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Please HURYY AND ANWER RIGHT I WILL GOVE BRAINLEST
Sorry I know it’s a lot to read
By 1860, there were about four million enslaved workers in the South. The plantation owners of the South, who were dependent on enslaved laborers, had much of their personal wealth tied up in enslaved persons. For example, a plantation owner might have had fifty enslaved persons. Their value in 1860, according to the records of the time, would have been about $80,000, a value of about $2.2 million today. Historians estimate that up to 50% of the wealth of the South was tied up in the institution of slavery, which is an important reason why so many Southern leaders were unwilling to discuss any type of emancipation.

Which idea does this secondary source support?

Enslaved persons were too valuable for Southern leaders to consider emancipation.

Many owners of large plantations could not afford enslaved workers.

Plantation owners paid millions of dollars for enslaved workers.

Almost all Southerners could afford to have enslaved workers in the antebellum era.


Sagot :

Answer:

Enslaved persons were too valuable for Southern leaders to consider emancipation.

Explanation:

"The plantation owners of the South, who were dependent on enslaved laborers, had much of their personal wealth tied up in enslaved persons."

and

Their value would be about $80,000 or $2.2mil today

Answer:

Enslaved persons were too valuable for Southern leaders to consider emancipation

Explanation:

B is wrong because many owners could actually afford them. C is wrong because though they were worth millions today, they weren't worth that much at the time. D is wrong because the passage doesn't talk/mention that. A is right because it says it in the passage, "The plantation owners of the South, who were dependent on enslaved laborers, had much of their personal wealth tied up in enslaved persons...50% of the wealth of the South was tied up in the institution of slavery, which is an important reason why so many Southern leaders were unwilling to discuss any type of emancipation."