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leva [86]
4 years ago
3

Please help!! Who was Squanto?

History
2 answers:
e-lub [12.9K]4 years ago
8 0
Squanto or Tisquantum, was a Native American of the paxtuet tribe he helped the pilgrims when they came in to america.
alexandr402 [8]4 years ago
7 0
<span>Dec 5, 2014 - Join Biography.com in a look at Squanto, also known as ... The following year, Squantodeepened the Pilgrims' trust by helping them find a lost ...</span><span>
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In the late 1800s, where did most European immigrants live in the United States?
shusha [124]

in the late 1800's many immigrated to the United states from European countries hoping to find work. these immigrants lived in ghettos or in tenement houses located in urban or industrialized areas. tenement houses where often cramped and dirty, people worked long hours and little pay.

6 0
3 years ago
Why did the united states face rising prices and labor unrest during the late 1940
VARVARA [1.3K]

The labor history of the United States describes the history of organized labor, US labor law, and more general history of working people, in the United States. Beginning in the 1930s, unions became important components of the Democratic Party. Some historians question why a Labor Party did not emerge in the United States, in contrast to Western Europe.[1]

The nature and power of organized labor is the outcome of historical tensions among counter-acting forces involving workplace rights, wages, working hours, political expression, labor laws, and other working conditions. Organized unions and their umbrella labor federations such as the AFL–CIO and citywide federations have competed, evolved, merged, and split against a backdrop of changing values and priorities, and periodic federal government intervention.

As commentator E. J. Dionne has noted, the union movement has traditionally espoused a set of values—solidarity being the most important, the sense that each should look out for the interests of all. From this followed commitments to mutual assistance, to a rough-and-ready sense of equality, to a disdain for elitism, and to a belief that democracy and individual rights did not stop at the plant gate or the office reception room. Dionne notes that these values are "increasingly foreign to American culture".[2] In most industrial nations the labor movement sponsored its own political parties, with the U.S. as a conspicuous exception. Both major American parties vied for union votes, with the Democrats usually much more successful. Labor unions became a central element of the New Deal Coalition that dominated national politics from the 1930s into the mid-1960s during the Fifth Party System.[3] Liberal Republicans who supported unions in the Northeast lost power after 1964

6 0
4 years ago
It’s actually American gov please help would highly appreciate it✨
Dmitrij [34]

Answer:

It’s actually American gov please help would highly appreciate it✨

All state governments must have) three branches.

3 0
3 years ago
Did the Americans want war with England in 1764? What makes you think so
Jet001 [13]

Answer:

The Americans, the majority of the colonists, didn't want war but, a peaceful separation and the formation of a new country.  Tensions and the British's reluctance towards this idea was which drove the colonists to war.

Explanation:

In 1765, tensions escalated with the Stamp Act which imposed more suffocating British rule over the already fed up colonists. In 1764, Parliament enacted the Sugar Act, an attempt to raise revenue in the colonies through a tax on molasses. Although this tax had been on the books since the 1730s, smuggling and laxity of enforcement had blunted its sting. Now, however, the tax was to be enforced. An outcry arose from those affected, and colonists implemented several effective protest measures that centered around boycotting British goods. Then in 1765, Parliament enacted the Stamp Act, which placed taxes on paper, playing cards, and every legal document created in the colonies. Since this tax affected virtually everyone and extended British taxes to domestically produced and consumed goods, the reaction in the colonies was pervasive. The Stamp Act crisis was the first of many that would occur over the next decade and a half.

3 0
3 years ago
How many of the people in Trumbull's painting signed the Declaration, and how many people actually signed it? (Site 1) In a para
Nimfa-mama [501]
56 people actually signed the declaration, but in the painting, 43.
8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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