The answer is D many revolutions
Answer:
That statement is false on a number of levels. Jeremy Bentham was not a boot maker. He was born to a wealthy family and was studying Latin by age three. He trained as a lawyer and became famous as a philosopher. Oh, and he died in 1832, so he wasn't doing much of anything in 1841. He is famous as one of the founders of Utilitarianism as an ethical theory. He also did philosophical work in regard to criminal justice and prisons. He proposed what he called the "Panopticon" as a design for prisons, in which all inmates can be observed from a central guard position.
Hey there. Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, was certainly not known for your choices C. and D. (Lexington and Concord), neither B. (Bunker Hill).
However, Lafayette is known for assisting GEN. George Washington and ADM. Francois de Grasse at the Battle of Yorktown (B.). At the Battle of Yorktown, these brave leaders and their men surrounded British General, Sir Cornwallis, and that marked the end of the American Revolutionary War.
Sites on the Trail include the Park Street Church, Granary Burying Ground, King's Chapel, Old Corner Book Store, Old State House, Faneuil Hall, Paul Revere House, The Old North Church, USS Constitution, and Bunker Hill Monument.
The First Continental Congress was a meeting by the colonies in response to the intolerable acts that the British had enforced. The king and parliament must be made to understand the grievances of the colonies and that the body much do everything possible to communicate with America, and the rest of the world.
Hope this helped.