1.) Fort Sumter. Apr 12, 1861 to Apr 13, 1861 Charleston, South Carolina, P.G.T. Beauregard and Robert Anderson. Fort Sumter was the battle that marked the beginning of the civil war. Major Robert Anderson surrendered the fort.
2.) Shiloh. Apr 6, 1862 to Apr 7, 1862 Hardin County, Tennessee. Shiloh resulted in a union victory and was the first battle with most death and suffering of a the Civil War. Commanders were Ulysses S. Grant, Albert Sidney Johnson, PGT Beauregard, and Don Carlos Buell. Union forces won.
3.)Siege of Vicksburg. Warren County, Mississippi Ulysses S. Grant, and John C. Pemberton. Ulysses S. Grant won. The union got control of the Mississippi River and shut down the confederates trade. May 18, 1963 to July 4, 1863
4.) Battle of Gettysburg. Jul 1, 1862-July 3,1863. Gettysburg, PA. Robert E. Lee, George Meade, Winfield Scott Hancock. The Union won. The significance of the battle was it was the bloodiest battle of the American civil war.
5.) Battle of cold harbor. May 31, 1864- June 3, 1864 Mechanicsville, VA. Lee's army won. Robert E. Lee, George Meade, Ulysses S. grant . A frontal assault to confederate lines.
Answer:
Check kiter.
Explanation:
What the exercise describes is a form of fraud commited with checks. The check kiter would take advantage of the float to make use of funds (that do not exist) in a bank account transforming a check in a form of unauthorized credit, like the exercise examplifies: Out of 2 accounts, you issue a check that overdraws their accout at bank 1, and then deposits a check in that account from their bank 2 to cover the first check. You "abuse" the float to make use of funds that don't exist.
Although textile mills and tobacco factories emerged in the South during this time, the plans for a New South largely failed. By 1900, per-capita income in the South was forty percent less than the national average, and rural poverty persisted across much of the South well into the twentieth century.
Answer:
<h2>To recap: currency evolved from barter, to bartering with set mediums of exchange, to coins representing exchangeable goods, to coins stamped in precious metal, to paper representing coins, to notes representing gold or silver, to being redeemable exclusively for gold, to the end of the gold standard.</h2>