The people of the Fourth Crusade were the ones who captured and partitioned the empire.
I think Mr. Bradford paints a rather rosy picture that is perhaps only a bit true. I suspect life was hard and the new country life quite strange. It took a strong forbearance for the women especially to adapt to the varying climates, crude living quarters, and usually harder work than in England. The Indians reportedly did welcome the strangers at first but did in time become leery of these new people - some lied to the Indians and did not deserve their welcome, so there were clashes in time. I do not think the early colonies were very successful. Later colonists learned from the mistakes of the first.
Answer:
C. Some southern leaders promoted industrialization as progress.
Explanation:
This answer is supported by the source because Henry W. Grandy states in his writing that the South has now become loyal to the Union and they have accepted their defeat. He also states that "the new South presents a perfect democracy" which shows that they are accepting the ways of the industrial north.
Answer: your answer is c
Explanation:
During the 1800s political machines were considered Obsolete
He
felt the defeat.
General George
Armstrong Custer is a famous army leader who was overpowered at the
"Battle of the Little Bighorn" fought in 1876, amid the "Indian
Wars", when battling against the indigenous people. <span>
</span>
The "joke"
depends upon the homophonous comparability of "defeat" and "the
feet", along these lines when removed his boots he experienced the feet.