I assume you have choices for this question? Anyway, working-class women during that era weren't exempted from factory work. They worked mainly in factories of textile, piecework, and coal mine industries. It was extra tiring for working-class women because after a hard day's work at the factories, they are faced with household duties and child care.
<span>states could require separate accommodations on trains, in schools, and the like, for blacks and whites as long as the accommodations were equal</span>
Give your government teacher a call for help. Asking the internet to do your work isn't going to help you learn these topics and you can't use brainly on the state test in the spring.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
What is Jefferson's attitude towards native Americans?
The attitude of US President Thomas Jefferson towards Native American Indian tribes was ambivalent. Sometimes he publicly expressed his respect for Native American Indians and felt sorry about their situation, but on the other hand, he knew that he had to move them away to allow white settlers to occupy their territories to work the land.
That was exactly his conflicting thoughts about them. How to move them west the Mississippi to allow white people to settle in those lands and make them productive.
After the Lewis and Clark Expedition in 1806, Jefferson was convinced that those territories had to be given to white settlers to make profits.