The correct answer is A. Education teaches how to be successful in work and everyday struggles.
Explanation:
Booker T. Washington was an African American that promoted the idea African-Americans could achieve equality through education and business. This encouraged him to create the Tuskegee institute for African Americans.
In the excerpt, Booker T. Washington points out the importance of education, this occurs in "Education of some kind is the first essential of the young man, or young woman, who would lay the foundation of a career" that shows the importance of education to work or in " to secure what they deem the training that would offer them the widest range of usefulness" that shows proper training would help African Americans to have abilities in many fields, including everyday struggles, which is mention in "enduring success in the struggle of life." According to this, the problem education solves is that it "teaches how to be successful in work and everyday struggles."
It was primarily that "Miners began searching for gold in Indian lands," that caused renewed fighting between Americans and western Indians during the 1860s, although basic issues of expanded white settlement played a role as well.
South Carolina and Atlanta
The cities were burned by both the North and the South military forces. Sympathizers of the Confederacy often accused Grant of war crimes South Carolina and Atlanta were destroyed by Sherman. Much of the Industrial sections and railroads were destroyed by the retreating Confederate forces
Hahahauaaiia c is correct
Answer:
Explanation:
Separate but equal was a legal doctrine in United States constitutional law, according to which racial segregation did not necessarily violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which guaranteed "equal protection" under the law to all people. Under the doctrine, as long as the facilities provided to each race were equal, state and local governments could require that services, facilities, public accommodations, housing, medical care, education, employment, and transportation be segregated by "race", which was already the case throughout the states of the former Confederacy. The phrase was derived from a Louisiana law of 1890, although the law actually used the phrase "equal but separate"