<span>Tensions in the region started rising in 1863, when John Bozeman blazed the Bozeman Trail, a new route for emigrants traveling to the Montana gold fields. Bozeman’s trail was of questionable legality since it passed directly through hunting grounds that the government had promised to the Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapahoe in the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851. Thus when Colorado militiamen murdered more than two hundred peaceful Cheyenne during the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864, the Indians began to take revenge by attacking whites all across the Plains, including the emigrants traveling the Bozeman Trail. The U.S. government responded by building a series of protective forts along the trail; the largest and most important of these was Fort Phil Kearney, erected in 1866 in north-central Wyoming.</span>
Answer:
Canada's entry into the Cold War came with the disclosure in 1946 of a spy ring led by Igor Gouzenko. Involvement in NATO and support for the UN led Canada to be an active participant in the Korean War in 1949. In 1949, the Soviet Union detonated its first atomic bomb, and the age of superpowers was launched.
Answer:
New England
Explanation:
During the American Revolutionary War around 1777, coupled with the addition of about eight thousand support from Canada.
The British government in their attempt to win the war under the advice of John Burgoyne declared that his armies could seize and take over the Hudson River.
Thereby isolate New England from the other colonies. This is in the hope that General William Howe would lay a great assault in Philadelphia.
Well, during this time period the Spanish, English and the French - among others - sought out to get three things; God, Gold and Glory ( known as the three G's). God was the spread of Christianity and other sub-religions of the anglican church. Gold, was the need and want for money. And glory stated the desire of power and dominance over the New World.
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Answer:
Congress´s plan contained the KKK Acts of 1870 and 1871 which impughed the KKK.