<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, <span>the correct response would be "power plants," since many of these plants exist on the coast line for cooling purposes. </span></span>
I'd say the combustion engine, even though it was toyed with in the mid-west during the cowboy era, it wasn't until after the Civil War in which it was a fully effective gasoline powered engine.
Answer:
Women worked long hours - sometimes 80 hours a week - often under horrible conditions. Remember, this was before the days of labor laws. The factories could basically set whatever policies they wanted, and workers were more or less powerless to do much about them. Conditions were often unsanitary and dangerous.
Northerners in America, due to the new rulings of Henry Clay's Compromise of 1850, were required by law to abide strictly by the Fugitive Slave Law and report any runaway slaves they encountered to the proper authorities. This was especially stressing to the many abolitionists in the region.
Answer: they were not completely owned
Explanation:
Under this system, slaves were not considered property as they later would be under the transatlantic system. These earlier forms of slavery in Africa saw slaves more like a social class or designation within society. It was often possible for the enslaved to escape slave states and integrate into new communities.