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LenKa [72]
3 years ago
10

Who was the black male, living in Boston, who was one of the five Americans killed in the Boston Massacre?

History
1 answer:
zhenek [66]3 years ago
7 0
Crispus Attucks was an escaped slave that was killed during the Boston Massacre.

You might be interested in
Why does Hitler want to control poland?​
liraira [26]

Answer: i found this on the internet. Hope it helps :)

Eight Reasons Hitler Invaded Poland

1.   To give Germans lebensraum in Eastern Europe

He had promised this in Mein Kampf (1924) and it was one of the three CENTRAL AIMS of Hitler foreign policy.

2.   Because he thought Chamberlain would not dare stop him

Chamberlain had stood up to Hitler, remember, at Bad Godesberg during the Sudeten crisis, but had then backed down at Munich.   Hitler despised Chamberlain, and did not believe that he would dare to go to war.   So he felt able to pursue his aims in Poland despite Chamberlain's promise in March 1939 to support Poland.

3.   To defend the Germans in Poland

The reason Hitler gave was that the Poles were persecuting those Germans who lived in Poland.   (There was some truth in this.)

4.   To overturn the Treaty of Versailles

This was a second CENTRAL AIM of Hitler's foreign policy.   The Polish Corridor and Posen had been given to Poland in 1919, and Danzig had been declared a free city administered by the League of Nations.   Hitler first asked Poland to consider the position of Danzig in October 1938, immediately after Munich, and in March 1939, Hitler demanded that he be given Danzig (this was the pattern he had followed with Austria and the Sudetenland).   Did you know that in March 1939 also, Germany seized the Lithuanian port of Memel (at the northern end of East Prussia)?   When Hitler demanded Danzig in March 1939, Brauchitsch, the Commander in Chief of the German Army noted that he intended ultimately to 'knock Poland down completely', and that eventually Hitler wanted Germany's pre-WWI boundary restoring.

5.   To oppose Communism/conquer Russia

I know Poland wasn't communist, but Russia was where Hitler was eventually headed (Mein Kampf, 1924) and Poland was just another step east.   When he demanded Danzig in 1939, Hitler's proposal included a joint anti-Soviet alliance against Russia.   This was the third CENTRAL AIM of Hitler foreign policy.

6.   To teach Chamberlain a lesson

Chamberlain's guarantee of Poland on 31 March 1939 infuriated Hitler - 'I'll cook them a stew they'll choke on' - was his reaction.   From then on he was determined to destroy Poland.  So you could say he wanted to attack Poland to teach Chamberlain a lesson.

7.   To prevent an anti-German alliance

Having thought about it, he realised also that the world was beginning to gang up on him, so the next day, 1 April, his CONSIDERED reaction was this: 'if they expect Germany to sit patiently by while they create satellite States and set them against Germany, then they are mistaken'.   This is fair enough, actually, because that is exactly what Chamberlain was trying to do.   And Poland was preparing to resist Hitler, and had started mobilising its army - Hitler stated that this broke Poland's non-aggression pact with Germany [see note below].   On April 3 Hitler issued a directive to his armies - entitled 'Case White' - stating that he wished to 'destroy Polish military strength and create in the East a situation which satisfies the requirements of national defence'.   In this document, he set the date for 'Case White' - 'any time from 1 September 1939 onward.' - and told the Werhmacht to draw up a timetable.

8.   The Nazi-Soviet Pact

After April 1939, both Roosevelt and Stalin began to express concerns about Hitler's aims on Poland.   Hitler merely mocked Roosevelt, but he was worried about Stalin.   Only Stalin - and the Russian army - could have stopped Hitler taking over Poland at this point.   But the failure of the Anglo-Soviet negotiations and the Nazi-Soviet Pact of 23 August 1939 not only freed up Hitler to attack Poland, it included a secret agreement to divide Poland up between them.   In the end, Hitler invaded Poland because he had agreed to do so with Stalin.

Explanation:

HOPE THIS HELPS! :D

4 0
3 years ago
Which Chinese Revolution was one of the most massive revolutions in world history and involved the Great Leap Forward to overcom
skad [1K]
The Chinese Communist Revolution was the Chinese Revolution that was one of the most massive revolutions in world history and involved the Great Leap Forward to overcome the "backwardness" of China's culture. This great revolution was started under the leadership of Mao Zedong on 1st of October in the year 1949.
4 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Match each situation with the universal theme it represents.
Usimov [2.4K]

Answer:

since not split up im gonna show it like this

related or similar.

1 , 2 , 3 , 8 related

4 , 5 , 6 , 7 similar

Explanation:

putting number on them so it easy to understand.

1.) Someone cheers up a sad friend.

2.) Love hurts when it is not returned.

3.) Someone has a crush and gets

rejected.

4.) Feuds can last a long time.

5.) Two groups do not get along with

each other.

6.) families do not always approve.

7.) Young lovers are kept apart by their

parents.

8.) Friends help and defend each other.

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
How did the Great Famine affect Ireland in the mid-19th century?
Ulleksa [173]
B- It led to a period of large-scale emigration out of Ireland. 
3 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
How did american companies contribute to the influx of puerto rican migrants by the hundreds of thousands beginning in the 1950s
ki77a [65]

U.S. factory owners and employment agencies had begun recruiting heavily on Puerto Rico.

After 1945, economic changes transformed Puerto Rico's economy from a monocultural plantation economy into a platform for export-production in factories through what was called Operation Bootstrap. By the 1950s a growing unemployment problem left thousands of Puerto Ricans in need of a fresh start on American companies.

4 0
3 years ago
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