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mart [117]
3 years ago
8

The sinking of which passenger ship angered President Wilson?

Social Studies
1 answer:
nadya68 [22]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

4. Lusitania

Explanation:

The Sinking of the Passenger Liner Lusitania, which carried 128 American passengers, angered President Wilson, for Germany broke their promise of not sinking any ships with Americans in it. However, the Germans, in saying that the ship was carrying military equipment (which makes it a plausible target), was technically a war ship, and can be sinked, without breaking any maritime laws.

~

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Why did planters enact the Black Codes into law?
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Answer:

plz give me BRAINLIEST answer

Explanation:

The Black Codes, sometimes called Black Laws, were laws governing the conduct of African Americans (free and freed blacks). The best known of them were passed in 1865 and 1866 by Southern states, after the American Civil War, in order to restrict African Americans' freedom, and to compel them to work for low wages. Although Black Codes existed before the Civil War and many Northern states had them, it was the Southern U.S. states that codified such laws in everyday practice. In 1832, James Kent wrote that "in most of the United States, there is a distinction in respect to political privileges, between free white persons and free coloured persons of African blood; and in no part of the country do the latter, in point of fact, participate equally with the whites, in the exercise of civil and political rights."[1]

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Before the war, Northern states that had prohibited slavery also enacted laws similar to the slave codes and the later Black Codes: Connecticut, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,[2] and New York enacted laws to discourage free blacks from residing in those states. They were denied equal political rights, including the right to vote, the right to attend public schools, and the right to equal treatment under the law. Some of the Northern states, those which had them, repealed such laws around the same time that the Civil War ended and slavery was abolished by constitutional amendment.

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