Answer:
These are the options for the question:
A) Effective Military Leadership
B) Intervention from Britain and France
C) The fighting skill of Southern males
D) Its ability to fight on its own soil
E) Its belief that it was defending its way of life
And the correct answer is:
B) Intervention from Britain and France
Explanation:
The Confederacy was an important supplier of cotton to Europe, including Britain and France. The Confederate leadership believed that Britain and France would eventually intervene in their favour once the cotton supply went down because of the war.
Unfortunately for the Confederacy, this never happenned because Europe got the cotton it needed from other countries such as Egypt and India. Besides, the fact that the Confederacy supported slavery also prevented France and Britain from supporting them, because in both countries, slavery was unpopular.
On a politicial map you'll find the following:
<em>Governmental boundaries of countries.</em>
<em>States, and counties.</em>
<em>The location of major cities.</em>
<em>And large bodies of water.</em>
Answer:
(hope this helps can I pls have brainlist (crown) ☺️)
Explanation:
Oliver Hazard Perry, the "Hero of Lake Erie," Jacob Brown, who successfully defended Fort Erie despite a seven-week siege and was later promoted to Commander General of the United States Army, and Winfield Scott, a brave fighter who also implemented a training system that significantly improved the American army's battlefield performance, were all important American figures. Later, he would devise the "Anaconda Plan," which defined Northern tactics throughout the Civil War. During the conflict, two future Presidents made their mark: William Henry Harrison, who was responsible for the military destruction of Tecumseh's Confederacy of Native American tribes, and Andrew Jackson, who destroyed the British at New Orleans.
Isaac Brock, a popular imperial administrator in Canada who became a posthumous hero for his heroic but fatal defence of Queenston Heights, Robert Ross, who led the veteran expeditionary force that burned Washington, D.C. and was killed outside of Baltimore at the Battle of North Point, and Edward Pakenham, a respected Napoleonic War veteran who led the British armed forces in the Battle of North Point, were all essential British figures.
Roughly 15,000 Americans died as a result of the War of 1812. Approximately 8,600 British and Canadian soldiers were killed from battle or disease. The losses among Native American tribes are not known.