the only one of the first one
 
        
             
        
        
        
The correct answer is a the prohibition of alcohol
It didn't stick however, and now, the 18th amendment is not in use anymore and alcohol is legal.
        
             
        
        
        
After the populist achieved some success on a local level in the late 1800s, they set their sight on adopting much of the People's Party's platform.
<h3>What was the 
populist party?</h3>
The party sprung out of the Populist Movement which was a politically oriented coalition of an agrarian reformers in the Midwest and South that advocated a wide range of economic and political legislation in the late 19th century.
During the 1880s, these local political action groups known as the Farmers’ Alliances sprang up among Midwesterners and Southerners as they were discontented because of crop failures, falling prices, and poor marketing and credit facilities. 
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Answer:
President Theodore Roosevelt’s "Square Deal" 
Explanation:
President Theodore Roosevelt, in his second term, introduces a Square Deal for the American people. It was a domestic policy that looked at the protection of natural resources, control of corporations, and consumer protection. A square deal was a progressive concept by Roosevelt that would help the country's capital, labour, and the public, ending special treatment for entrepreneurs who tend to exploit easily.
 
        
             
        
        
        
Answer:
Though thematic mapping had its origins in the 19th century, the technique is useful for understanding history in our own day. One of the fundamental problems of history is scale: how can historians move between understanding the past in terms of a single life and in the lives of millions; within a city and at the bounds of continents; over a period of days and over the span of centuries? Maps can't tell us everything, but they can help, especially interactive web maps that can zoom in and out, represent more than one subject, and be set in motion to show change over time.
To help show the big patterns of American slavery, I have created an interactive map of the spread of slavery. Where the Coast Survey map showed one measure, the interactive map shows the population of slaves, of free African Americans, of all free people, and of the entire United States, as well as each of those measure in terms of population density and the percentage of the total population. The map extends from the first Census in 1790 to the Census taken in 1860 on the eve of the Civil War. You can explore the map for yourself, but below I have created animations to highlight some of the major patterns.
Explanation: