Answer:
<u>the north</u>: U.S. General-in-Chief Winfield Scott's plan to defeat the Confederacy: blockade the southern and eastern coasts, seize control of the Mississippi River so as to break the Confederacy in two, and then strike from all sides at once.
<u>the south:</u> a strategy of winning by not losing, of wearing out a better equipped foe and compelling him to give up by prolonging the war and making it too costly.
This consisted of defending the Confederate homeland by using interior lines of communication to concentrate dispersed forces against an invading army and, if opportunity offered, to go over to the offensive, even to the extent of invading the North.
Townsend Acts, aka Intolerable Acts.
In what endeavor was Pope Gregory I especially active?<span>converting non-Christian peoples of Germanic Europe to Christianity</span>
Answer:
1. Atomic Whirlpool. Tell players to get in the pool and line up in a single-file line along the edge of the pool.
2. Basketball and Volleyball. Whether it’s one-on-one or team play, games like basketball and volleyball are even more...
3. Bumper Balls. Place the rope across a section of the pool. Give each player a beach ball. When you say “Go,” players...
Answer:
Counting slaves in the population.
Explanation:
The weakness of the national government to not able tax, could not implement the laws it passed, and could not control trade lead to the revision of Article of Confederation. Such and other shortcomings, along with a rise in national opinion, led to the Constitutional Convention, which convened from May to September 1787. Representatives from southern states wanted slaves to be counted in terms of representation, however, northern states felt that slaves ought not to be counted towards representation because counting them would provide more representatives for the South. The negotiation between the two sides came to be known as the compromise of three-fifths because in terms of representation every five slaves would be counted as three individuals.