Read the passage from Sugar Changed the World.

As sugar planters fled from the revolution in Haiti, some moved to Cuba's Oriente Province, others to North America—to Louisiana. By the time the Haitian plantation owners and overseers reached New Orleans, abolitionists were pressing to end the African slave trade. The tragedy is that this movement to end slavery did nothing to improve conditions in Louisiana. In fact, the state that slaves called Lousy Anna was the very worst place for an African in America; it was the Caribbean all over again—a death sentence.

In every single American slave state, the population of enslaved people kept rising even after the slave trade was abolished. That was because enough enslaved children were born, lived, and grew to become adults. There was just one exception to this rule: Louisiana, where the native-born enslaved population kept dropping. Sugar was a killer.

Which words from the passage best support the authors' purpose?

A.revolution, improve, and rising
B.tragedy, death, and killer
C.moved, reached, and conditions
D.single, population, and children

Respuesta :

Answer:

B: tragedy, death, and killer

Explanation:

The author's purpose is best supported by the words tragedy, death, and killer.

Tragedy: Even though planters fled from the revolution in Haiti, still the conditions in Lousiana didn't change.

Death: The same situation lived in the Caribben was a death sentence for an African in America.

Killer: The abolition of slave trade didn't stop the rising of the population of slaved people.

ACCESS MORE
EDU ACCESS