Answer:
♡ The whiskey rebellion was a 1794 uprising of farmers and distillers in western Pennsylvania in protest of a whiskey tax enacted by the federal government. ♡
Explanation:
Tulsa's race riots were a large-scale racial conflict between May 31 and June 1, 1921, in which white American population groups attacked the Afro-American community in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
One of its main focuses was the Greenwood district, the most prosperous African-American community in the United States of America, which was completely destroyed.
Contextual background includes the Red Summer of 1919 in the USA, which was characterized by repeated racial conflicts. As an immediate background, on the afternoon of May 30, a man of color, D. Rowland, was reported to the police, accused of attacking a white woman. On the morning of the next day, May 31, D. Rowland was arrested. The repercussion of the case and the existence of previous tensions led to the concentration of black and white armed groups around the place where Rowland was detained, very close to the Greenwood district, throughout the afternoon of the same day and fear about a possible lynching attempt.
A key feature of trade and urbanization during roman times was B. great merchants becoming the elites of Rome. <span>The Romans highly encouraged private enterprise and trade.</span>
During the Ridges youth, Cherokee Nation faced constant threats, and so, the young warrior had a duty to keep an eye to encroaching neighbors, i.e., The Creeks, Shawnees, Chickasaws, and Choctaws together with a new force from the Southern mountains, the Americans.
The people paid dearly when they choose the wrong side of the American Revolution. The Ridge witnessed American riflemen burn his town and destroy the Cherokee territory, and at 17 he took his first America scale to fight the Americans.
In 1805, the population of the Cherokee people had significantly reduced to, 12,000 and more than half of its land was lost.
Answer: The correct answer is : England, Ireland and Scotland.
Explanation: The growth of the agricultural economy was based on plantations in the hot and humid lowlands of the colonies of the southern colonies and for this cheap and large-scale labor was needed. Some poor immigrants agreed to work as servants in tobacco plantations for a period of time to pay for the passage to the New World.