Answer:
The role of Barbed Wire
, Zig-Zag trenches and a rolling barrage of artillery are given below:
Explanation:
Barbed Wire is done by troops to stop the movement of the enemies in order to make barrier in their movement. Zig-Zag trenches are system of trenches dug by troops to provide a safe place of shelter from firing of enemy. A rolling barrage of artillery is a massed sustained artillery fire aimed along the enemy line. A barrage is done to suppress enemy movement and actions through that line.
The Navajo were forcibly removed by the U.S. Army as they walk 300 miles to Fort Sumner in Bosque Redondo from their ancestral lands in Arizona and New Mexico. During the 18-day march, hundreds of people died. Thus, the long walk of the Navajo ended at Fort Sumner.
The United States federal government deported the Navajo people in 1864 and made an effort at ethnic cleansing during the Long Walk of the Navajo, also known as the Long Walk to Bosque Redondo. Navajos were made to travel from their homeland in eastern New Mexico to what is now Arizona. Between August 1864 and the end of 1866, there were about 53 distinct forced marches. According to some anthropologists the "collective trauma of the Long Walk is fundamental to current Navajos' sense of identity as a people".
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The Articles of Confederation was the first written constitution of the United States. Stemming from wartime urgency, its progress was slowed by fears of central authority and extensive land claims by states before was it was ratified on March 1, 1781. Under these articles, the states remained sovereign and independent, with Congress serving as the last resort on appeal of disputes. Congress was also given the authority to make treaties and alliances, maintain armed forces and coin money. However, the central government lacked the ability to levy taxes and regulate commerce, issues that led to the Constitutional Convention in 1787 for the creation of new federal laws.
A lot of them did return to their families, however the role of women in the factory was actually cemented in American and other cultures upon the war ending, so many women continued to work and even started careers. Cue second wave feminism.