Who were the Pilgrims and Puritans?
The pilgrims and puritans were pioneers of the new world, this America. Coming from 1600s Britain, many of them were seeking freedom from their past lives, from the government, to find a new way of life, a more pure and sure one.
Pilgrims were separatists from the Church of England, settling in Plymouth in the 1620s, while the puritans joined in 1630 to establish the Massachusets bay colony.
What role did they play in American Journalism?
The real question is: What role didn't they play in all of America? The modern #1 nation wouldn't exist without them! They were egregious se*ist and racist monsters, that never stopped them from doing something great. Aboard the boat, a few of them had an idea and, when they came to dry land, they all signed a document in the government of our now-country, affecting journalism and many other things for years to come.
Answer:Jewish beliefs, concepts and events permeate many facets of U.S. culture and heritage. Judaism laid the foundations for Christianity and Islam. The Hebrew language is among the building blocks of English. As a result, we tend to have a passing, somewhat vague knowledge of Jewish religious practices.
Explanation:
Answer:
On July 22, in announcing the federal indictment of Charleston killer Dylann Roof, Attorney General Loretta Lynch commented that the expression of forgiveness offered by the victims’ families is “an incredible lesson and message for us all.”
Forgiveness and grace are, indeed, hallmarks of the Black Church.
Since slavery, the church has been a formidable force for the survival of blacks in an America still grappling with the residual effects of white supremacy.
This was eloquently illustrated in the aftermath of the Charleston church massacre. Americans rightly stood in awe of the bereaved families’ laudable demonstration of God’s grace in action.
Answer:
A. & B.
Explanation:
When the Gold Rush ended, Chinese Americans were considered cheap labor. They easily found employment as farmhands, gardeners, domestics, laundry workers, and most famously, railroad workers.
<span>The main arguments used by the Anti-Federalists in the debate for the U.S. Constitution were the fact that the Constitution gave too much power to the federal government and that the rights of the people were not guaranteed through a Bill of Rights. They did not want to ratify the Constitution, and they had a significant impact in the creation and implementation of the Bill of Rights.</span>