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Digiron [165]
4 years ago
8

What is the sugar act

History
1 answer:
Lynna [10]4 years ago
3 0

It's the act where the british placed a tax on sugar. There's also the stamp act and I think there was a tea act not sure though.

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How might the Knights of Labor have developed if its members had admitted belonging to the union?
castortr0y [4]
The answer is A. The appropriate response is letter A. The Knights of Labor's organizer was Uriah Stevens. At to begin with, the Knights of Labor was a mystery association, yet Terence Powderly finished the gathering's mystery after expecting control of the association in 1879. Enrollment developed rapidly, achieving around 700,000 individuals by 1886. 

The Knights advanced the social and social inspire of the workingman, rejected communism and political agitation, requested the eight-hour day, and advanced the makers ethic of republicanism. At times it went about as a worker's party, consulting with managers, yet it was never efficient, and after a quick development in the mid-1880s, it abruptly lost its new individuals and turned into a little operation again.
6 0
3 years ago
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As a result of British -Hindu conspiracy on the eve of independence the state of Pakistan which ultimately emerged in August 194
Soloha48 [4]

Answer:

here you go!

Explanation:

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7 0
3 years ago
Try to zoom out or in if cant see well​
dolphi86 [110]

Answer:

I'd assume B

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Biographies would tell you the life story of how they lived their life, which could give a rough idea of how their communities were.

4 0
4 years ago
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How did Americans’ fears shape their opinions, attitudes, debates, and, ultimately, their actions? Did these change over time in
leva [86]

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Americans fears shape the whole wide world

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oh yes they did

8 0
3 years ago
What fundamental difference between the two parties made partisan politics so fiercely contested in the gilded age?
Xelga [282]
I believe this difference had to do with <span>religious values and cultural differences.
The two parties definitely couldn't see eye to eye because of their cultural, as well as religious differences. This is the reason why they fought so hard to win, which made their competition a fierce one during the Gilded Age in the 1920s and 1930s.
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