When First Nations came into contact with European settlers and explorers, the first people they met were often traders and missionaries. Many of the first Europeans to come to Canada wanted to set up trading networks. ... European missionaries also came to Canada and tried to convert native people to Christianity.
As various European imperial powers settled on the new continent of North America, their conflicts became transatlantic. The Anglo-Dutch Wars were primarily over trade supremacy. ... Britain and France fought four wars: King William's War, Queen Anne's War, King George's War, and the French and Indian War.
Competition for control of territory and resources in North America led to conflicts among colonizing powers. National rivalries spurred the powerful European countries to make land claims and to exploit the resources of the Western Hemisphere.
The French, British, and Iroquois. Conflicts between the French and the British began to arise after 1664, when the British captured the colony of New Amsterdam from the Dutch. The Dutch struggled to regain control of New Amsterdam, but they were permanently driven from North America by 1675.
Happy Thanksgiving uwu!!
The correct answer is: <u>all of these</u>, as all of the options provided are correct.
Even though at the beginning automobiles were considered a luxury, as they started to be mass produced they became more affordable. Also, some <u>changes were made</u> to cars that made them <em>cheaper to produce</em>, so even the <u>average American could afford to own a vehicle</u>.
New businesses were created because the automobile industry grew. Even the government was involved with the <em>Federal Highway Act of 1921.</em> More <u>gas stations</u> were opened to supply the increasing demand for fuel, motels began to appear in long-distance routes to shelter travellers on the road. <u>Fast food restaurants or diners</u> began to appear, offering travellers cheap and fast food so they could be on their way rapidly.
Suburbs became popular, as people didn't need to live closer to their jobs and had a comfortable and fast way of transportation to pick up their children or do the shopping.
The most important advantage in the north was the industrialization. This was the most important because weapons and other equipment were easier to manufacture.
The most important advantage of the south was that they were fighting on their land, so it was familiar to them. This was the most important because the southerners were in a space that they knew/could navigate better.
Answer:
Survey Map of Oklahoma and Indian Territory showing distances, municipal towns, and post offices, published by George Cram, 1902 Most of the land that is now Oklahoma was acquired by the United States in 1803 as part of the Louisiana Purchase. In the 1830s, the U.S. used the land to relocate Indian tribes and the Indian Territory was formed from the land set aside by the Indian Intercourse Act of 1834. The Indian Territory originally extended beyond present-day Oklahoma, but the size was gradually reduced over the course of the 19th century. In 1889 Congress authorized the opening land seized from the Indian Territory for homestead settlement, and a year later Congress passed an act that officially created the Oklahoma Territory. RG 233, Records of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Explanation: First page of the Joint Statehood Convention, Oklahoma City, July 12, 1905 Although the Oklahoma and Indian Territories had sufficient population to be admitted as separate states, Congress insisted that the territories would only be granted statehood as a single, combined state. As a result, delegates representing the citizens of the Indian and Oklahoma Territories met in Oklahoma City for a joint statehood convention. They outlined their reasons for statehood—they had sufficient land area, population, resources and character—and drafted a petition to Congress which was presented on March 7, 1906 and ordered printed. RG 233, Records of the U.S. House of Representatives HR 12707, A Bill to enabling the people of the Indian and Oklahoma Territories to form a state constitution and State government, January 20, 1906 The Oklahoma statehood bill, as originally introduced to the House, also included the admission of New Mexico and Arizona as one state. RG 233, Records of the U.S. House of Representatives