The action taken by the first continental was that they voted to boycott all trade with Britain until Parliament stopped taxing the colonies.
The first major accomplishment that this congress had was that they voted that all British goods be boycotted in the colonies until the intolerable acts were overturned.
They also voted not to buy British goods or sell any good from the colonies to the British. This boycott was a way of showing their many grievances to the British who were taxing, and enforcing a lot of restrictions on them.
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The first one is <u>salaried</u>, the second one is <u>a job with benefits</u> and the last one is an <u>advanced job</u>.
(really it's just logical because salaried jobs are payments that are simply fixed to one payment, Abdul clearly has benefits to his job, and if Lisa really needs degree for a job, then the job is advanced because it seems that they won't accept someone who has a degree to get them qualified for that job.)
The two Battles of Saratoga- which were fought eighteen days apart in September and October of 1777- changed the American Revolution. British General John Burgoyne was victorious over American forces -which were led by Horatio Gates and Benedict Arnold- on September 19th.
After capturing Fort Ticonderoga, the British, who were led by General John Burgoyne, moved south giving the Americans time to regroup under Horatio Gates.
General George Washington sent Benedict Arnold, Colonel Daniel Morgan and his regiment of Virginia riflemen, and two brigades of Continentals from the Hudson Highlands. Gates’s strength was improved by about sixty-five hundred men.
Burgoyne attacked the Americans a second time at Bemis Heights on October 7th, and Arnold led an attack that captured key points, forcing the British to retreat to Saratoga.
On this occasion, Burgoyne was beat and 10 days later he retreated, and the victorious Americans made the French government become their ally during the war.
Answer:
It was introduced during the investigation of the assassination of John F. Kennedy to explain what happened to the bullet that hit Kennedy in the back and exited through his throat.