The sharecropper has to work on the owners land and whatever crops they harvest has to be given to the owner in return for the use of the landowners items.
A difficulty that had to be overcome during the building of the Transcontinental railroad was Native raiding on work camps.
Answer:
No, they won't since isreal was palestine and for palestinien people isreal government stole if they don't give it back then what's the point of peace? It wasn't theres in the first place they should give it back palestinien people won't accept the fact that someone is stealing land kicking them for there houses and mocking them (like they did when they burned the aqsa mosque) and they won't just forget about all the innocent people that died because of war that isreal started there won't be peace until free palestine is backwards
<h3>13. Correct answer choice is:</h3><h2>D. Began violently and remained violent as the natives ruled over the colonists.</h2>
Explanation:
The Southern Colonies relationship with the Native Americans were at conflict when the English established in Jamestown, in 1670. Indians were compelled to transmit half of their estate till the general of the Powhaten Tribe prosecuted a battle between them. The Indians almost cleaned out all of the colonists because of seizures and illnesses from the water, but fortunately Captain John Smith endeavored to trade with the Indians for food and freindship with them. Later further colonists arrived from England, they began to take Indians as slaves. The colonists inslaved more Native Americans than anyone other. The Native Americans were used as menials and had to do work nearby the masters home and had to produce rice and other cash products. All of these bestow the realtionship between the Native Americans.
<h3>14. Correct answer choice is:</h3><h2>D. Based on trade and diplomacy at first, but increased violence as English population grew.
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Explanation:
By 1640 the British had rooted colonies settled along the New England coast and the Chesapeake Bay. In between were the Dutch and the small Swedish population. To the westward were the aboriginal Americans, the Indians.
Seldom favorable, seldom unfriendly, the Eastern societies were no more immigrants to the Europeans. Although Native Americans profited from passage to new technology and business, the illness and dryness for land which the initial immigrants also began posed a severe difficulty to the Indian's long-established style of living.