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David Beck Ryden
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Journal Articles
“One of the Finest and Most Fruitful Spots in America ”: An Analysis of Eighteenth-Century Carriacou
Publisher: Journals Gateway
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History (2013) 43 (4): 539–570.
Published: 01 April 2013
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Analysis of the 1776 and 1790 agricultural censuses from Carriacou overturns the notion that only farmers with small holdings cultivated cotton in the West Indies. The evidence shows that cotton squeezed out all other crops on Carriacou during the first phase of the Industrial Revolution. The island's cotton planters were socially diverse; the yeomanry with their small their farms often competed successfully with the owners of the large plantations financed by wealthy metropolitan investors. Despite the viability of the more modest operations in this industry, however, the largest estates offered creditors comparatively lower transaction and information costs. Furthermore, the data from 1790 indicate that the largest estates achieved the highest output per hand, provided that the “gangs” of enslaved laborers were sufficiently monitored by free workers.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History (2001) 31 (3): 347–374.
Published: 01 January 2001
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Most historians describe the moral distaste for slavery as the sole reason for the cessation of the British slave trade. Data from the Caribbean, however, along with contemporary commentary, show that an economic crisis faced by sugar planters was critical to the timing of abolition in 1807.