Answer:
Imperalism, population boom, and faster production due to factories.
Explanation:
The British started to make more and more money off of putting cild laborers into the factories with horrible working conditions. They also experienced a large population boom because people from other countries were looking for money to send home to their families and all of the new factories provided thousands of job openings. The Industrial Revolution also brought imperalism to Britain because they had so much supplies and weapons stock piled that they could essentially take over whatever they wanted.
Answer:
new tools made it possible from more crops to be grown.
Explanation:
The Agriculture Revolution in England meant that the agriculture process started to transform in the 18th century. Farmers relocated land to make it more compact, investments in new machines improved the work in the farming fields, better drainage helped the crops, and new agriculture experimentations such as the crop rotation facilitated the difficult labor of growing crops. So it is true that as a result of the agriculture revolution, new tools made it possible from more crops to be grown.
The U.S. government took over and ran the railroads from 26 December 1917 to 1 March 1920. During the period of government operation, the tracks were obliged to carry a heavy volume of traffic with little attention to replacements or ordinary maintenance.
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Thomas Wood McLain volunteered for pharmacy school. They sent Thomas to Fort Sam Houston, Texas. For three months he was a pharmacist. In his two years as a pharmacist, he fulfilled his enlistment and was released from the army on August 25 1950. On that same day, the Korean war started. Thomas agreed to be on the inactive reservist for five years. Due to the Korean War, they then recalled him. During September of 1950, he was in the Army again as a PFC [Private First Class]. He received orders to take a troop train from Camp Breckinridge, Kentucky to Seattle, Washington. They loaded him and 500 Americans on board the ship the day before they loaded the Princess Pats Light Infantry [The Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry]. As soon as they hit open water and hit a storm, everyone started getting sick. Thomas later became a gunner and he got on-the-job training. He was later promoted to section sergeant. He was promoted again and made sergeant first class. That was towards the end of the war, that would have been in October of 1951. Thomas was on the front line from February 17th until October 28th, after he left the company.