Answer: b. an increase in machine-made goods beginning in England during the 1700s
Explanation: The Industrial Revolution marked an increase in machine-made goods beginning in England during the 1700s. The Industrial Revolution is the major technological, socioeconomic, and cultural change in the late 18th and early 19th century that resulted in the replacement of an economy based on manual labor to one dominated by industry and machine manufacture.
Answer:
While the South used subjugation to support its way of life and develop cotton on manors, the North succeeded during the Industrial Revolution. ... Servitude turned out to be much more disruptive when it took steps to extend toward the west on the grounds that non-slaveholding white pioneers would not like to contend with slaveholders in the new domains.
Explanation: Can u gimme brain plz!
The Britain's did not know the land that well so the Americans had and advantage
Answer: In the late 1800s, people in many parts of the world decided to leave their homes and immigrate to the United States. Fleeing crop failure, land and job shortages, rising taxes, and famine, many came to the U. S. because it was perceived as the land of economic opportunity. Others came seeking personal freedom or relief from political and religious persecution, and nearly 12 million immigrants arrived in the United States between 1870 and 1900. During the 1870s and 1880s, the vast majority of these people were from Germany, Ireland, and England - the principal sources of immigration before the Civil War. Even so, a relatively large group of Chinese immigrated to the United States between the start of the California gold rush in 1849 and 1882, when federal law stopped their immigration.
With the onset of hard economic times in the 1870s, European immigrants and Americans began to compete for the jobs traditionally reserved for the Chinese. With economic competition came dislike and even racial suspicion and hatred. Such feelings were accompanied by anti-Chinese riots and pressure, especially in California, for the exclusion of Chinese immigrants from the United States. The result of this pressure was the Chinese Exclusion Act, passed by Congress in 1882. This Act virtually ended Chinese immigration for nearly a century.
Explanation: Not sure if this will help! But there!!
Answer:
this affected the U.S. because after this we were rivels