The correct answer is, B) bought from the store.
<em>Family farmers got things that they needed such as cloth in the mid-1800s by buying it from the store.
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In those years, people did not have enough money to have clothes for each day of the week and keep a collection in the wardrobe. Just had what they needed to use for work and something different for church on Sundays or special events. Yes, they bought it from the store as well as the things they needed. But they were frugal. The times demanded to be cautious with the money spent on things. Just the necessary.
Answer:
Great Awakening, religious revival in the British American colonies mainly between about 1720 and the 1740s. It was a part of the religious ferment that swept western Europe in the latter part of the 17th century and early 18th century, referred to as Pietism and Quietism in continental Europe among Protestants and Roman Catholics and as Evangelicalism in England under the leadership of John Wesley (1703–91).
Explanation:
After the Boston Tea Party, England became concerned that the American colonies, if allowed to rebel the way they had been, might just declare freedom for themselves. Also, the Boston Tea Party had embarrassed England. All of England's friends saw a country losing control of its subjects and England's enemies saw a struggling nation, vunerable to attack. Therefore, Parliament passed what they called the Coercive Acts. This act effectively put into place sanctions meant to punish Boston for their rebellion. One of these punishments was to close Boston Harbor. This outraged colonists everywhere, not only in Boston. Other colonies were so disgusted with England, that they secretly sent supplies and other forms of aid to Boston. The colonists disliked these acts so much that, with in the colonies, they became known as the Intolerable Acts.
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