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    What Drove Sugar Trade

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    What drove the sugar trade? In the late 1600s and 1700s sugar growing took firm hold in the Caribbean. During that time sugar cane spread even further West. Anthropologists tell us that sugar was first grown in New Guienea some 9000 years ago. Sugar cane grows for 15 months then gets cuts down and gets crushed down. First‚ Jamaica and Barbados is a good place to make sugar cane. The reason is because they both get a lot of rain. Another reason why I say it is good place is because they have good

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    What Drove the Sugar Trade? In the late 1600s and 1700s sugar growing took firm hold in the Caribbean. France and Britain competed for domination of the Sugar Trade. By 1655‚ Britain was the biggest sugar trader. France passed Britain as the biggest Caribbean sugar trader in 1740 (oi). The Sugar Trade was driven by many factors. Some of which are capital‚ slavery and complementing industries. Money was‚ and still is‚ very important. Sugar was even called white gold by British colonists during

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    Who dove the sugar Trade? I ask myself that question because I think I know the answer. I think the British drove the Sugar Trade. Everything during the Sugar Trade‚ the British almost had something involved with it. The reasons why the British drove the Sugar Trade was because of the demanding‚ the capital‚ and all of the trading. In Doc.3‚ it shows a drawing of a hogshead of sugar. A hogshead was a large barrel weighing between 700 and 1200 pounds. The picture was located in London. In document

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    The Sugar trade. Oh the wonderful sweetness of money and sugar. What drove this so called sugar trade‚ you ask? Consumer demand‚ return on investment‚ and slavery were all very important aspects to the making of the historic events in which were the sugar trade. Consumer demand is the product of the addicting compounds which make up sugar‚ adding it to about everything sugar gradually became a very important aspect in the 1500’s normal lifestyle. Return on investment is when you put money into

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    what drove the sugar

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    10/4/13 What Drove The Sugar Trade? Sugar is a very tempting and delightful sweetener to foods used every day‚ all over the world to satisfy our appetites. One year after Christopher Columbus’s first voyage in 1493‚ Columbus introduced cane sugar to the islands of the Caribbean. During this time sugar was not known to most people in Europe. That changed soon enough and caused the production of sugar to become a large industry. The sugar trade was driven by land and climate‚ consumer demand‚ and

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    You might ask‚ “What drove the sugar trade?”. Let me tell you by starting off saying; consumers demanded sugar. Consumers demanded sugar because the producers became wealthy off of sugarsugar was sweet so people wanted it and was very efficient due to the labor of slaves. To start off‚ sugar was an easy way to become wealthy for producers. As said in Document 7A and 7B‚ after the first production of sugar from the West Indies‚ sugar easily grabbed the attention of many Englishmen. The Englishmen

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    Sugar Trade DBQ

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    Daniels White 3rd Hour 11-23-14 Sugar Trade DBQ The rise of absolute monarchies in Western Europe during the 1400’s brought a new economic theory called mercantilism. In mercantilism countries desired a favorable balance of trade‚ in which raw materials were imported from their own colonies‚ manufactured‚ and then exported. After the discovery of the Americas‚ cane sugar was introduced to the West Indies and became a prominent plantation cash crop. From that time sugar trade remained part of the global

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    Sugar Trade Dbq

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    What Drove the Sugar Trade? Sugar was not a very well know product back in the late 1300s. However‚ sugar became a very popular ingredient when Columbus introduce sugar to the West Indies in 1493. After being introduced to other countries‚ sugar spread like wildfire‚ and was wanted everywhere. Of course‚ after sugar became popular‚ there was going to be a rise on merchants selling cane sugar. The sugar trade was driven by the higher demands of people‚ profit‚ and the slave trade. Cane sugar was an

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    Sugar and Slave Trade Dbq

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    Escobedo Sugar and slave trade Sugar is filled with sweetness‚ but the sweetness of sugar was covered up by the saltiness of sweat. Sugar has been started all over the world‚ from the labor from Africa‚ markets from Europe and its origins in Asia. The sugar and slavery trade included Africa‚ Asia and Europe. This was called the triangular trade. Demands‚ land‚ capitol and labor were things that drove the sugar and slave trade. One thing that drove the sugar trade was the demand for sugar. Demand

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    Sugar Trade

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    Period.6 DBQ -1- What drove the sugar trade? Theodore Roosevelt once said‚ “Do what you can with what you have‚ where you are.” For the British this meant using islands such as Jamaica and Barbados to produce‚ process‚ and sell sugar. Sugar cane thrives in hot humid‚ tropical climates. The British used sugar for things such as rum‚ molasses

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