Answer:
communal slavery
Explanation:
The endomienda system was a system applied by the Spanish Crown in its new territories in the Americas. Through this system, certain individuals that had some accomplishments were given large amounts of land in the Americas. Apart from being granted land, they were also granted a certain group of people to work for them. The people that were granted to them had to work on their lands, and they also had to pay tribute to the owners. Even though this was not a formal way of slavery, it still can be considered a form of slavery, as the people were stripped of most of their rights, and they were in a possession of the owners of the lands, thus creating a communal slavery type.
The Treaty as you can imagine received enormous opposition. Henry Cabot Lodge and Alfred Beveridge strongly denounced the treaty, especially Article Ten which called upon the US to support League actions. Wilson campaigned vigorously and gave 37 speeches in 29 cities in a span of only three weeks. He declared that US soldiers should not have died in vain. After a dramatic speech in Colorado Wilson collapsed. His health had been poor for sic months and the strain of the trip was too much. He was rushed back to Washington and a few days later had a massive stroke. For the next year and a half he was incapable of running the government but was protected by his wife and closest advisors.
1. In March 1920 the US Senate finally killed the treaty. The United States did not ratify the Treaty of Versailles and we did not join the League of Nations. Wilson considered this a great failure and it plagued him until his death.
The correct answer is letter E) All these answers are correct. Prosperity helped many Americans to ignore the following issues: the 20 percent of Americans who lived in poverty in the 1950s, discrimination suffered by minorities, discontent of many American women in their traditional roles, and <span>discontent of returning veterans.</span>
Answer:
The Stamp Act (March 1765)
The Townshend Acts (June-July 1767)
The Boston Massacre (March 1770)
The Boston Tea Party (December 1773)
The Coercive Acts (March-June 1774)
Lexington and Concord (April 1775)
Explanation: