The correct option is "the national currency was too weak"
While the Southerners resigned their seats in the Senate and the House of Representatives, secession allowed the Republicans to approve proposals that had been blocked by the Southern senators before the war. Among these laws that were approved highlighted the Morrill Act, through which the important iron industry was protected; the Homestead Act, according to which all free citizens who applied for 160 acres of land not yet worked from the territories outside the Thirteen Colonies would be granted; the construction of a transcontinental railroad; the National Banking Act, with which the use of the national currency was developed and the Law of Legal Course of 1862, which authorized the use of bank notes. Fees on income to finance the war were also approved with the Tax Act.
False because others had shios and other things under water to destroy things
Answer: All I know is that president james madison tried hard to avoid war against Britain, until he declared war to britain.
The correct answer is A, as both the Chisholm Trail and the Goodnight-Loving Trail are two prominent examples of cattle trails heading out of Texas.
The Chisholm Trail was, in the second half of the nineteenth century in the United States of America, one of the many trails traced by hunters and cattle traders that allowed to reach the central states of the Union starting from Texas (where the railways had not yet reached), that is to transport the animals destined for consumption on the east coast of the United States, to the main railway junctions, already existing further north, in the central states. One of the hunters in question took the name of the trail: Jesse Chisholm, a half-breed Cherokee who traded habitually with the natives and had created with them some points of exchange and commerce along the way.
The Goodnight Loving Trail was a herd path in the United States for the cattle drive from Texas and New Mexico to the loading yards in the north.
The trail was particularly used in the late 1860s, to lead large herds of Texas Longhorn cattle from pasture in the south of Texas to Colorado. It was named after the cattle breeders Charles Goodnight and Oliver Loving, who drove their first common flock along this route in 1866.