The options of the question are:
A)The states in the South had to repair the damage they caused in the North. B)The states in the South had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment. C)The land confiscated from Confederates had to be given to freedmen for farms. D)The states had to pass a law that guaranteed the freedoms of former slaves
The correct answer is B) The states in the South had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment.
<em>Part of President Andrew Johnson’s reconstruction plan was that the states in the South had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment.
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<em>The plan of Andrew Johnson for the Reconstruction of t</em>he United States included the readmission of the Southern States once they had rewritten their state constitution. They also had to form their state governments, pay war debts and ratified the 13th Amendment. The 13th amendment abolished slavery, but President Johnson did not give former slaves the right to vote.
False the colonist declared independence after the revolutionary war
Hope this helps :)
If we are talking about the revolutionary war, then congress was the leader of the colonies and therefore the army but George Washington was the commander-in-chief of the army. Definitely at the beginning and almost all throughout the war the army was in bad shape often not having enough pay to send home to their families and often without proper clothing or food. Many men either ran away from the army or left as soon as their contract was up. The rebel army maintained decently steady numbers and only saw dramatic increases when the French and Spanish joined the war.
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
This week was chosen because it coincided with the birthday of Abraham Lincoln on February 12 and of Frederick Douglass on February 14, both of which dates black communities had celebrated together since the late 19th century
Answer:
The ancient Babylonian king ruled with military and diplomatic finesse—and he also knew a thing or two about self-promotion.
Explanation:
More than 3,800 years after he took power, the ancient Babylonian king Hammurabi is best remembered for the Code of Hammurabi which was inscribed on human-sized stone pillars that he placed in the towns of his realm.
But the system of 282 laws was just one of the achievements of a leader who turned Babylon, a city-state located 60 miles south of modern-day Baghdad, into the dominant power of ancient Mesopotamia.
During his reign, which lasted from 1792 to his death in 1750 B.C., Hammurabi in many ways also served as a model for how to combine military power, diplomatic finesse and political skill to build and control an empire that stretched from the Persian Gulf inland for 250 miles along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.