Questions: Sugar Changed the World, Part 4: Building Claims Assignment Active Citing Evidence to Support a Claim The English public, now consuming some eighteen pounds of sugar a year, knew little about the lives of the enslaved Africans whose labor sweetened their meals. Worse yet, every Englishman who hammered the wood, sewed the sails, manufactured the rope for slave ships, or built the barrels to hold slave-harvested sugar made his money from the slave trade. The English were getting richer because Africans were being turned into property. Clarkson and others who believed as he did, who in the coming decades would be called abolitionists, realized that while that link gave the English a stake in slavery, it also gave the antislavery forces an opportunity. If they could reverse the flow-make the horrors of slavery visible to those who benefited from it-they might be able to end the vile practice forever. -Sugar Changed the World, Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos Which quotation provides evidence to support the claim that the sugar trade led to the end of slavery? "The English public . . . knew little about the lives of the enslaved Africans whose labor sweetened their meals." "Every Englishman who . . . built the barrels to hold slave-harvested sugar made his money from the slave trade." "The English were getting richer because Africans were being turned into property." "While that link gave the English a stake in slavery, it also gave the antislavery forces an opportunity." Done

Sugar Changed the World, Part 4: Building Claims
Assignment
Active
Citing Evidence to Support a Claim

The English public, now consuming some eighteen pounds of sugar a year, knew little about the lives of the enslaved Africans whose labor sweetened their meals. Worse yet, every Englishman who hammered the wood, sewed the sails, manufactured the rope for slave ships, or built the barrels to hold slave-harvested sugar made his money from the slave trade. The English were getting richer because Africans were being turned into property. Clarkson and others who believed as he did, who in the coming decades would be called abolitionists, realized that while that link gave the English a stake in slavery, it also gave the antislavery forces an opportunity. If they could reverse the flow-make the horrors of slavery visible to those who benefited from it-they might be able to end the vile practice forever.
-Sugar Changed the World, Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos

Which quotation provides evidence to support the claim that the sugar trade led to the end of slavery?
"The English public . . . knew little about the lives of the enslaved Africans whose labor sweetened their meals."
"Every Englishman who . . . built the barrels to hold slave-harvested sugar made his money from the slave trade."
"The English were getting richer because Africans were being turned into property."
"While that link gave the English a stake in slavery, it also gave the antislavery forces an opportunity."
Done
Transcript text: Sugar Changed the World, Part 4: Building Claims Assignment Active Citing Evidence to Support a Claim The English public, now consuming some eighteen pounds of sugar a year, knew little about the lives of the enslaved Africans whose labor sweetened their meals. Worse yet, every Englishman who hammered the wood, sewed the sails, manufactured the rope for slave ships, or built the barrels to hold slave-harvested sugar made his money from the slave trade. The English were getting richer because Africans were being turned into property. Clarkson and others who believed as he did, who in the coming decades would be called abolitionists, realized that while that link gave the English a stake in slavery, it also gave the antislavery forces an opportunity. If they could reverse the flow-make the horrors of slavery visible to those who benefited from it-they might be able to end the vile practice forever. -Sugar Changed the World, Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos Which quotation provides evidence to support the claim that the sugar trade led to the end of slavery? "The English public . . . knew little about the lives of the enslaved Africans whose labor sweetened their meals." "Every Englishman who . . . built the barrels to hold slave-harvested sugar made his money from the slave trade." "The English were getting richer because Africans were being turned into property." "While that link gave the English a stake in slavery, it also gave the antislavery forces an opportunity." Done
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Solution

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Answer

The answer is "While that link gave the English a stake in slavery, it also gave the antislavery forces an opportunity."

Explanation
Option 1: "The English public . . . knew little about the lives of the enslaved Africans whose labor sweetened their meals."

This statement highlights the ignorance of the English public regarding the conditions of enslaved Africans but does not directly connect the sugar trade to the end of slavery.

Option 2: "Every Englishman who . . . built the barrels to hold slave-harvested sugar made his money from the slave trade."

This option emphasizes the economic involvement of the English in the slave trade but does not address how the sugar trade contributed to the end of slavery.

Option 3: "The English were getting richer because Africans were being turned into property."

This statement points out the economic benefits derived from slavery but does not provide evidence of how the sugar trade led to the end of slavery.

Option 4: "While that link gave the English a stake in slavery, it also gave the antislavery forces an opportunity."

This option directly supports the claim that the sugar trade, by making the horrors of slavery visible to those who benefited from it, provided an opportunity for antislavery forces to work towards ending slavery.

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