Answer:
As late as 1800 most slaves in the U.S. had not been converted to Christianity. In the years that followed, however, widespread Protestant Evangelicalism, emphasizing individual freedom and direct communication with God, brought about the first large-scale conversion of enslaved men and women.
Explanation:
The first one is probably correct
The last one is false I believe. Very shortly after the site was uncovered, archaeologists came to excavate it, and the year after it was discovered they started building a museum on the site. Safe to say robbers probably would've had a hard time pillaging it when the whole archaeological community had their attention fixated on it.
The Warsaw Pact<span> came to be seen as quite a potential militaristic threat, as a sign of Communist dominance, and a definite opponent to American capitalism. The signing of the </span>pact<span> became a symbol of Soviet dominance in Eastern Europe.</span>
This description fits any random British settler from the colonies. They were taught how to plant tobacco and eventually they made an entire business out of it, even kicked out Natives out of their lands so as to increase their farms.