Evaluating the Link Between Slavery and Industrialization
A historian argues, 'The British textile industry's rapid growth was fundamentally dependent on the cheap, mass-produced cotton supplied by enslaved laborers in the Americas. Without this specific input, the Industrial Revolution would have been significantly delayed or taken a completely different path.' Evaluate the validity of this claim, using historical evidence to support your position.
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Evaluating the Link Between Slavery and Industrialization
Impact of Raw Material Costs on an Industrial Enterprise
Which statement best analyzes the economic connection between the system of enslaved labor in the Americas and the growth of the British textile industry during the Industrial Revolution?
The economic success of the British textile industry during its period of rapid mechanization was fundamentally disconnected from the labor practices on American cotton plantations, as the market price for the raw material was the only factor of consequence to British factory owners.
Analyzing the Economic Link in Textile Production
Match each economic actor or element to its specific role within the 18th and 19th-century transatlantic textile economy.
Arrange the following events to accurately represent the supply chain that connected American plantations to the British textile market during the Industrial Revolution.
Sourcing Raw Cotton in the 19th Century
The economic system that supplied the essential raw cotton for Britain's mechanized textile industry was based on the institution of ______.
A 19th-century British textile mill owner is assessing the primary risks to their business's supply chain. Based on the production model for their main raw material, which of the following represents the most significant and direct vulnerability to their access to cheap, plentiful cotton?