The settlers in the mountains region, the wealthy plantation owners and the people living on the coast would have been most likely to support seccession in North Carolina. Yeoman farmers were non-slave farmers, and abolitionists were against slavery.
In 1860, North Carolina was a slave state, with a population of slaves comprising approximately one third of the population, a smaller proportion than many southern states. The state refused to join the Confederate States of America until President Abraham Lincoln insisted that he invade his "brother" state, South Carolina. The state was a place of few battles, but it provided 125,000 soldiers to the Confederate States of America, much more than any other state. About 40,000 of those troops never returned to their homes, some died of illness, because of injuries caused on the battlefield and deprivation. Elected in 1862, Governor Zebulon Baird Vance sought to maintain state autonomy against the President of the Confederate States of America Jefferson Davis in Richmond, Virginia.
Even after the secession, some people of North Carolina refused to support the Confederate States. This happened, mainly, in the case of those who did not own slaves for agriculture in the western mountains of the state and the Piedmont region. Some of these farmers remained neutral during the war, while some, undercover, supported the Union during the conflict. Even so, the troops of the Confederate States of America from all over North Carolina served in virtually all the great battles of the Army of Northern Virginia. The biggest battle in North Carolina was in Bentonville, a vain attempt on the part of the Confederate general Joseph Johnston to stop the advance of the general of the Union William Tecumseh Sherman, in the spring of 1865. In April of 1865 Johnston surrendered at Sherman Bennett Place, in what is now Durham. This was the last great army to surrender.
Answer:
No.
Explanation:
Goods for goods (barter) produce more significance results in the long distance trade because the traders sold goods and purchase other goods which wanted to sell in his region so there is no significance of money in these long distance trade, the people prefer barter system for them. In ancient times, people sell their items and purchase what they needed with the exchange of items.
Answer:
Edmentum Answers:
Boy Picking Berries: A young boy squats in a field picking berries of bushes. He seems quite young to be working for a living. The conditions of the work look difficult.
Garment Workers: A mother and her two children sit in a room sewing clothes. Seeing children working at home like this indicates that there were even more child laborers than those visible in factories, farms, and street corners. I wonder whether these children have time to go to school or have to work all day.
My answers:
Nine-Year Old Newsgirl: A little girl is standing by a street trying to give out newspapers. There is a man on the side walking by that looks like he has one of her newspapers in his hands. The little girls background is dirty, and has a bunch of papers all over the ground. The girls face looks like it shows another side of her, but a sad version with her head down. She has on a coat, hat, boots, leggings, and a dress which might mean she comes from a family of wealth.
Girls at Weaving Machines: Two girls and a woman are all at weaving machines. The two girls look young and they are wearing the same outfit and ribbon in their hair. The woman at the end looks older than the two girls and she is not wearing the same outfit as the two girls. This might indicate that she is the boss of them. The first girl looks like she is weaving something while the other girl looks like she is making or folding something on a table.
The Noon Hour at Indianapolis Cannery: There a bunch of boys and two girls from small children to teens who are gathered in a line by a railroad track and train. They all look like they are posing for the picture. The two girls have on dresses, while the boys have on overalls and hats. Some of them have their arms around each other, which might mean they are close friends or related. Some of them are smiling while the others stand with a certain look on their face. The boy on top of the train looks happy and is smiling. The oldest of them all look like they are on the steps while the others on on the sidewalk and railroad track.
Explanation: Could've been better but this is what I submitted. Hope this helps!