D it was a draw but showed the colonist could stand their ground when it came to the war
The answer to your question would be C.
The events of the Revolution and the birth of the new American republic were the ideal climate for American and British cartoonists. Among these are four artists, Paul Revere, William Humphreys, William Charles and Henry Pelham. Their engravings exalted anti-British sentiments and patriotic sentiments at the same time, portraying, for example, the so-called Bloody Massacre in King Street in Boston. Just as today, the caricatures of that time, graciously and mockingly represented the feelings of the people about the violent political changes.
The Supreme Court asserted that it has the right to declare laws of Congress unconstitutional.
It was sort of a roundabout way in which the principle of judicial review was asserted by the Supreme Court in the case of Marbury v. Madison. William Marbury had been appointed Justice of the Peace for the District of Columbia by outgoing president John Adams -- one of a number of such last-minute appointments made by Adams. When Thomas Jefferson came into office as president, he directed his Secretary of State, James Madison, not to deliver many of the commission papers for appointees such as Marbury. Marbury petitioned the Supreme Court directly to hear his case, as a provision of the Judiciary Act of 1789 had made possible. The Court said that particular provision of the Judiciary Act was in conflict with Article III of the Constitution, and so they could not issue a specific ruling in Marbury's case (which they believe he should have won). But the bottom line was, the Court had taken up the right of judicial review by calling out a portion of the Judiciary Act of 1789 as unconstitutional.
This period was known as the baby boom, and this generation is still referred to as the "baby boomers," this being because there was a huge increase in the birth rate as people returned home from the war.