It<span> continued to influence US economic policy for many years.
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Answer:The massacre left somewhere between 30 and 300 people dead, mostly African Americans, and destroyed Tulsa's prosperous Black neighbourhood of Greenwood, known as the “Black Wall Street.” More than 1,400 homes and businesses were burned, and nearly 10,000 people were left homeless.
Explanation:
obvious
The progress of the manufacturing industries in Texas has been that of the emblematic borderline region with its colonial economy in a slow shift from pastoral toward established economic status. The Texas region has had the superiority of rich and assorted natural resources. The geographic position inspiring the growth of population, and the expanding of transportation facilities. Consumption of these properties has come, primarily, by exporting of raw materials but progressively by manufacture in Texas into consumer’s products and semi-processed, as rail lines have been placing and deep-water ports dug, while the tide of American migration moved westward. Before the 1900 Texas manufacturing industries were of either the type that had inevitably come to the source of raw materials, such as brick manufacturing, stone cutting, lumbering, or the type that produce for the instant requests of a local market, as the milling of cornmeal and flour and the manufacture of saddlery and harness. Some industries were industrialized around the Spanish undertakings at San Antonio.
By the mid-1800s The Mason-Dixon Line was the term to describe the rough divide between free and slave states, correct me if I'm wrong please, thank you