Hope my answer helped you<span />
Wyoming was only a territory when it began to allow women to vote in 1869, which led to a cascade of other western states allowing the same. Before the 19th Amendment, outside of New Mexico, every territory and state in the West allowed women to vote. However, it was not because Western states such as Wyoming thought that women deserved this privilege. It was a time of rapid Westward expansion, and in 1869 Wyoming had barely been able to become a territory. They added that these laws were aimed exclusively at white women. One lawmaker in Wyoming even tried to water down the bill by adding a text that explicitly gave women of other races the right to vote. But his amendment failed "because everyone said, 'Look, we know we're only talking about white women here.'" After Wyoming passed the law, states around the West saw it as an opportunity for them, too. And interestingly, even though Wyoming was the first to grant women’s suffrage, Utah was the first place where women cast a vote because their elections came first.
I believe it was Ecuador, based on this government file released by the cia:
https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/docs/DOC_0000437007.pdf
Answer:
The Versailles Treaty, terminating World War I, imposed significant reparations and territorial losses on Germany.
This statement is TRUE.
The aim of the Convention of 1818 was to settle exceptional limit issues and questions between the US and British North America following the War of 1812. An understanding between the United States and Great Brittan that settled angling rights and canceled new North American outskirts.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The significance of the Treaty of 1818 is that along with the Rush-Bagot Treaty of 1817 it marked the beginning of improved relations between the British Empire and its former colony. The border between the United States and Canada is 5,525 miles (8,891 km) long. It is the longest international boundary in the world. The treaty solved a boundary dispute that emerged from the 1783 Treaty of Paris, which ended the American Revolutionary War.