This question is actually harder to answer than it may appear. Some states have scrapped their old constitutions and written new ones. I've only included the ones that have stuck with their original constitutions. Here are those.
Alabama 905
California 511
Louisiana 300
Texas 495
Answer:
Georgia's 1956 Flag
In 1955 the Atlanta attorney and state Democratic Party leader John Sammons Bell began a campaign to substitute the square Confederate battle flag for the red and white bars on Georgia's state flag.
State Flag, 1956-2001
State Flag, 1956-2001
Along with Bell, state senators Jefferson Lee Davis and Willis Harden, who were well known for their interest in Georgia's Confederate history, agreed to introduce legislation to change the state flag. Some legislators favored the adoption of a standard state flag as an appropriate way to mark the upcoming centennial of the Civil War. A strong impetus for change, however, was the 1954 and 1955 Brown v. Board of Education decisions, which were bitterly denounced by most Georgia political leaders. The entire 1956 legislative session was devoted to Governor Marvin Griffin's platform of "massive resistance" to federally imposed integration of public schools. In this charged atmosphere, legislation to put the Confederate battle flag on Georgia's state flag sailed through the General Assembly.
Explanation:
State Flag, 1956-2001
Answer:
Spain
Explanation:
The Spanish–American War was an armed conflict between Spain and the United States.
Answer:
A similar example is the federal government's use of mandates. A mandate is a federal regulation that states must follow. Mandates are another common way that the federal ...
Explanation:
I tried, it's my first time.
He explained culture and ideology in a way anyone could understand it