<u>The correct answer is: he went from Arkansas post to Fort Smith in 1818</u>. His first contact with the frontier occurred during a mineralogical journey through Arkansas in 1817 and 1818. Schoolcraft is known for its discovery of the source of the Mississippi River. He was a geographer, ethnologist and geologist.
Answer:
- 21. In 1962 the Soviet Union began to secretly install missiles in Cuba to launch attacks on U.S. cities. The confrontation that followed, known as the Cuban missile crisis, brought the two superpowers to the brink of war before an agreement was reached to withdraw the missiles.
- 23. Isolationism or non-interventionism was a tradition in America’s foreign policy for its first two centuries.
- 24. was afraid that communism would spread to South Vietnam. It decided to send money, supplies and military advisers to help the South Vietnamese Government.
You can double check... tried my best..
sorry if its not correct
Answer:
The Continent of Africa
Explanation:
In both Europe and many parts of the New World was the belief on a scientific notation that people from the African continent were somehow inferior specimens of Homo Sapiens.
pocahontas, little snow-feather.
what possessed you to marry that pale stranger
to cross the blue, blue Atlantic.
leaving behind your mother and your father?
How naive you were to think they wouldn't destroy you...
but pocahontas, little snow-Feather,
bones under England soil it is your spirit
not that of Cortez or colonel Forsyth your
generosity your love which will survive
The
stock market crash in the waning days of October 1929 heralded the beginning of the worst economic depression in U.S. history. The Great Depression hit the South, including Georgia, harder than some other regions of the country, and in fact only worsened an economic downturn that had begun in the state a decade earlier. U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt's programs for economic relief and recovery, known collectively as the New Deal, arrived late in Georgia and were only sporadically effective, yet they did lay the foundation for far-reaching changes. Not until the United States' entry into World War II (1941-45) did the depression in Georgia fully recede.