The Bataan death march occurred when Japanese forced captured soldiers to walk for 80 miles to Bataan peninsula.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The Bataan Death March was the persuasive exchange by the Imperial Japanese Army of 60,000–80,000 American and Filipino detainees of war from Saysain Point, Bagac, Bataan and Mariveles to Camp O'Donnell, Capas, Tarlac, by means of San Fernando, Pampanga, where the detainees were stacked onto trains.
The Bataan Death March was the point at which the Japanese constrained 76,000 caught Allied officers (Filipinos and Americans) to walk around 80 miles over the Bataan Peninsula. The walk occurred in April of 1942 during World War II.
Explanation:
"Before she led the Union Army nursing corps during the Civil War, New England’s Dorothea Dix led the most ambitious reform efforts for the care of the mentally ill ever attempted in the U.S. Dix argued that a land grant system, similar to the one that created state universities, should be used to create mental hospitals across the country."