1. Battle of Trenton. In the Battle of Trenton, Washington defeated a formidable garrison of Hessian mercenaries before withdrawing. A week later he returned to Trenton to lure British forces south, then executed a daring night march to capture Princeton on January 3rd.
2. The Battle of Saratoga. The Battle of Saratoga occurred in September and October, 1777, during the second year of the American Revolution. It included two crucial battles, fought eighteen days apart, and was a decisive victory for the Continental Army and a crucial turning point in the Revolutionary War.
3. The Arrival of Adm. DeGrasse’s Fleet. Washington had long planned to assault the main British force occupying New York City, but French Gen. Rochambeau felt it was a foolhardy plan. Instead he convinced French Adm. DeGrasse to bring his fleet to the Chesapeake. Once Washington received news that DeGrasse was on the way to the Chesapeake, he changed plans and marched his army south, along with Rochambeau’s 5,000 French troops to confront the British under Gen. Cornwallis at Yorktown. The arrival of the French fleet kept the British fleet at bay and prevented Cornwallis from evacuating by sea.
4. The Siege of Yorktown. Siege of Yorktown, (September 28–October 19, 1781), joint Franco-American land and sea campaign that entrapped a major British army on a peninsula at Yorktown, Virginia, and forced its surrender. The siege virtually ended military operations in the American Revolution.
5. The arrivals of Lafayette and von Steuben. Though a number of foreign officers joined the American side, non were more important to the American cause than Marie Paul Joseph, Marquis de Lafayette and Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben. Lafayette, though only 19 years old when he arrived, proved to be a brave and able battlefield commander and was popular among the men and officers. Von Steuben was an undistinguished, mid-level Prussian army officer and mercenary who came to the US, possibly to escape debt. Yet he brought with him Prussian discipline and a textbook knowledge of European drills and battlefield tactics including use of the bayonet. During the winter of 1777–78 he trained the Continental troops at Valley Forge, instilling a level of discipline unseen in the American army.
<u><em>Mixed capitalism
</em></u>
It refers to an economic model that uses the market to allocate resources, but in which the State intervenes to regulate its operation, incorporates elements of the free market economy and the planned economy, or a proposal in which property coexists deprived of capitalism and the collective property of socialism (in general, and not exclusively, state or public) in order to include broader social considerations in an economic system, for example, ethics, social justice, social welfare, sustainable management of environment, etc.
Answer: I would have to say either A or C, im a little more confident in C tho :)
Explanation: Brainliest is awlays helpful
OPTIONS:
A.Germany was stepping up its efforts to stop goods from reaching the Allies.
B.Germany’s U-boat attacks were mostly ineffective in early 1917.
C.Germany was tired of the war and wanted to reach peace with the Allies.
D.Germany was seeking to maintain the Atlantic Ocean as German territory
Answer:
A.Germany was stepping up its efforts to stop goods from reaching the Allies.
Explanation:
The best conclusion that can be drawn from the graph above which shows the results of the warfare involving the German submarine in 1917, is <em>A) “Germany was stepping up its efforts to stop goods from reaching the Allies.”</em>
One of the tactics the Germans took in other to be at advantage against the opposition and the allies, was to ensure goods being shipped are prevented from reaching their destination by sinking them with the submarines. The deployment of submarines in the warfare led to more losses incurred in goods being shipped, as shown in the graph attached below.