<span>It never ceases to amaze me when a teacher asks a question like this. Why are any coastal areas important? Why are any Sounds important? The real question should be, What are the physical properties of coastal areas that make them important enough for educated humans to talk about? Does Washington's coastal area have properties that differentiate it from other coastal areas on the planet? I would argue that the question is searching for the wrong answer. Your teacher must have listed some properties of the area she is asking you to regurgitate, or she is trying to prompt some answer from your textbook, which may or may not be true. So, I return to the real question- what is it about coastal areas, in general, that make them important to the life on the planet, or to the well being of the human population? Is there anything that differentiates the Washington coastal area and the Puget Sound from other coastal areas around the globe?</span>
Based on the given excerpt above, the statement that best connects the excerpt to cultural developments the author witnessed is this: <span> Stone refers to the Cult of Domesticity, arguing that it denies women their right to determine their own way in life. The answer would be the first statement. Hope this helps. </span>
The answer is A. The appropriate response is letter A. The Knights of Labor's organizer was Uriah Stevens. At to begin with, the Knights of Labor was a mystery association, yet Terence Powderly finished the gathering's mystery after expecting control of the association in 1879. Enrollment developed rapidly, achieving around 700,000 individuals by 1886.
The Knights advanced the social and social inspire of the workingman, rejected communism and political agitation, requested the eight-hour day, and advanced the makers ethic of republicanism. At times it went about as a worker's party, consulting with managers, yet it was never efficient, and after a quick development in the mid-1880s, it abruptly lost its new individuals and turned into a little operation again.
Indentured servants who were freed caused conflicts by not helping grow crops and raising their colonies. My guess sorry... Studied this a long time ago...