Answer:
To keep workers happy and producing goods for war
Explanation:
The National Industrial Recovery Act set up in 1933 made room for collective bargaining. The 1935 National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act) also required businesses to bargain well and fairly with any union supported by the majority of their workers. This acts fell within the period of World War II and helped to keep the workers happy and encourage more production of goods for the war.
Answer: It was an attempt to free only the slaves in the Confederacy, not the Border States or areas under Union control.
Explanation:
The Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 by President Lincoln freed the slaves in the Confederate states. This made the war about slavery and therefore ensured that European countries did not support the Confederacy and that the Union ranks increased as African Americans signed up for the war.
Sadly the proclamation did not free the enslaved people who were in the Border states or in areas under Union control because the President did not want these areas to join the Confederacy.
Answer:
A). They were asked to leave the church and the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
Explanation:
Anne Hutchinson and Roger Williams were courageous Puritans who dared to disagree with the religious concepts preached in Massachusetts Bay Colony, a strictly Puritan region.
Anne Hutchinson disagreed that her behavior could change the destiny that God had prepared for her. While Roger Williams, he disagreed with the union between church and state, religious intolerance and the theft of indigenous lands.
The Puritans saw the two as major threats and wasted no time in banning them (Anne was arrested before the ban). As a result Williams bought land from the natives and formed the Rhode Island colony. Subsequently, Hutchinson joined this colony.