Many Southerners felt slavery was an economic necessity. Many Northerners felt that slavery was morally wrong. Northern factories wanted tariffs to help their industry which hurt Southerners buying goods in Europe with their cotton exports. When Calhoun wanted to nullify the tariff, Andrew Jackson said he would bring in the US Army to stop him. The Missouri Compromise was done to keep the number of slave and free states equal. These were band aids to keep the country <span>together and worked until 1861, when South Carolina seceded from the Union.</span>
The answer is <span>the Ecole de Fontainebleau. This mentions to
two periods of creative production in France for the duration of the late </span>Renaissance positioned on
the imperial Château de
Fontainebleau, that were vital in establishing the French variety of Northern Mannerism.
#1 - Fluffy the dog in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone is relevent to the guard dog of the underworld called Cerberus.
#2 - The scar on Harry Potter's forehead resembles the Greek god Zeus.
#3 - Fluffy and Cerberus both fell asleep due to music.
#4 - Hermione has the same name as the Greek daughter of King Menelaus of Sparta and Helen of Troy.
#5 - The hippocampus does show up in Harry Potter and Greek mythology pulling the greek god Poseidon's chariot.
#6 - Argus, the caretaker of Hogwarts, has the same name as the Hundred-eyed one, who is also named Argus.
#7 - Greek gods have a nimbus, not a broom, but a cloud
#8 - Harry meets a sphinx in the Goblet of Fire, and answers it's riddle, Oedipus solved a sphinxes riddle in greek mythology.
#9 - Minerva McGonagall's first name is the same as Greek goddess Athena's roman name.
#10 - Centaurs are top-half human and bottom-half horse, and they show up in Harry Potter (In the Forbidden Forest) and in Greek mythology.
There you go... You now have ten things that are connections between Harry Potter and Greek mythology.
To give rights and freedom to all America’s citizens.
<span>A)availability of railroads to transport crops
</span>Availability of railroads to transport crops <span>was not a factor in making cotton a risky crop to grow, even if such availability makes easier to gain from the crops, the cotton was a risky crop because it is very delicate and environmental factors such as drought or insect infestation could easily kill the plant, making the investment worthless.</span>