The Union Army took a series of military actions during the Civil War in which their troops took control of the Mississippi River. Mississippi was the main north-south avenue of transport. In July 1863, the western part of the Confederate states was split from the states east of the Mississippi River. Plan of the Union Army generals was to defeat the Confederacy through blockade of ports and control of rivers. Answer: Union forces took control of Mississippi River because they wanted to cut off the eastern part of Confederacy and to control the supply lines.
Because it was easier for Europeans to cross the Atlantic than for Chinese to cross the Pacific.
Answer: Yeoman farmers
Explanation: Jefferson and the form of democracy he aimed to popularize, supported yeoman farmers and was against the other options listed in this question, the factory worker, merchant and banker.
The new republic represented freedom from corruption, aristocracy and British rule and the yeoman farmer was a perfect example of people who were not touched by any of these as they simply relied on the land and their farm yield. Jefferson therefore believed that they represented the virtue and wholesomeness of the new republic.
Answer:
Though President Wilson firmly believed in an international body to conduct the matters of conflict between different nations by peace talks and his 'Fourteen Points' were influential in the foundation of the League of Nations, he could not rally the United States to be a member of League of Nations. Opposition came from the isolationist section who considers that Article Ten could draw the United States again into international war. Article ten required the members of the League to defend an attack on any of its member from any external threat.
Answer:
-Justice is taking responsibility for your mind and your actions
-People over profit
-We're courteous to criminals. They always get to finish their sentences
-Revenge is not the way, choose justice that restores
-Service. Integrity. Reliability.
-There is not god hugher than the truth