<span>"Tobacco" was the most important to the economic success of Jamestown, and in many ways it was the only economic success of Jamestown, which would have failed without it.
</span>
Abigail's attitude about the colonial boycott was "she was willing to use her own resources to support the boycott." Abigail Adams (1744-1818) always supported his husband John Adams and was an active female in the Revolution times.
James K. Polk was the 11th president of the United States Of America he was a chef lieutenant and served in the Bank war and was even a speaker at some point then was nominated for vice president.
Answer:
The answer Is :
B.the director of the Environmental Protection Agency, the chairperson of the Council on Environmental Quality, and the secretary of energy
This is becasue there are different people in the caste group that work with the president. This is the Council that works with the president in the caste group
On March 1, 1917, the American public learned about a German proposal to ally with Mexico if the United States entered the war. Months earlier, British intelligence had intercepted a secret message from German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmermann to the Mexican government, inviting an alliance (along with Japan) that would recover the southwestern states Mexico lost to the U.S. during the Mexican War of 1846-47.
The secret to the British interception began years earlier. In 1914, with war imminent, the British had quickly dispatched a ship to cut Germany’s five trans-Atlantic cables and six underwater cables running between Britain and Germany. Soon after the war began, the British successfully tapped into overseas cable lines Germany borrowed from neutral countries to send communications. Britain began capturing large volumes of intelligence communications.
British code breakers worked to decrypt communication codes. In October of 1914, the Russian admiralty gave British Naval Intelligence (known as Room 40) a copy of the German naval codebook removed from a drowned German sailor’s body from the cruiser SMS Magdeburg. Room 40 also received a copy of the German diplomatic code, stolen from a German diplomat’s luggage in the Near East. By 1917, British Intelligence could decipher most German messages.