It flows both north and south but the best answer would be north
James K Polk is one of the historical figures that is really hard to judge by modern standards.
He was a forceful man with strongly held beliefs. He was the last in the line of "Jacksonian Presidents" with all of the baggage that came along with that.
Ultimately, he was a strong war time President. His single term in office led to the short lived Presidency of Zachary Taylor, who was significantly less informed and forceful than Polk. After Polk, the issue of slavery really came to the forefront. Polk was either responsible for delaying the prominence of this issue or just got lucky. It is likely that history would look much differently if Polk had a second term and continued his aggressive posture towards America's future.
I'd say he was a good President, for his time, who strongly acted on the economy and in regards to Mexico but whose record looks abysmal by modern standards and values.
Answer:
George W. Bush - US PRESIDENT FROM 2001-2009
Goerge Bush had sad and hard childhood. Her sister died at young age. Bush attended Sam Houston Elementary School in Midland and moved to Houston with his family in 1959, where he attended the private Kinkaid School. He spent his high school years at Phillips Academy Andover, in Andover, Massachusetts, which his father had also attended. It was a family tradition and a privilege to attend a school such as Andover, but it was not without drawbacks; life at the exclusive school was regimented, academically rigorous, cold, snowy, and devoid of female students. Bush learned to be self-sufficient but initially struggled in his studies. He received a zero on his first written assignment at the Academy, overutilizing Roget’s Thesaurus in order to boost his vocabulary.
The correct answer is B) Washington Gladden and Jane Addams.
<em>Two reformers that share similar beliefs about bringing about social change were Washington Gladden and Jane Addams.</em>
Jane Addams(1860-1935) was an American social worker an activist that supported positive social change. For her dedicated work, she is renown as the "mother of social work" in the United States. She was one of the founders of the famous Hull House in Chicago, a place where poor people could go for food.
Washington Gladden was a religious man, an American Pastor from the Social Gospel movement. He supported workers, the union of the labor force, and African American civil rights.
So yes, two reformers that share similar beliefs about bringing about social change were Washington Gladden and Jane Addams.