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stiv31 [10]
4 years ago
11

Name three sounds Riis describes in the tenements. Please help me

History
2 answers:
statuscvo [17]4 years ago
7 0
What hardships do tenement - dwellers face? do you know of something similar today?

Alex73 [517]4 years ago
4 0
I believe that the answer to the question provided above are :

1. Silence of the night
2. Chirping of Crickets 
3. the sound of the wind
Hope my answer would be a great help for you.    If you have more questions feel free to ask here at Brainly.
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How did world war ii change life for many women and african americans?
LiRa [457]
For African Americans, it made jobs available because businesses were booming and a very small percentage of black fought in the war

For women, it allowed women to join the work force

hope i helped ^-^
6 0
3 years ago
Why did Calais landing seem logistically sound to the Germans?
vova2212 [387]
The Germans thought Calais was the likely landing site for an Allied invasion because the Allies made them think that's what they were planning.

The Allies employed various strategies, code named "Operation Fortitude," which were intended to deceive the Germans in advance of the planned Normandy invasion.  They built up phony infrastructure for possible invasions, on at Calais just across the English Channel, another as a northern incursion via Norway.  They also leaked phony intelligence reports that would find their way into German hands.  So Calais seemed logistically sound not only because it was directly across the Channel from Allied positions in Britain, but because the Allies were wanting the Germans to think that was a possible plan they were making.  The deception was meant to give the actual invasion at Normandy a better chance for success. 
8 0
4 years ago
What system allowed workers to move to the colonies by paying their passage in return for a promise to work?
nekit [7.7K]
Indentured servitude

This was the process that allowed those wh couldnt afford to go were allowed to work for passage... It was somewhat like slavery though.
4 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
what was the name for a group of german towns who’s people worked to encourage trade in their regions
nirvana33 [79]

They were called the 'Hansa Towns'

8 0
3 years ago
What should be done to prevent the institution of slavery returning to the U.S.?
svet-max [94.6K]

Answer:

When the American colonies broke from England, the Continental Congress asked Thomas Jefferson to write the Declaration of Independence. In the declaration, Jefferson expressed American grievances and explained why the colonists were breaking away. His words proclaimed America’s ideals of freedom and equality, which still resonate throughout the world.

Yet at the time these words were written, more than 500,000 black Americans were slaves. Jefferson himself owned more than 100. Slaves accounted for about one-fifth of the population in the American colonies. Most of them lived in the Southern colonies, where slaves made up 40 percent of the population.

Many colonists, even slave holders, hated slavery. Jefferson called it a “hideous blot” on America. George Washington, who owned hundreds of slaves, denounced it as “repugnant.” James Mason, a Virginia slave owner, condemned it as “evil.”

But even though many of them decried it, Southern colonists relied on slavery. The Southern colonies were among the richest in America. Their cash crops of tobacco, indigo, and rice depended on slave labor. They weren’t going to give it up.

The first U.S. national government began under the Articles of Confederation, adopted in 1781. This document said nothing about slavery. It left the power to regulate slavery, as well as most powers, to the individual states. After their experience with the British, the colonists distrusted a strong central government. The new national government consisted solely of a Congress in which each state had one vote.

With little power to execute its laws or collect taxes, the new government proved ineffective. In May 1787, 55 delegates from 12 states met in Philadelphia. (Rhode Island refused to send a delegation.) Their goal was to revise the Articles of Confederation. Meeting in secret sessions, they quickly changed their goal. They would write a new Constitution. The outline of the new government was soon agreed to. It would have three branches — executive, judiciary, and a two-house legislature.

A dispute arose over the legislative branch. States with large populations wanted representation in both houses of the legislature to be based on population. States with small populations wanted each state to have the same number of representatives, like under the Articles of Confederation. This argument carried on for two months. In the end, the delegates agreed to the “Great Compromise.” One branch, the House of Representatives, would be based on population. The other, the Senate, would have two members from each state.

Part of this compromise included an issue that split the convention on North–South lines. The issue was: Should slaves count as part of the population? Under the proposed Constitution, population would ultimately determine three matters:

(1) How many members each state would have in the House of Representatives.

(2) How many electoral votes each state would have in presidential elections.

(3) The amount each state would pay in direct taxes to the federal government.

constitutional convention

In 1787 after months of debate, delegates signed the new Constitution of the United States. (Wikimedia Commons)

Explanation:

https://www.crf-usa.org/black-history-month/the-constitution-and-slavery

4 0
3 years ago
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