Every Slave State in the USA had Slave codes during the period in which slavery was legal. These slave codes were legal codes regarding the owning of slaves, much the same as laws regarding real-estate (they were very similar). Since slaves were treated as property the basic human rights that applied to other American's did not apply to them, in fact, any slave marriages that occurred meant absolutely nothing in the eyes of the law as property technically cannot marry (think of it like a fork marrying a spoon, except worse because these are people).
Some slave codes even made it illegal for slaves to be educated. In regards to assembly, slave codes would not allow for assembly of slaves outside of mandatory assembly (chain gangs, ect.)
Hope this helps!
He’s a rapper not a trackstarr he doesn’t run away when it gets harddd
In 1876 the Electoral College made Hayes president in one of the most contentious elections in U.S. history. He had lost the popular vote to Democrat Samuel J Tilden, but won an intensely disputed electoral-college vote after a Congressional commission awarded him 20 contested electoral votes.
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be the second option, having to do with people working long hours in textile factories, since textiles were the first major product of industrialization.</span></span>
<span>governments had raised taxes and borrowed money to wage war</span>