Free African American communities during the antebellum period showed the rest of Americans that African Americans could perfectly be as prosperous, self-reliant and educated as white Americans. They provided a showcase of what educated African Americans could accomplish and demonstrated that if they were given the same means and opportunities that white Americans enjoyed, they could perfectly enjoy the same level of prosperity of educated white Americans. The emergence of an active and extremely articulate black leadership showed the rest of Americans that the only thing that separated free, educated African Americans in the 19th from their white counterparts was the color of skin. Furthermore, not only intelligent African American leaders who were born free achieved a great level of education and influence, some of the leaders of the black community had been born into slavery and after escaping had managed to educate themselves and even surpass several white Americans in terms of intellectual accomplishments. Frederick Douglass is an excellent example of this. Despite being born into slavery and remaining in this condition until the age of 16, he secretly educated himself and escaped to become one of the most powerful and eloquent orator of the abolitionist movement.
This is a bit subjective, but many historians would agree that Hammurabi's most important contribution to history in general was that "<span>D. He was responsible for the first codification of laws"</span>
It would be on how to handle and manage the world after the Second World War. After the war the allied powers were divided on how the world would look after and it resulted into conflicts and struggles and even resulted a Cold War between the two world's superpower which is the US and the USSR.
Although lacking a charter, the founders of Plymouth in Massachusetts were, like enabling them to devote their time to building a strong, stable