the democrats fought almost bitterly at times over:
banking policies
slavery issues
tariff rates
answer: all of the above
Olympe De Gouges and Mary Wollstonecraft were both dedicated feminists and advocates for women's rights during the 1700s.
Olympe De Gouges fought for the right for women to be able to divorce. During this time women did not have the right to divorce spouses and would often be stuck for life, she did not want this. She spoke up about how she thought that women were treated unequally and ended up starting movements and people fighting for women's rights during the Enlightenment eras to come.
Mary Wollstonecraft also fought for women's rights and she was a huge feminist. She focused on something different than Olympe De Gouges, she wanted equal education. She felt that the education system was flawed and sexist and it preferred men's education over women's education. The education that women would receive would leave them incapable and not prepared for the real world, Mary Wollstonecraft wanted to change this.
1606, John got involved in Virginia's Company of London's plan to colonize Virginia for profit.
Hello!
In the past, women were primarily expected to stay at home and teach and raise her children. Men, however, were expected to have jobs and work for his family.
When women began working, it changed America’s views on gender roles because the roll of women was changing. Instead of working at home, they began working true jobs in society. Today, it is entirely normal to see women working for companies, as individual workers, etc.
I hope this helps you!
<span>Primary source.
A primary source is a historical source that originated at the time of the events by people directly participating in or affected by the events. In the case of researching persons in history, a primary source would be material from those persons themselves or from others in direct contact with them. Primary means first, and so these are the first sources of historical information.
Secondary sources are the history accounts or analyses written by others based on what is seen in the primary sources. Primary sources can be things like letters, official documents, diaries, interviews, contemporary newspaper accounts of events, as well as photographs (or contemporary paintings) and other artifacts from the person or event being studied.
Note that primary sources can be biased in the same way that all sources can be biased. If you were studying the Dakota Conflict, for instance, between white settlers and Native Americans, the sources stemming from the two sides of the conflict will have differing points of view.</span>