Are there any choices to this question
<span>The person who most strongly influenced humane reforms for the mentally ill in the United States was Dorothea Dix, who lived from 1802 until 1887. Dorothea Dix was a school teacher from Maine who struggled at times with her own physical and mental health. This may have contributed to her becoming compassionate towards others who struggled with mental illness. In her lifetime, she founded over 30 hospitals dedicated to the treatment of mentally ill patients. She challenged a prevailing mindset of her day that people with mental illness could not be helped or improved. She was an advocate for the humane treatment of those in mental hospitals. At the time, common practices towards mentally ill patients included neglect, malnutrition, caging them like animals, and physically restraining them in such a way as to cause pain. Overall, Dorothea Dix spent 40 years lobbying the United States Congress to establish state hospitals for the mentally ill. She worked tirelessly to change how society views the mentally ill and to advocate for laws providing proper treatment for these individuals.</span>
Answer:
*It should be Denmark Vesey not Denmark Veset*
He was accused and convicted of being the leader of "the rising," a potentially major slave revolt which was scheduled to take place in the city on July 14, as well as mounting a planned insurrection where slaves would rise in the middle of the night, murder their masters by slitting their throats, burn the city, and then mount their escape by sailing from the harbor in Charleston to the black republic of Haiti.
President Roosevelt saw support from the Allies involved in World War II
increase due to his strong victory during the 1940 Presidential
election, where he easily defeated Wendell Willkie