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AP U.S. History 1.4 Period 2: 1690-1754 267 Views
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AP U.S. History 1.4 Period 2: 1690-1754. Which of the following environmental factors did not contribute to the rise of the West Indies slave trade as described in the excerpt?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:04
And here's your shmoop du jour,
- 00:05
brought to you by the triangular trade -
- 00:09
the coveted three-pointer of European commerce.
- 00:12
[ woo! ]
Full Transcript
- 00:13
All right, take a look at this excerpt.
- 00:14
All servants imported and brought...
- 00:16
[ mumbles ]
- 00:17
Wow. [ exhales ] And the question:
- 00:20
Which of the following environmental factors
- 00:22
did not contribute to the rise of the West Indies slave trade
- 00:26
as described in the excerpt?
- 00:28
And here are your potential answers.
- 00:30
All right, proximity...
- 00:32
[ mumbles ]
- 00:35
All right.
- 00:35
So, what's this question asking?
- 00:37
Well, we know that the slave trade led to a large period
- 00:40
of economic growth for Europe.
- 00:43
Think about it - if you weren't paying your laborers,
- 00:45
well, you'd have some extra cash to throw around, too.
- 00:48
But there were also environmental factors that led to the boom
- 00:51
in slave trade. We just need to figure out which of the answers
- 00:54
wasn't one of those.
- 00:56
Did the West Indies' A - proximity to West Africa
- 01:00
have anything to do with the rise of the slave trade?
- 01:03
You bet it did. The West Indies are just across the ocean
- 01:06
from West Africa, and this geographical proximity
- 01:09
made it much easier to transport slaves from their home countries to the plantations.
- 01:14
Oh, and those islands? Well, they had a bunch of
- 01:17
naturally accessible ports and harbors,
- 01:19
which is part of the reason that Europeans were able
- 01:21
to establish a new trade operation so quickly.
- 01:24
But we're looking for factors that didn't contribute to the rise of the West Indies slave trade,
- 01:29
so it's not A and it's not C.
- 01:32
Was the boom in the slave trade helped by the West Indies' B -
- 01:36
temperate climate and labor-intensive crops?
- 01:40
Oh, yeah, the West Indies had a perfect climate
- 01:42
for sugar and tobacco, two labor-intensive crops
- 01:45
that would benefit from a large population of unpaid workers
- 01:49
with, uh, no unions.
- 01:51
But it didn't stop there. That sugar and tobacco
- 01:53
would go to New England, where traders
- 01:56
would buy manufactured goods.
- 01:58
And those manufactured goods would go to Africa,
- 02:01
where they were traded for more slaves.
- 02:04
So, could it have been that the West Indies D -
- 02:06
had large of swaths of unclaimed land?
- 02:10
[ chuckles ] Goodness, no. Like most of the Americas,
- 02:12
the West Indies was not an empty place waiting to welcome
- 02:16
European colonists. The process of colonizing these small islands
- 02:20
involved murdering or enslaving local inhabitants
- 02:23
that had prior claim to the land,
- 02:25
followed by the Europeans pretending that none of them
- 02:28
had ever been there in the first place.
- 02:30
So D is our answer and, hey, you know what else is
- 02:33
"large" and "unclaimed"? The bill when a bunch of slave traders
- 02:36
go out to dinner.
- 02:39
[ coins jingle ]
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