In theory a total failure as he failed to start a war to free all enslaved men from bondage and was swiftly dealt with by Robert E Lee, his 2nd Jeb Stuart and their Marines and the local Militia.
But it ended up succeeding after all the raiders had already been killed in action or executed.
Browns death riled up an already angry North and more people saw slavery as a southern blight on society.
So as John Brown's body lied in the grave, abolitionists everywhere were mobilizing and spreading.
In the Northern states, West coast and Midwest Brown became a martyr for the abolition of an Evil which cost him his life, while in the south he was a Terrorist a crazy fanatic who stormed a small town killing 6 civilians and a marine.
He was further enshrined as an American hero during the Civil War when he became a rallying, and battle cry for union soldiers especially African american units.
So no his original plan didnt work but posthomously he stirred up division which in turn saw his dream true.
The Reformation promoted an individual relationship with God and that anyone could find salvation through hard work.
Democracy--the Protestant reformation taught people they could have a say in the own salvation and did not need a Church leader such as the Pope to provide them salvation. This thinking convince people they could lead themselves and have a say in other parts of their life such as their government.
Individualism--because the Reformation taught that individual people could be the key to their own salvation, it began to convince people they could find progress on their own. Individualism grew as an idea as more people believed they could control their own destiny through their own hard work.
Answer:
Some white people didn't want their kids going to school with black kids, so they moved
Explanation:
The correct answer is a. evolution.
Darwin was the scientist behind the theory of natural selection, one of the main mechanisms behind evolution (next to sexual selection).
In 1969 at a UNESCO Conference in San Francisco, peace activist John McConnell proposed a day to honor the Earth and the concept of peace, to first be celebrated on March 21, 1970, the first day of spring in the northern hemisphere.