This would depend on your beliefs. Personally, I believe it was a cruel injustice to the Cherokee, and that the Trail of Tears was nowhere near necessary to advance civilization. However, this question is asking for your point of view on the matter. Using the information you have learned, reflect on the event and come to your own conclusion. Hope this helped! ^.^
The answers are:
Meriwether Lewis, William Clark and Sacagawea
C. Technically, you couldn't stop people from voting based on their race, but at the time, you could put restrictions on voting. Most white men were educated, and those who weren't could read basic, common words. Black men, historically couldn't read, so literacy tests were an attempt to make it so that black people couldn't vote. Poll taxes were the same way, the white men could afford to pay the poll tax, but the black men couldn't due to their mostly low paying jobs. Lastly, if a white man couldn't read, or couldn't afford to pay the tax, they shouldn't have been allowed to vote, so in order to make it so that they could vote a "grandfather clause" was instated. This made it so that if your father had voted, you could vote. This meant that any white man could vote.
Answer:lack of communication because of distances between properties.
Lack of communication between settlements because of nationalities and non speaking English americans
Explanation:
Answer:
A) the search for markets for American products.
Explanation:
The United States became a wealthy, fully industrialized country in the years between 1865 and 1900. American companies exported goods to different parts of the world and American businessmen invested around the world. Its economic interests became global. Industrial might also meant the development of a powerful army and navy to protect American interests abroad.
So, by the end of the 19th century, just as in the case of European industrial powers, there was an increasing pressure to guarantee access to sources of raw materials and new markets for industrial goods. The 1898 Spanish-American War marked the advent of an epoch in which the US got more involved in international affairs and was ready to use its military muscle to protect its interests globally.