Clearly the embargo<span> wasn't working. It was hurting America rather than its intended targets, Britain and France. In March 1809, Congress repealed the </span>Embargo Act of 1807. Jefferson signed the repeal shortly before he left office.<span>the embargo failed to have a significant effect on the British. Goods still reached Great Britain through illegal shipments; British trade was not suffering as much as the framers of the embargo had intended.</span>
Thomas Woodrow Wilson was an academic and American statesman and was the 28th President of the United States from 1913 up until 1921. He used the expanded or extended power of the presidency to encourage a far reaching reform program to upsurge the government’s part in the economy.
The 15th century....I think
Because on the railroad you have many ways to go
This term was known as popular sovereignty and resulted in debate over many decades in both State legislatures and the United States congress. It led to tension across the free and slave states, even leading to a event known as Bleeding Kansas in which the residents would determine whether to be free or slave