Both the tobacco and cotton crop were essential
to the founding of independent colonies in the western world that would become
the United States of America. The two crops could grow profusely in the warm,
temporal climate of eastern North America and as a result, Britain found itself
in a time of major colonial expansion. As major trade markets opened up in
Europe and Asia, tobacco and cotton spread across the world, consumed in an enormous
variety of fashions.
![]() |
Photo credit: Paul Owen 2012 |
When colonist John Rolfe arrived at the hell
that was the Jamestown settlement, the British Empire was on the verge of
abandoning and losing the settlement due to the impact of famine and disease.
Rolfe’s work on the cultivation of tobacco crops began in the ideal climate and
environment of the settlement lands and the colony prospered.
Jamestown Settlement, early 17th Century Photo Credit: Nasa.gov |
The tobacco crop allowed the colonists to
persevere through the initial winters and move out of the terrible existing
living conditions and into a thriving effort of imperialism that brought
thousands of new settlers and eventually, horrifyingly enough, slavery.
Tobacco Crops Photo Credit: LearnNc.org |
Similarly synonymous with the evils of slavery
in the United States’ development is the cotton crop. Like tobacco, cotton was
a widely popular and highly useful good around the world and as such there was
a very high global demand. With the foundation that tobacco laid for society in
the Western World, cotton provided economic and material resources for the
expansion of the American settlements. This exposed an appalling cycle that led
to the growth and prosperity of the tobacco and cotton industry in which slave
labor was used as a manner of production of the crops as well as a currency to
acquire goods and further common assets. This boosted an entire economy which in
turn provided autonomy and self sustaining resources for the founding of the
United States of America.
Photo Credit: Slave Breeding in The US, Wikipedia |
Tobacco and cotton’s widespread popularity and global consumption in the 17th
and 18th century provided financial stability to Britain’s endeavor
in colonizing the Western World and as such, the American colonies saw continuous
backing from the British Empire and prospered exponentially. This led to a
mentality of independence among the colonists and with the mismanaged tariffs,
taxes, and legislation imposed on the
colonies by the British government, the settlers were on the path to American
independence. The tobacco and cotton crops were only players in the full development
of the United States, but the usefulness and resilience of the colonists
brought about by the two crops are what allowed for such a monumental expansion
of a new, independent society.
No comments:
Post a Comment