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kati45 [8]
3 years ago
6

Which legal change after the American Revolution most likely resulted from grievance?

History
2 answers:
kvv77 [185]3 years ago
6 0
The answer would be A) Due process of law was implemented
Jlenok [28]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

A) Due to process of law was implemented  

Explanation:

The legal change after the American Revolution which most likely resulted from this grievance is that due process of law was implemented.

Most of the archive sketched out a rundown of explicit complaints that the pilgrims had with British endeavors to change imperial administration amid the 1770s. An early draft reprimanded the British for the transoceanic slave exchange and notwithstanding for debilitating endeavors by the pilgrims to advance nullification. Representatives from South Carolina and Georgia just as those from northern states who benefitted from the exchange all opposed this language, and it was removed.  

Neither thegrievances nor the rhetoric of the preamble was new. Rather, they were the summit of both a time of famous protection from imperial change and decades a greater amount of long haul improvements that saw the two sides create inconsistent understandings of the British Empire and the states' place inside it. The Congress endorsed the document on July 4, 1776.

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By July 1861, two months after Confederate troops opened fire on Fort Sumter to begin the Civil War, the northern press and public were eager for the Union Army to make an advance on Richmond ahead of the planned meeting of the Confederate Congress there on July 20. Encouraged by early victories by Union troops in western Virginia and by the war fever spreading through the North, President Abraham Lincoln ordered Brigadier General Irvin McDowell to mount an offensive that would hit quickly and decisively at the enemy and open the way to Richmond, thus bringing the war to a mercifully quick end. The offensive would begin with an attack on more than 20,000 Confederate troops under the command of General P.G.T. Beauregard camped near Manassas Junction, Virginia (25 miles from Washington, D.C.) along a little river known as Bull Run.

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McDowell’s Union force struck on July 21, shelling the enemy across Bull Run while more troops crossed the river at Sudley Ford in an attempt to hit the Confederate left flank. Over two hours, 10,000 Federals gradually pushed back 4,500 rebels across the Warrington turnpike and up Henry House Hill. Reporters, congressmen and other onlookers who had traveled from Washington and were watching the battle from the nearby countryside prematurely celebrated a Union victory, but reinforcements from both Johnston and Beauregard’s armies soon arrived on the battlefield to rally the Confederate troops. In the afternoon, both sides traded attacks and counterattacks near Henry House Hill. On Johnston and Beauregard’s orders, more and more Confederate reinforcements arrived, even as the Federals struggled with coordinating assaults made by different regiments.

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By four o’clock in the afternoon, both sides had an equal number of men on the field of battle (about 18,000 on each side were engaged at Bull Run), and Beauregard ordered a counterattack along the entire line. Screaming as they advanced (the “rebel yell” that would become infamous among Union troops) the Confederates managed to break the Union line. As McDowell’s Federals retreated chaotically across Bull Run, they ran headlong into hundreds of Washington civilians who had been watching the battle while picnicking on the fields east of the river, now making their own hasty retreat.

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