Honestly they (Colonial Americans) didn't have enough soldiers but all i know is that they won the war by using different military tactics.
Like for example....
Ambush techniques (which they borrowed from the Native Americans)
and they didn't use the line of fire tactic or is it firing line?
and they knew they ways of the land that they were on compared to the British soldiers who only knew where nearest pub was in London.
That's all I know!
Its probably D because the also got help from some mercenaries and other war generals from Europe.
The fugitive slave law was meant to return slaves, who had escaped to the "free" North, back to the South. It was a compromise set up by previous agreement made most recently in 1850. The 1850 agreement was an attempt to amend slave laws, but still allow for slavery in the South, while allowing the country to further expand to the West. The North resented the law, because it denied slaves the freedom embodied in the North. The South resented it, because they saw it as their right to own slaves per the 1850, regardless of where the slaves were in the U.S. The slaves were deemed extremely necessary because of the requirement of slave labor in the vast agricultural networks in the South.
<span>Albany Plan. The Albany Plan of Union was a plan to create a unified government for the Thirteen Colonies, suggested by Benjamin Franklin, then a senior leader (age 45) and a delegate from Pennsylvania, at the Albany Congress on July 10, 1754 in Albany, New York.</span>
The correct answer is C. Increased population growth. This enabled the people to have many workers in their factories and it also enabled the England to have a large army that would go and colonize and take the resources back to England. The other things weren't that helpful.
The Missouri compromise was nullified by the Kansas-Nebraska act. This act allowed the people in each state to determine whether or not slavery would continue within their state.
Abolitionist John Brown was executed because of his attempt to seize the arsenal at Harper's Ferry. John Brown led the Harper's Ferry raid.