Supporters of the temperance movement advocated for Prohibition mainly because they believed drinking was the most important cause of society’s problems.
The <em>temperance movement</em>, formed primarily by <em>Christian denominations</em>, had spread the idea that alcohol was the major cause of the problems that American society was facing. They blamed alcohol for the increasing rate of crime, poverty, violence and the spreading of illnesses. For this reason, they became the main promoters of the Prohibition Act.
<span>They prompted a mass preparation for the war effort even before they joined the war effort. Production was high and everyone was making weapons and supplies that they were using to help the allies, but they were also preparing for the War which the United States officially joined after the Pearl Harbor attack.</span>
<u>a. Lost Generation</u>
Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) was an American writer, famous for her literary and artistic judgments, and her home in Paris that was a salon for the leading artists and writers of the period between WW I and II. Many of those who attended her home were middle-age American writers, mostly expatriated, whose values were no longer relevant in the postwar era. Many of them found themselves disoriented and deeply disillusioned by World War I and its outcome. And Stein started to call them "Lost Generation".
Answer:
He led other runaway slaves on the long perilous trek to freedom along the Underground Railroad. It was reported that he helped some 200 slaves.
Explanation:
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