Well an obvious answer would be slavery, depending on how late you're talking. After slavery ended, the country began what is known as the "industrial revolution". The north had already begun industrializing for a while, but in the 1870's and beyond, things ramped up quite a bit. Factories for clothes, shoes, farming equipment, packaged foods, and etc. became more popular. You also had coal mines, railroads, and steel mills. This showed the country was moving in the direction of mass production, and moving away from agricultural ways of living. This also meant child labor, which led to many child labor laws in the later years. This also meant many moved out of farming communities, and into larger, noisy, and crowded cities. Many immigrated to the US to take advantage of that, which led to some tension between communities.
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The mood of the "Beat Generation" is best reflected in A. Jack Kerouac's <em>On the Road. </em><em />Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and Lucien Carr were "founders" of the Beat Generation, a literary and social movement following World War II during the onset of the Cold War. Many of their books dealt with the growing interconnectedness of the world, the nuclear threat of the Cold War (and the futility of the present), and resisting the conformity of the 1950s.
Answer:
The United States began to provide significant military supplies and other assistance to the Allies in September 1940, even though the United States did not enter the war until December 1941.
Explanation:
Answer:
honestly the Japanese would not have stopped if we didn't drop atomic bombs becasue we gave them warnings and did what we could and they wouldn't back down. so they did what was necessary and also the us really didn't know what kind of damage it would casue. becasue they had never used it before
They began to protest but in the workforce is known as strike. Others also were journalists who were known as muckrakers such as Ida B. Tarbell who responded to the big business of standardized oil and how that company was a monopoly. Because of the unjust way Rockefeller’s standard oil company got money there were laws passed to prevent this such as the Sherman-Anti Trust Act. Hope this helped!