Answer:
Constitutional convention, Philadelphia convention, Annapolis, 1786
Explanation:
It began after the stock market crash of October 1929, which sent Wall Street into a panic and wiped out millions of investors. Over the next several years, consumer spending and investment dropped, causing steep declines in industrial output and employment as failing companies laid off workers.
<span>In McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) the Supreme Court ruled that Congress had impliedpowers under the Necessary and Proper Clause of Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution to create the Second Bank of the United States and that the state of Maryland lacked the power to tax the Bank.
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Answer:
umm..It says in your own words...Do u want me to try to write it in your own words or my own words? or
Explanation:
Because it was not specified which War, lets talk about WWI and WWII:
WWI: The closing off of foreign immigration and the movement of 4 million men from the workforce into the armed services created an acute labor shortage across the wartime United States. To meet it, women, African Americans, and other ethnic minorities were encouraged to enter industries and take on jobs heretofore dominated by white men. Over four hundred thousand southern blacks (and a significant number of whites) began a Great Migration northward during the war years, a mass movement that continued unabated through the 1920s and changed the political and social dynamics of northern cities.
WWII: Nearly 8 million people moved into the states west of the Mississippi River between 1940 and 1950. Lured by news of job openings and higher wages, African Americans from Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana headed west. The South also experienced dramatic social changes as a result of the war effort. Sixty of the one hundred new army camps created during the war were in southern states. The construction of military bases and the influx of new personnel transformed the local economies. Manufacturing jobs led tens of thousands of “dirt poor” sharecroppers and tenant farmers, many of them African Americans, to leave the land and gain a steady wage working in mills and factories. Throughout the United States during the Second World War, the rural population decreased by 20 percent.