Answer:Any fruits, vegetables, or animals found only in the New World, including:
tomato
eggplant
bell pepper
winter squash (pumpkin, etc.)
summer squash (zucchini, yellow squash, etc.)
turkey
cocoa
potato
avocado
Explanation:
Answer: Yazoo land fraud, in U.S. history, scheme by which Georgia legislators were bribed in 1795 to sell most of the land now making up the state of Mississippi (then a part of Georgia’s western claims) to four land companies for the sum of $500,000, far below its potential market value. News of the Yazoo Act and the dealing behind it aroused anger throughout the state and resulted in a large turnover of legislators in the 1796 election. The new legislature promptly rescinded the act and returned the money. By this time, however, much of the land had been resold to third parties, who refused the state’s money and maintained their claim to the territory. The dispute between Georgia and the land companies continued into the 1800s. The state of Georgia ceded its claim to the region to the U.S. government in 1802. Finally the issue was reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court, and in 1810 Chief Justice John Marshall ruled in Fletcher v. Peck that the rescinding law was an unconstitutional infringement on a legal contract. By 1814 the government had taken possession of the territory, and Congress awarded the claimants more than $4,000,000. The fraud was named for the Yazoo River, which runs through most of the region.
Explanation:
Overcrowding was most directly contributed to the spread of disease in city tenements in the early 1900.
Back then , the city was shocked by smallpox epidemic. Since smallpox is easily transmitted by contact, overcrowded areas are the perfect breeding spot for smallpox ( they still has not developed small pox vaccine back then)
Immigration in the late 19th century in the US was the highest immigration numbers of all time. As nationalist movements in Europe pushed people out, the fast growing industrialization pulled people into the US. Immigrants began coming from Eastern and Southern Europe for the first time bringing many Catholics, Jews, and even Muslims in addition to many languages and cultures not known in the US. These groups created ethnic communities in cities where their language and culture could continue. Americans reacted in one of two ways: nativism or reform.
The nativists claimed to be the "native" Americans focused on racial issues and white "native" Americans being the rightly members of the United States.
Reformers worked to assimilate immigrants into society providing education, jobs, and cultural training. The most famous of which was the Hull House in Chicago run by Jane Addams.