I think the answer is <span>Freedom rides to Washington, D.C. it was a challenge to segregation with buses. This was usually spearheaded by the CORE, Congress of Racial Equality. Its protests are brought by ordinances on social segregation based on color. This is widely done in schools, public transportation and social areas. </span><span />
Answer: I think Carolina
Explanation:
Because Until the early 18th century, enslaved Africans were difficult to acquire in the colonies that became the United States, as most were sold to the West Indies, where the large plantations and high mortality rates required continued importation of slaves. One of the first major centers of African slavery in the English North American colonies occurred with the founding of Charles Town and the Province of Carolina in 1670.
These journalists were called muckrakers. They basically "raked the muck" out of society to make it a better place. They uncovered unsafe working conditions and unjust business practices and wrote about them to try to expose corruption.
Answer:
Right choice:
It became one of the great cities of the world.
Explanation:
Constantinopole (also called Byzantium) was the capital of the Byzantine Empire since the division of the Roman Empire into the Western Roman Empire and the Eastern Roman Empire. It was considered it had an equal status with Rome. It conserved the Orthodox rituals, the Greek language and culture, and became the seat of the Orthodox Church after the Great Schism of the Church in the 11th century. It fell into the hands of the Ottoman Turks in 1453, its end as a Christian metropolis.
Answer:
I believe that the answer is B. Cotton farmers grew rich because France paid higher prices than those paid by the North.
Explanation: The Civil War affected the Southern economy by 1815, cotton was the most valuable export in the United States; by 1840, it was worth more than all of the other exports combined. But, while the Southern states produced two- thirds of the world's supply of cotton, the South had little manufacturing capability, about 29 percent of the railroad tracks, and only about 13 percent of the nation's banks. The South did experiment with using slave labor in manufacturing, but for the most part it was well satisfied with its agricultural economy. The North, by contrast, was well on its way toward a commercial and manufacturing economy, which would have a direct impact on its war making abilities. By 1860, 90 percent of the nation's manufacturing output came from Northern states. The North produced 17 times more cotton than in the South. Other Northern industries such as weapons, manufacturing, leather goods, iron production, textiles, grew and improved as the war progressed. But, the same was not true in the South. The twin disadvantages of a smaller industrial economy and having so much of the war fought in the South hampered Confederate growth and development. Southern farmers (including cotton growers) were hampered in their ability to sell their goods overseas due to Union naval blockades. Union invasions into the South resulted in the capture of Southern transportation and manufacturing facilities.