African Americans Settle in Fort Mose<span>. The first African Americans came to Florida in the late 1500s. The Europeans brought them here from Africa. Most were enslaved in the British Colonies, but there were some free Africans who settled in </span>St. Augustine<span>.</span>
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.
Answer:
D. Paul Robeson's stand made him more popular thank Jackie Robinson
Explanation:
Paul Robeson was a stage actor and an American artist. He was well known all over the world because of his cultural accomplishments as well as his political activism. He was a public champion in the socialist experiment in the Soviet Union which created hope and dreams among the black people around the world. He was well known and became a public face when there was injustice and discrimination against the black people in the constitution. His stand political stand made him more popular than Jackie Robinson.
The American economy had yet to fully recover from Great Depression when the United States was drawn into world war ll in December 1941 because of this agonizingly slow recovery the entire decade of the 1930s in the United States is often referred to as the Great Depression