The Port of Catoosa is located near the homonymous city of Catoosa, Rogers County, Oklahoma. It is called the Tulsa Port of Catoosa because it is located within the municipality of Tulsa. It opened at the end of 1970 and, apart from being the largest port in Oklahoma, it is one of the largest inland river-ports in the United States. The port is the starting point of the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System (named after the two senators that were able to secure the funding to build it), which runs through the states of Oklahoma and Arkansas to the Mississippi River, covering a distance of 445 miles. The system was built by and is managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The port serves manufacturing companies, mostly from the oil and gas industry, as well as the agricultural sector.
Answer:
i study history and threw this together quick hope it works
Explanation:
The mass execution of Jewish people shocked me! Germany was at war. why did a harmless race get singled out and murdered?
I was surprised at how many people took part in the holocaust not just the Germans.
Answer:
1) Pardons would be granted to those taking a loyalty oath
2)No pardons would be available to high Confederate officials
and persons owning property valued in excess of $20,000
3)A state needed to abolish slavery before being readmitted
4)A state was required to repeal its secession ordinance before
being readmitted.
5)High Confederate officials and military leaders were to be
temporarily excluded from the process
6)When one tenth of the number of voters who had participated
in the 1860 election had taken the oath within a particular state,
then that state could launch a new government and elect
representatives to Congress.
D. The British navy won the Battle of New Orleans early in the war.
It was actually the American army that won the Battle of New Orleans.
Segregation was okay as long as everything was " seperate but equal".
Though, Plessy and Jim Crow did give the NAACP and other black groups something specific to fight against later for equality (Brown vs. the Board of Ed.)