The correct answer is:
C) Force Native American Indians to give up their traditional cultures.
The Dawes Act (1887) allowed the President of the United States to examine Native American tribal land and split it into allotments for specific Native Americans. Those who endured allotments and lived apart from the tribe would be awarded United States citizenship. The Dawes Act would later be amended in 1891, in 1898 by the Curtis Act, and again in 1906 by the Burke Act.
Answer:
I can't see the questions that well, maybe if you comment all the questions from the book i can try to help
Explanation:
if you can comment the questions i might be able to answer them better
Answer:
Explanation:
O senhor João VI de Portugal diretamente não se juntaria ao bloqueio continental. Em 1793, Portugal marcou um acordo de ajuda compartilhada com a Inglaterra. A população portuguesa se levantou contra os invasores franceses, com a assistência da força armada inglesa sob Arthur Wellesley, mais tarde primeiro duque de Wellington.
I believe the answer is c
Answer:
I guess
Explanation:
Federalist Party
historical political party, United States
Alternate titles: Federal Party
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BY The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica | View Edit History
Federalist Party, early U.S. national political party that advocated a strong central government and held power from 1789 to 1801, during the rise of the country’s political party system. The term federalist was first used in 1787 to describe the supporters of the newly written Constitution, who emphasized the federal character of the proposed union. Between October 1787 and August 1788, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison wrote a series of 85 essays that appeared in various New York newspapers attributed to the pseudonym “Publius.” The Federalist papers (formally The Federalist), as the combined essays are called, were written to combat Anti-Federalism and to persuade the public of the necessity of the Constitution.The Federalist papers stressed the need for an adequate central government and argued that the republican form of government easily could be adapted to the large expanse of territory and widely divergent interests found in the United States. The essays were immediately recognized as the most powerful defense of the new Constitution.