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Land, Labor, and Economies of Scale in Early Maryland: Some Limits to Growth in the Chesapeake System of Husbandry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 March 2009
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Seventeenth-century planters developed a new system of husbandry, a long fallow, hoe-based agriculture that raised tobacco for export and Indian corn for subsistence. Plentiful land and shortages of labor characterized the system, which had few economies of scale. It provided rapid increases in wealth during the farm building stages, but its land and labor constraints set limits on growth. Eighteenth-century adaptations created economies of scale that permitted planters to grow grains for export without reducing tobacco crops. Planters who did not adopt these changes did not share in the resulting prosperity, and many left.
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References
1 Carr, Lois Green, Menard, Russell R., and Wash, Lorena S., Robert Cole's World: Agriculture and Society in Early Maryland (Chapel Hill, forthcoming),Google ScholarWe have described the Cole plantation in “A Small Planter's Profits: The Cole Estate and the Growth of the Early Chesapeake Economy,” William and Mary Quarierly, 3rd series. 40 (Apr. 1983), pp. 171–96. Unless otherwise noted, documentation of points made in this essay will be found in that book and article.Google Scholar
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16 On inheritance, opportunities, and migration, see Kulikoff, Tobacco and Slaves, pp. 131–41.Google Scholar
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