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Serhud [2]
3 years ago
7

Which of the ideas on williams banner do you think is more important to him?

History
1 answer:
yan [13]3 years ago
3 0
Pacific Command and now United States Central Command, it's impossible to make this guy as he likes to say " nervous". The United States Central Command is a theater-level Unified Combatant Command of the U.S. Department of Defense, established in 1983, taking over the 1980 Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force responsibilities. United States Pacific Command is a unified combatant command of the United States armed forces responsible for the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. It is the oldest and largest of the unified combatant commands.
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Tobacco was significant to the development of the Virginia colony. Which of the following was the result of tobacco? Check all o
meriva

Answer:

More than any other crop or industry, tobacco shaped the development of Virginia.

Virginia colonists saw the Native Americans growing tobacco, and the colonists quickly adopted tobacco as their primary mechanism of getting wealthy. Virginia operated under "cash-crop" agriculture (tobacco is grown for sale, not for use on the farm) since 1613. Tobacco provided more income than any other farm crop until the 21st Century.

Tobacco plantations shaped the settlement of the Coastal Plain and the Piedmont. Until after World War I the state's economy was dependent upon the weather conditions for growing and harvesting tobacco, and upon the price paid for tobacco by customers outside Virginia.

Staple agriculture puts all of a region's economic eggs in one basket, in contrast to a diversified economy. When prices for the staple crop are low, or supplies diminished by a bad growing season, the entire region can suffer heavily. In the first half of the 1800's, Southern states were dependent upon cotton (though South Carolina grew indigo and rice as staple crops as well). Conflicts with Northern industrialists regarding Federal incentives/disincentives for cotton production led in part to the Civil War, just as conflicts between colonial Virginia planters and English merchants regarding tobacco prices and credit terms created a significant amount of distrust that led to the American Revolution.

In 1613, John Rolfe grew a crop of "sweet-scented" tobacco from seeds imported from the Caribbean, rather than the harsh strain of tobacco that was native to Virginia. After the colonists discovered that England would pay high prices for the sweeter tobacco, a frenzy of tobacco planting followed.

Rolfe's product was popular, but smoking was already popular in Europe before Virginia was colonized. By 1604, James I was so repulsed by the habit that he issued A Counterblaste to Tobacco, three years before Jamestown was settled.

The Spanish had seen the Aztecs using tobacco a century before Rolfe shipped his crop. Jean Nicot (the French ambassador to Portugal) often is credited with introducing tobacco to France. A monk may actually have been the first to bring it back from Brazil, but Nicot was honored by the botanical name for the species - Nicotiana tabacum.   The Jamestown settlers cared more about the price paid for tobacco than about King James's personal opinion on smoking. The tobacco in Rolfe's original shipment of four hogsheads was sold at 3 shillings per pound. The West Indies crops sold at six times that price - but at 3 shillings a pound, the Virginians had finally identified tobacco as a product they could export

Explanation:

7 0
2 years ago
One of the problems faced by farmers in the late 1800s was that railroads
NNADVOKAT [17]
 ...Charged very high prices to move farm products to market 
The farmers felt the railroads had monopoly power over them. The farmers essentially had no choice but to send their crops to market on trains. There was not much, if any, competition on most short-line tracks that went through farm areas. Therefore, most farmers had to simply accept whatever price railroads charged to transport crops. Farmers felt the railroads could gouge them by charging high prices and that they, the farmers, had no recourse when this happened. They blamed much of their trouble on this monopoly power.
6 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Travis believed that Texans should fight Santa Anna at the Alamo because A. the Alamo was the most important location in Texas.
Novay_Z [31]
<span>Answer: A. The Alamo was the most important location in Texas.
William B. Travis was left in the care of the Alamo, by Colonel James Bowie, and when the Mexican army began siege to the Alamo, Travis sent letters requesting arms and supplies, along with reinforcements to defend it, since Travis thought along with Bowie , that maintaining the Alamo was crucial, and in Travis' most famous and patriotic letter, addressing the people of Texas and all the Americans in the world, he expressed that he would remain defending the Alamo as long as he could, and die as a <span>soldier, since he would never surrender to the army of Santa Anna, and defend his honor.</span></span>
6 0
3 years ago
Which best describes wealthy Southerners who owned plantations?
Neko [114]

Answer:

They were members of the yeoman class.

7 0
1 year ago
What does the edict demonstrate about the Tokugawa government’s approach to international relations?
RSB [31]

Answer:

What was the purpose of edicts Tokugawa shogunate?

This Sakoku Edict (Sakoku-rei, 鎖国令) of 1635 was a Japanese decree intended to eliminate foreign influence, enforced by strict government rules and regulations to impose these ideas. It was the third of a series issued by Tokugawa Iemitsu, shōgun of Japan from 1623 to 1651.

5 0
2 years ago
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