He was the 11th presudent of the United States.
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Fraud from the Chicago "river vote" gave Kennedy the State of Illinois and the electoral college victory.
"Kennedy won Illinois by less than 9,000 votes out of 4.75 million cast, or a margin of two-tenths of one percent. [16] However, Nixon carried 92 of the state's 101 counties, and Kennedy's victory in Illinois came from the city of Chicago, where Mayor Richard J. Daley held back much of Chicago's vote until the late morning hours of November 9. The efforts of Daley and the powerful Chicago Democratic organization gave Kennedy an extraordinary Cook County victory margin of 450,000 votes—more than 10% of Chicago's 1960 population of 3.55 million—thus barely overcoming the heavy Republican vote in the rest of Illinois. Earl Mazo, a reporter for the pro-Nixon New York Herald Tribune, investigated the voting in Chicago and claimed to have discovered sufficient evidence of vote fraud to prove that the state was stolen for Kennedy.
Answer:
The north had a much more industrial revolutionized approach toward their lifestyle, while the south was more inclined with slave -labor. The north made a living from industrial lifestyles rapidly producing many products like textiles, sewing machines, farm equipment, and guns. Factories and railroads were very common in the north. A majority of voters in the north opposed slavery because they feared slave labor would threaten the status of free white workers and would compete with free labor.
The south was a lot more rural than the north making a living from plantations and small farms. Most of the south's economy relied on cotton. Only one third of the whole nation's population lived in the south in 1850. Free white slave owners in the south feared that if slavery was restricted, it would lead to a social and economic revolution.
Explanation: