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AlexFokin [52]
3 years ago
10

I neeeds heelllpsspspsp lol UwU

History
1 answer:
Angelina_Jolie [31]3 years ago
6 0

Hi! I believe your answer is <u>B</u><u>: It created a hero in Andrew Jackson and his frontier fighters</u>. I hope this helps you! Good luck and have a great day. ❤️✨

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Could the national government solve problems between the states?
Artist 52 [7]

According to the Constitution the answer is yes. The federal government is the guardian of the Constitution and Article IV the Constitution establishes a series of guidelines and principles that dictate the duties, rights and powers of states towards the federal government and to each other. Two sections are of special importance:

Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by general Laws prescribe the Manner in which such Acts, Records and Proceedings shall be proved, and the Effect thereof.

This section is known as the “Full Faith and Credit Clause” and it means for example that a couple who married in Colorado and then moves to Texas will still be legally married in Texas which is bound by this clause to accept the marriage certificate from Colorado as a valid legal document.

The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States.

This Section is known as the Privileges and Immunities Clause and it means for example that American citizens to move from Texas to California have to be granted all the rights and privileges that the state of California has granted to its native-born residents.


6 0
3 years ago
What are some additional requirements you feel should be added, and why?
labwork [276]
You should give more details, though.
If you mean to Brainly, I think that more options should be added for more students to join.

8 0
3 years ago
Which of the following performers was not killed in a 1959 plane crash? Buddy Holly Big Bopper Waylon Jennings Ritchie Valens
Tems11 [23]

The performer that was not killed in a 1959 plane crash was Waylon Jennings.  The accident is known as "The day the music died".

The plane crash took place on Tuesday, February 3, 1959, when rock and roll composers and musicians Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper ("JP" Richardson), along with the pilot Roger Peterson, were carrying out a tour by the United States. Their Beechcraft Bonanza four-seat plane crashed into a corn field in the small rural town of Clear Lake (Cerro Gordo County) in the state of Iowa. All them passed away.


3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
When Napoleon seized the Spanish throne and replaced it with a French king, criollos in Latin America did/ thought what? please
madreJ [45]

Answer:

In 1833

Explanation:

5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Describe the significance of Grant’s meeting Lee at the Appomattox Courthouse. please
77julia77 [94]

Answer:

HE GENTLEMEN'S AGREEMENT

See "The Surrender" painting by Keith Rocco

On the morning of April 9, while General Robert E . Lee realized that the retreat of his beleaguered army had finally been halted, U. S. Grant was riding toward Appomattox Court House where Union Cavalry, followed by infantry from the V, XXIV, and XXV Corps had blocked the Confederate path. Lee had sent a letter to Grant requesting a meeting to discuss his army's surrender and this letter overtook Grant and his party just before noon about four miles west of Walker's Church (present-day Hixburg). Grant, who had been suffering from a severe headache, later remembered that upon reading Lee's letter the pain in his head had disappeared. He stopped to prepare his reply to Lee, writing that he would push to the front to meet him.

The location of the meeting was left to Lee's discretion. Lt. Colonel Orville E . Babcock and his orderly, Capt. Dunn, took Grant's reply and rode ahead. Babcock found Lee resting under an apple tree near the Appomattox River. After reading Grant's letter, Lee, his Aide-de-Camp Lt. Colonel Charles Marshall, and Private Joshua O. Johns rode toward Appomattox Court House accompanied by Federal Officers Lt. Col. Babcock and Capt. William McKee Dunn. Marshall and Johns rode ahead of Lee in order to find a place for the generals to confer. As Marshall passed through the village he saw Wilmer McLean in the vicinity of the courthouse. He asked McLean if he knew of a suitable location, and McLean took him to an empty structure that was without furniture. Marshall immediately rejected this offer. Then McLean offered his own home. After seeing the comfortable country abode, Marshall readily accepted and sent Private Johns back to inform General Lee that a meeting site had been found.

Lee arrived at the McLean house about one o'clock and took a seat in the parlor. A half hour later, the sound of horses on the stage road signalled the approach of General Grant. Entering the house, Grant greeted Lee in the center of the room. The generals presented a contrasting appearance; Lee in a new uniform and Grant in his mud-spattered field uniform. Grant, who remembered meeting Lee once during the Mexican War, asked the Confederate general if he recalled their meeting. Lee replied that he did, and the two conversed in a very cordial manner, for approximately 25 minutes. The subject had not yet gotten around to surrender until finally, Lee, feeling the anguish of defeat, brought Grant's attention to it. Grant, who later confessed to being embarrassed at having to ask for the surrender from Lee, said simply that the terms would be just as he had outlined them in a previous letter.

The terms would parole officers and enlisted men but required that all Confederate military equipment be relinquished. The discussion between the generals then drifted into the prospects for peace, but Lee, once again taking the lead, asked Grant to put his terms in writing. When Grant finished, he handed the terms to his former adversary, and Lee -- first donning spectacles used for reading-- quietly looked them over. When he finished reading, the bespectacled Lee looked up at Grant and remarked "This will have a very happy effect on my army." Lee asked if the terms allowed his men to keep their horses, for in the Confederate army men owned their mounts. Lee explained that his men would need these animals to farm once they returned to civilian life. Grant responded that he would not change the terms as written (which had no provisions allowing private soldiers to keep their mounts) but would order his officers to allow any Confederate claiming a horse or a mule to keep it. General Lee agreed that this concession would go a long way toward promoting healing. Grant's generosity extended further. When Lee mentioned that his men had been without rations for several days, the Union commander arranged for 25, 000 rations to be sent to the hungry Confederates. After formal copies of the surrender terms, and Lee's acceptance, had been drafted and exchanged, the meeting ended.

In a war that was marked by such divisiveness and bitter fighting, it is remarkable that it ended so simply. Grant's compassion and generosity did much to allay the emotions of the Confederate troops. As for Robert E. Lee, he realized that the best course was for his men to return home and resume their lives as American citizens.

Before he met with General Grant, one of Lee's officers (General E. Porter Alexander) had suggested fighting a guerilla war, but Lee had rejected the idea. It would only cause more pain and suffering for a cause that was lost. The character of both Lee and Grant was of such a high order that the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia has been called "The Gentlemen's Agreement."

7 0
3 years ago
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