Explanation:
After the war ended and during Reconstruction, the Northern industrial economy had made important progress, particularly in manufacturing and railroad-building. The struggle for political reform and eventual legal changes, like the Civil Rights Act and the Fifteenth Amendment, affected the North as well as the South
One of the ways in which the Crusades brought about the end of the Dark Ages in Europe was that they (by accident) opened up a variety of new trade routes, which led to increased travel and cultural diffusion. This was thought to be the "spark in the dark" as the Enlightenment.
America prosperity today and the extinction of native American cultures were due to European settlements. Europeans settlers like the spanish forced the native Americans into converting into Christianity which resulted in leaving today Americas' lost in native cultures. However the europeans brought about goods things to modern day Americas. The start of slaveries lead to civil rights and diverse in Americans cultures. Many people from around the world started migrating into Americas in search of freedom of religious and opportunities. The world most wide known language, English originated from the British settlements. Modern US government was brought through progresses of Europeans arrival from the Mayflower Compact to the Bill of Rights, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, etc.. Europeans also brought along advances in technology from their voyages around the world, such as the type writer and compass.
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Two
The cities were Hiroshima and Nagasaki. On August 6, 1945, a bomb was dropped on Hiroshima that instantly killed around 80,000 people, and many thousands more from after-effects of the nuclear explosion. On August 9, 1945, a second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, with an immediate death toll of around 40,000.
The history of New England is the history of the New England region of North America in the current-day United States. New England is the oldest clearly defined region of the United States, and it predates the history of the United States by over 150 years. While New England was originally inhabited by Indigenous peoples, English Pilgrims and especially Puritans, fleeing religious persecution in England, arrived in the 1620-1660 era. They dominated the region; their religion was later called Congregationalism. They and their descendants are called Yankees. Farming, fishing, and lumbering prospered, as did whaling, sea trading, and merchandising.
New England writers and events in the region helped launch and sustain the American Revolution, and the American War of Independence began when fighting between British troops and Massachusetts militia broke out in Battles of Lexington and Concord. The region became a stronghold of the conservative Federalist Party and opposed the later War of 1812 with Great Britain.
By the 1840s it was the center of the American anti-slavery movement and was the leading force in American literature and higher education. The region was the scene of the first Industrial Revolution in the United States, with many textile mills and machine shops operating by 1830, and was the manufacturing center of the entire United States for much of that century. It played an important role leading up to, during, and after the American Civil War as a fervent intellectual, political, and cultural promoter of abolitionism as well as civil rights for Freedman and harsh treatment for former Confederate leaders.
As manufacturing in the United States shifted southwards and westwards, New England experienced a sustained period of economic decline and deindustrialization in the early part of the last century. This trend was reversed in the late-twentieth century largely thanks to the region's universities and educated workforce; by the turn of the century, New England had become a world center for higher education, high technology, weapons manufacturing, scientific research, and financial service