Asked by berlanda
Read the passage from Sugar Changed the World.
In every single American slave state, the population of enslaved people kept rising even after the slave trade was abolished. That was because enough enslaved children were born, lived, and grew to become adults. There was just one exception to this rule: Louisiana, where the native-born enslaved population kept dropping. Sugar was a killer.
Unlike the Caribbean, Louisiana has cold snaps. That put an additional pressure on the sugar harvest. Not only did the slaves need to harvest the cane in perfect rhythm with the grinding mills, but the entire crop had to be cut down between mid-October and December. This pace only increased when growers installed improved, steam-powered mills. People needed to work faster than the weather and to keep pace with machines.
What is the authors’ purpose in this passage?
to inform the reader that Louisiana had fewer enslaved people than other slave states did
to inform the reader that Louisiana's hot weather hastened the sugar harvest to a few months
to inform the reader that life for enslaved people improved when sugar mills became powered by steam
to inform the reader that Louisiana's short harvest season meant that enslaved people were cruelly overworked
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to inform the reader that Louisiana's short harvest season meant that enslaved people were cruelly overworked
The passage explains that the compressed harvest season, cold snaps, and faster steam-powered mills forced enslaved people to work faster and harder, causing deaths and a declining native-born enslaved population.
The passage explains that the compressed harvest season, cold snaps, and faster steam-powered mills forced enslaved people to work faster and harder, causing deaths and a declining native-born enslaved population.
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