Women's suffrage<span> groups had existed since the 1870s, but during the war it was hard to ignore their arguments. Women were serving in the war, taking over from the men in factories and offices, holding families together while the men were overseas, and working in voluntary organizations that supported the war effort. They couldn't be kept out of political life any longer.</span><span>
Women got the federal vote in three stages: the Military Voters Act of 1917 allowed nurses and women in the armed services to vote; the Wartime Election Act extended the vote to women who had husbands, sons or fathers serving overseas; and all women over 21 were allowed to vote as of January 1, 1919.
Hope this helped :P</span>
Haymarket, Homestead, and Pullman were all violent labor strikes.
The Homestead Strike occurred in 1892 in Homestead PA and was a violent battle between laborers and hired Pinkertons after a lockout.
The Haymarket Affair occurred in Chicago in 1896 and involved a violent labor protest and a bombing.
The Pullman Strike occurred in 1894 and was a nationwide violent railroad strike.
A coureur des bois (French pronunciation: [kuʁœʁ de bwa]) or coureur de bois (French pronunciation: [kuʁœʁ də bwa], runner of the woods; plural: coureurs de bois) was an independent entrepreneurial French-Canadian woodsman who traveled in NewFrance<span> and the interior of </span>North America<span>.</span>
Answer:
this ones a bit sad
Explanation:
so in school i learned that martin luther king jr. was shot and killed. but, what most schools dont tell you and what most people dont know is that , in fact, while yes, martin luther king jr. was shot, that is not what killed him. in fact, the doctor and nurse that were taking care of him while he was in the hospital suffocated him to death. so, theres a little peice of black history that isnt taught in most schools.