. After being elected as the thirty-second president of the United States in 1932, he used his new home at Warm Springs, "The Little White House," as a retreat from the rigors of leading a nation through the Great Depression. He died there in 1945. To a generation of west Georgians, he was both the president and a trusted friend who could be seen waving as he passed by in his convertible or rode by in a train on his way to the nation's capital.
Answer:
Deborah Sampson
- She enlisted as a soldier in the Revolutionary War, pretending to be a man. She fought in four major battles till she was wounded, and it was discovered that she was a woman.
Margret Corbin- Took over firing a cannon after her husband was killed in battle - was hit by enemy fire herself.
Mary Hayes- Became known as Molly Pitcher for bringing the soldiers water while under fire. She too would take her husband’s place at a cannon
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Anne Marie Lane- pretended to be male and fought in the Continental Army.
Mercy Otis Warren- Wrote a play about the British who were blockading Boston. The play helped to turn some that were initially Loyalists into Patriots.
Phylis Wheatley- Became the first African American woman, and the first enslaved, to publish a book of Patriotic poetry
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Abigail Adams- Worked behind the scenes to try to gain more rights for women and for the enslaved.
Hannah Blair- had a farm in NC where she would hide patriots and supply them with food and medical care
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TOOK SOO LONG TO FIND OUT!! HOPE IT HELPS!!
Answer:
50-90%
Explanation:
The exact number is unknown but most of them died of dieses
Civil liberties are protections against government actions. For example, the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights guarantees citizens the right to practice whatever religion they please. Government, then, cannot interfere in an individual's freedom of worship.