Prior to 1820, how did eligible citizens cast their votes in elections?
<span>C.) by casting secret ballots
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Unlike today where men and women can vote regardless of race as long as they are registered voters, people in 1820 can only vote if they are white, male, have properties, and sometimes must be Protestants. These are just some of the requirements that they must meet before they can cast their vote using secret ballots.
C. The Oregon Country
The Oregon Country was acquired in June 1846, at a time of James K. Polk's term, a president characterized for his advocacy for American westward expansion
The United States' occupation of Oregon Country started in 1818 by Britain's consent. And by the 1840s, Americans outnumbered British people. In 1845, the United States tried to negotiate the division of the Oregon territory, and a year later in June, both nations finally agreed to divide the territory at the 49th parallel.
"Oregon Country" is now the American's states of Oregon, Washington, and Idaho, as well as portions of Montana and Wyoming.
It endorsed the ideas presented in the constitution.
They could've worked with Parliament like Henry VIII & Elizabeth I
Answer:
In the late 1800s, there were two inventions that changed Americans' lives, they were the telephone and the electric lighting