The main impact that affected how state institutions should work after the <em>Emancipation Proclamation</em> is associated with a series of constitutional amendments promoted by the Congress ending slavery, granting citizenship, and giving black men voting rights, changing the political environment, to the point that for example, by 1872, 1,510 African Americans held office in the southern states.
By the other hand, the impact on northern culture is wide, throughout the spreading of Frederick Douglass, Wendell Phillips, and Lucy Stone ideas. Other authors like James Russell Lowell, influenced popular literature with poetry. In education, the first nation’s experiment in racially integrated coeducation with the founding of Oberlin College and Illinois’s Knox College, a western center of abolitionism are some of the most important pieces of evidence of abolitionism on American culture.
<span>The correct answer here is the last option. The settlement movement was
created in 1880s as a reformist movement whose goal was to help the poor and
improve their lives. Their plan was to this by getting the wealthy and the poor
to share an interdependent community. The settlement movement hoped to achieve
this by opening the “settlement houses” where someone from the middle class who
volunteered would live and improve the living conditions of their poorer neighbors</span>
The Jesuit order played an important role in the Counter-Reformation and eventually succeeded in converting millions around the world to Catholicism.
<span>Thaddeus Stevens' view while reconstructing the south is that it should be populated with black and white yeoman. He even opposed Abraham Lincoln reconstruction plan saying that it was too lenient and also played a huge part in removing the slavery in US. Due to the reformation steps taken in reconstruction in that period by him, it is called as radical reconstruction.</span>
Answer: A. Great Basin
The reason to support is
Historic Tribes of the Great Basin
The tribal peoples now living in the Great Basin are descendants of the people who have been in the region for several hundred to several thousand years. When early explorers first entered the Great Basin, they encountered many different groups. And although there were several distinct tribes speaking various (but closely related) languages, the basic lifestyle was similar across the region.
The native people of the Great Basin knew the land intimately and understood the natural cycles. Small family groups hunted and gathered, patterning their lives to take advantage of the diverse and abundant resources. The land provided all their nutritional needs as well as materials for clothing and shelter.
Explanation: