Answer:
In both the New England and Chesapeake regions, English colonists established settler colonies based on agriculture, in contrast to French trading posts in Canada. These settlements were based on some form of agriculture and had some measure of self-sufficiency, especially in New England. For example, permanent settlements were established at both Jamestown in the Chesapeake and Boston in Massachusetts Bay. The economies of the New England and Chesapeake colonies were very different. The New England colonies had a more diverse economy which included shipping, lumber, and export of food crops. On the other hand, the Chesapeake colonies' economy focused almost exclusively on the production and export of tobacco and a few other cash crops. This focus on cash crops fostered a need for slave labor in the Chesapeake. As a result, more enslaved Africans went to the Chesapeake than New England. The New England climate and terrain was not suitable for growing cash crops like tobacco. A plantation economy did not develop in New England because plantation crops would not grow. In the Chesapeake, however, the soil, weather, and flat terrain were excellent for tobacco growing. Had the climate of Virginia been more similar to Connecticut, it’s reasonable to say the two colonies would have been very similar. The sharp contrast in the climates and terrain accounts for much of the difference in the development of the two regions.
This term also referred to as westward expansion means to move further westward into America from original states such as Virgina and Pennsylvania into states such as California and the Dakota's
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states' rights.
The issue of slavery brought up a lot about the issues of states' rights, the South supported things like nullification and slavery becoming legal in the territories. So slavery, which was so key to the South was fought for by fighting for "states' rights".
A) The government could not issue more currency than it had gold.
As the U.S. was coming to an economic crisis, by 1929 people didn't trust any financial institution anymore and the atmosphere was filled with high speculations about the value of the American currency and other nations' in the near future. As a result, people began to hoard more gold, the strongest asset, its demand increased sharply as well as its prince, and the government could not issue more currency than it had gold.