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grigory [225]
3 years ago
13

How does President Johnson's speech promote peace in America?

History
1 answer:
serg [7]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

We do not know what speech it is send what speech it is and i can help

Explanation:

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The Panic of the 1819's caused many people to lose their land. People who did not own land were not allowed to vote. How did the
cupoosta [38]

Answer:

In the voting rights of 1820 you were aloud to vote even if you didn’t own land because of the Amendments of the Constition.

6 0
3 years ago
Help please I’ll appreciate it
postnew [5]
The answer is YES.


The American Revolution had many effects and one of the was a Women’s life. Like in the text, this did not happen overnight. Women were starting to rise on the idea of them doing what was called a “mans job.” Women at that time were trying to overcome male privilege. Although the American Revolution didn’t exactly fix that, it certainly inspired the movement.

(I would appreciate if you voted the brainliest. Hope that helps!!)
6 0
3 years ago
MATCH THESE ITEMS WITH THE BEST DEFINITION AS POSSIBLE:
melamori03 [73]

Answer:

1. Breed's Hill: is a glacial drumlin located in the Charlestown section of Boston, Massachusetts. It is located in the southern portion of the Charlestown Peninsula, a historically oval, but now more roughly triangular, peninsula that was originally connected to Cambridge in colonial times by a short, narrow isthmus known as the Charlestown Neck.

* Thomas Jefferson: 3rd president of the US 1801–09. A Democratic-Republican from Virginia, he played a key role in leadership during the American Revolution and was the principal drafter of the Declaration of Independence 1776.

2.  seized Fort Ticonderoga :  a pitched battle in which American revolutionary troops captured Fort Ticonderoga from the British in 1775.

* George Washington : 1st president of the US 1789–97. Commander in chief of the Continental Army, he helped to win the American Revolution by keeping his army together through the winter of 1777–78 at Valley Forge and by winning a decisive battle at Yorktown in 1781.

3. mercenaries from Germany : combines Land and Knecht to form "servant of the land."

Battle of Bunker Hill: the first important battle of the American War of Independence (1775) which was fought at Breed's Hill; the British defeated the colonial forces. Bunker Hill.

4. Common Sense : (Thomas Paine)

Ethan Allen : American soldier. He fought the British in the American Revolution.

5. Declaration of Independence : The fundamental document establishing the United States as a nation, adopted on July 4, 1776. The declaration was ordered and approved by the Continental Congress and written largely by Thomas Jefferson.

Hessians :  a native or inhabitant of the German state of Hesse.

6. commander-in-chief of the Continental Army : General George Washington was the commander-in-chief of the army throughout the war.

Benedict Arnold:  American general and traitor. During the American Revolution, he was instrumental, with Ethan Allan, in the capture of Fort Ticonderoga but later planned to betray West Point to the British.

7. "I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.": Patriot Nathan Hale  

Nathan Hale: American hero. He volunteered in 1776 during the American Revolution to spy behind British lines on Long Island. Disguised as a schoolmaster, he was captured by the British and hanged without trial. His last words are said to have been, “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country. ”.

8. American traitor : a person who betrays a friend, country, principle

Thomas Paine : English American political writer. His pamphlet Common Sense (1776) called for American independence, and The Rights of Man (1791) defended the French Revolution.

9. "I have not yet begun to fight." :  John Paul Jones

John Paul Jones : Scottish-born US admiral; born John Paul. Noted for his raids off the northern coasts of Britain during the American Revolution, he is said to have stated “I have not yet begun to fight!” after victory in a 1779 battle between the Americans and the British.

10. secured the western lands : George Rogers Clark.

George Rogers Clark: American military leader and frontiersman. He defended the Illinois frontier against the British during the American Revolution.

Explanation:

I shorted some of them and some of them are bold

8 0
3 years ago
What action by president Richard Nixon spurred the protests at Kent state
Arte-miy333 [17]

Answer:

Los disparos en la Kent State (Kent State shootings), también conocida como la Matanza del 4 de mayo (May 4 massacre) o la Masacre de la Kent State fue un suceso acontecido en la Universidad de Kent, Ohio, donde se sucedió un caótico panorama entre estudiantes y miembros de la Guardia Nacional, el lunes 4 de mayo de 1970 en el cual cuatro estudiantes fueron asesinados y nueve heridos (uno de ellos sufrió parálisis permanente) a manos de la Guardia Nacional, que disparó contra los estudiantes.

Explanation:

Richard Nixon fue elegido presidente de los Estados Unidos en 1968, prometiendo el fin de la guerra de Vietnam. En noviembre del 1969 se difundió la matanza de My Lai, rápidamente las imágenes dieron la vuelta al mundo generando indignación y aumentando la oposición a la guerra. Los meses siguientes se vio el primer sorteo para el reclutamiento desde la Segunda guerra mundial. La guerra parecía que iba a llegar a su fin alrededor de 1969 cuando se planteó invadir Camboya lo cual exacerbó el conflicto.

Algunos de los estudiantes tiroteados estaban protestando por la invasión estadounidense a Camboya (en el marco de la guerra de Vietnam y las protestas antibélicas en Estados Unidos), la cual el presidente Richard Nixon anuncio por televisión el 30 de abril. Algunos estudiantes que solo pasaban u observaban las protestas en la distancia también recibieron disparos cerca de la universidad.

Los trágicos sucesos recibieron respuestas por toda la nación: cientos de universidades, colegios e institutos promovieron una huelga estudiantil, cerrándose los centros educativos

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Before television became popular in the 1950s how did many Americans get their news
Eddi Din [679]

Before TV and the Internet, radio revolutionized American politics(also news paper is what comes to mind). Hope this helps!!

7 0
2 years ago
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