If your talking the 13 American Colonies.
Nationality: English, French, African
Work: Sailors, Traders, Gentry
Religious: Protestants, Anglicans, some Jews
(it would be useful if you could be more specific)
Answer:
answer below
Explanation:
The colonists hoped to get aid from foreign nations The Congress hoped other colonists would join the Revolution,.
The soldiers needed a good reason for fighting
1. Jacob Riis. In the late 1800s, the rapid growth of cities during America's second wave of industrialization produced serious problems. Overcrowding in huge apartment buildings known as tenements were unsanitary, and garbage accumulated in the streets, leading to the spread of disease. Poverty was common, and crime was a result. Jacob Riis was a Danish immigrant who took photographs of the horrible living conditions in New York City. His photos in "How the Other Half Lives" shocked Americans and resulted in many reformers campaigning for better water and sewage systems and vaccinations.
2. NAACP. The NAACP, or the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, was formed in 1909. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, African Americans in the North and South faced discrimination. Even though slavery had been abolished by the 13th amendment in 1865, African Americans were denied basic rights. Many notable African Americans from this time period advocated for full equality, such as Booker T. Washington, Ida B. Wells, and W.E.B. Dubois. Dubois believed that under no circumstances should African Americans accept segregation, and he helped found the NAACP to help with attempts to gain legal and economic equality for African Americans.
3. Conservation. The protection and preservation of natural resources is known as conservation. One of the most prominent leaders of the conservation movement was President Theodore Roosevelt. A progressive president and an avid outdoorsman, Roosevelt began to protect America's natural resources by establishing some of the first national parks for future generations. Other progressive presidents, such as William H. Taft and Woodrow Wilson, also contributed greatly to conservation efforts in the early 1900s.
4. Jim Crow Laws. After the abolition of slavery in 1865, laws in Southern states were put into place to separate blacks and whites. These laws were called "Jim Crow" laws, named after a character in a song. Jim Crow laws required the separation of African Americans and whites in nearly any public place they might come in contact with each other. A famous court case in 1896, Plessy v. Ferguson enforced the concept of "separate but equal" facilities and institutions to segregate blacks and whites.
The price of housing in the United States has remained relatively stable from 1890 to 1997-date of the beginning of the bubble-except for a large period of falling prices that began during World War I -about 1916- and extended during the Great Depression of the 30s until the beginning of World War II. In 1942, still in the middle of the war, prices suffered an important rise that brought them to levels of the early twentieth century. In the 1970s and 1980s two real estate bubbles took place that increased the price and then fell again, until the global real estate bubble that began in 1996 and lasted until July 2006 when the subprime mortgage crisis caused the big drop in prices.
In 1978 consumers get the best deal on a mortgage.-