Jedediah Morse, like other American educators, believed that textbooks were essential for Americans to retain their opposition to the aristocratic notions of the English (p. 184, 1st Sentence).
Geographer Jedidiah Morse (August 23, 1761 – June 9, 1826) wrote textbooks that were widely used by American pupils. He is known as the "father of American geography" due to his textbooks and his relationship to the painter and telegraphy pioneer Samuel Morse. Born in Woodstock, Connecticut, to Jedidiah Morse and Sarah Child, he attended Yale University for his undergraduate studies and received a degree in divinity. He founded a school for young women in New Haven in 1783 while continuing his theological studies under Jonathan Edwards and Samuel Watts.
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Answer:
Consequences. The Berlin wall divided families who found themselves unable to visit each other. Many East Berliners were cut off from their jobs. West Berliners demonstrated against the wall and their mayor Willy Brandt led the criticism against the United States who they felt had failed to respond.
Explanation:
above
They passed it without changes.