In article <6uiov6$fer at web.nmti.com>, peter at baileynm.com says...
> Slaves were mostly used in labor-intensive cash crops. Cotton is the
> obvious one, but there's plenty of others. And I've heard it argued that
> without the mechanical methods of harvesting and processing cotton that
> were one of the products of the industrial revolution the south would
> still be effectively a slave society.
You have it backwards. Slavery was on its way out, and southern states
had moved towards abolition, but then the industrial revolution
introduced mechanized textiles and suddenly there was an unlimited market
for cotton. At that point, owning slaves became hugely profitable.
While England and the North invested in machinery, the South invested in
slaves because that's where the profit was.
-- Larry