Stamp Act
Grenville was the British Prime Minister from 1763-1765 and was most famous for his passage of the Stamp Act.
The Stamp Act was wildly hated by the colonists. The act required a tax on government stamps or seals which were necessary to make documents official. All legal documents and contracts would need this stamp and each were tax with the passage of the Stamp Act. The act was so despised it caused rebellion and had to be repealed.
The answer to the question is C. Truman felt that the Americans would suffer from heavy losses with an invasion. Eventually, a strategy was put in place.
Italy was the country that was referred to as the "soft underbelly" of Europe by Winston Churchill. This occurred during World War II.
Answer:
European nations that lost WWI were poor because of reparations money owed to the Allies.
Explanation:
Thats the only one I see that mentions something to do with finances and economy.
William Lloyd Garrison was an American abolitionist who published a newspaper called The Liberator which was an abolitionist piece of literature and kept on publishing until the end of slavery. Reverend Lovejoy or Elijah Parish Lovejoy was a reverend who published anti-slavery articles in various newspapers. He also started an abolitionist paper called the Alton Observer. Frederick Douglass was a leader of the abolitionist movement who had escaped from slavery and was a great orator and wrote very important antislavery writing.