He changed his vote because of a letter from his mother asking him to "be a good boy" and vote for the amendment.
<u>Explanation</u>:
- Harry Thomas Burn was the youngest member of the state legislature (Tennessee General Assembly )
- He is remembered for the step taken to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment during his very first legislature.
- Even though he really intended to vote for the amendment, he was pressurized by party leaders and other misleading telegrams. He began to side with the Anti-suffragists.
- He received a letter from his mother which made him to change his mind and vote for the amendment.
- The result of the vote was a tie of 48-48, when the house speaker called for a vote on the "merits", but his vote broke the tie in favor of ratifying the amendment.
Answer:
Explanation:
It was an average day here in Massachusetts, warm and crisp, but something was wrong. There had been tell of witches roaming our country, and any suspicious actions were supposed to be reported immediately. Suddenly, a mounty came riding into town with two screaming girls. He was taking them to the town council, so I decided to follow him.
As I peeked into the window of the town hall, I heard the mounty speak about witchcraft and how he had found the young girls prancing about the wood chanting eerie songs. As I looked closer, I realized that one of the girls was my friend Mary. She would never do witchery, not ever! I heard the councilmen talk of a stake and fire. The next day, Mary was a pile of ashes on the ground.