Answer:
The correct answer to the question: Joseph Brant, a young Mohawk:___, would be, E: wanted to create an Indian confederacy between Canada and the United States.
Explanation:
Joseph Brant, also known among his people as Thayendanegea, was a member of the Iriquois League, and was born to the Mohawk tribe in 1743. To the very end, Brant defended and supported the British claim to the Americas and he was highly influential in rallying the efforts of Loyalists to the British Crown during the American Revolution. When peace between America and Britain was signed in Paris, Brant was highly disappointed with the British but still he remained loyal to the British. In the end, he and his tribe of Mohawk, as well as Loyalists to the Crown, relocated towards the region of Upper Canada, on the Grand River valley (present day Ontario). This Province was established by the British in 1791 as a place of refuge for those who had supported the British against American colonists, mostly Indian tribes.
Answer:
its Lee who introduces a resolution to declare the colonies independent of great Britain
Answer:The 1688 Germantown Quaker Petition Against Slavery was the first protest against African-American slavery made by a religious body in the English colonies. Francis Daniel Pastorius authored the petition; he and three other Quakers living in Germantown, Pennsylvania (now part of Philadelphia) signed it on behalf of the Germantown Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends. Clearly a highly controversial document, Friends forwarded it up the hierarchical chain of their administrative structure--monthly, quarterly, and yearly meetings--without either approving or rejecting it. The petition effectively disappeared for 150 years into Philadelphia Yearly Meeting's capacious archives; but upon rediscovery in 1844 by Philadelphia antiquarian Nathan Kite, latter-day abolitionists published it in 1844 in The Friend
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