Answer:
Granger is threatening to kick the Avery's off of his land
Answer:
it's not know why
Explanation:
Due to slavery.
Due to African Americans joining the war.
Due to segregated units in the war.
Picture 1
A reflective essay is a text in which a writer relates their experiences and feelings to communicate a message to the reader.
Write 1 - 2 paragraphs answering the following questions:
. What are two central messages Annie Dilard is communicating through her narration of this episode? How does she develop those messages in the text?
As you are brainstorming ideas for your response, think about additional questions that may help you identify details from the text to support your response.
. Which details and examples from the text support your analysis?
. Which vocabulary or word choices I used to support your analysis?
Now you are going to write 1 - 2 paragraphs answering the following questions: What are two central messages Annie Dillard is communicating through her narration with this episode? How does she develop those messages in the text?
Picture 2
The experiment was doomed to failure from the beginning. General Carleton’s illusion that the Bosque Redondo would spawn a farming community of thriving transplanted Native American prisoners was disastrous.General Carleton was a strict taskmaster however, and although the Native American prisoners were sick, ill-fed and unfit for heavy manual farm labor, and fields were improperly irrigated, he nearly realized his dream of a bountiful harvest. By mid-summer 1863 the corn alone was expected to yield twenty-five to thirty bushels per acre, a minimum of 75,000 bushels. Considering the extraordinary handicaps under which the Indians worked, this was an astonishing accomplishment. <span>When it seemed Carleton would realize his dreams, nature dealt a lethal blow. The reservation’s 3,000 acres of planted agricultural land was struck by an inch-long cut worm, or “army worm”, that destroyed the crops. The following year, another promising crop was again insect-infested and destroyed. Demoralized, the Indians would refuse to plant again.</span>