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3 May, 17:34

What did plantations and yeoman's farms have in common?

They both produced crops.

They both relied on the labor of enslaved people.

They both grew cash crops.

They both required workers to live in one-room cabins.

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  1. 3 May, 19:32
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    The correct answer is option A. They both produced crops.

    Explanation:

    Plantations and Yeoman's farms between the 17th and 18 centuries were highly farmers. The Plantations had a large expanse of land to grow crops and all other farm produce. Both were of the Southern Colonies in the United States. Plantations specialized in the planting of tobacco, sugar cane, rubber, cotton, etc.

    It depended on the use of slaves as laborers on the farm because the initial indenture labor applied failed as a result of the high cost of money and the fact that the crops needed a large expanse of land. Hence, the use of slaves.

    Yeoman was involved in "landholding farming". In this colony, the farmers had very small-sized farmland in contrast to the plantations. They grew their crops themselves because they could not afford a large expanse of land. They did not own slaves but relied on the strength of the community.
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