Answer:
Enormous fights by Russian laborers against the government prompted the Bloody Sunday slaughter of 1905. Many unarmed dissidents were murdered or injured by the despot's soldiers.
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Answer: The reason why Britain imposed taxation on the colonies was because of the losses faced in the French-Indian war. ... The Stamp Act was essential to the Boycott of British goods because it was the first direct taxation on the colonies; also the act was valid throughout all the English colonies.
Explanation:
June 1805
(Sacagawea)
Dear Diary:
Today I realized that Everybody likes Sacagawea on the expedition. I noticed how Clark was so fond of her that he offered to educate her little boy. The soldiers look at her with admiration. Early in the moning we had an encounter with the Shoshone in western Montana she kept cool in the moment of crises and She was useful as a translator. Time for luch some edible greens and roots in the High Plains that Sacagawea spotted.
(Captain Lewis and Lieutenant Clark)
Dear Diary:
Today We learned Captain Lewis and Lieutenant Clark are good leaders. Two weeks ago we got lost. We came to a fork in the Missouri at the Mandan´s villages that was not mentioned. We have maps of the lower Missouri but not beyond. There was doubt about which river was the Missouri. Captain Lewis and Lieutenant Clark had sent separate reconnaissance expeditions. They decided the south fork was the true Missouri, Every one disagreed but we followed them anyway because they are good leaders and in the end they were right.
(York, Captain Clark´s slave)
Dear Diary:
Today we ate dog for the first time.. York, Captain Clark´s slave, ate happily while the rest of us just hardly managed to swallow it.
Early this morning we met some tribesmen who were terrified at York´s black skin. They thought he was the devil and had come back to haunt them.
<span>Your answer is: February 20, 1967.
Hope this helps!
~Mistermistyeyed.</span>
Answer:
The Point No Point Treaty was signed on January 26, 1855 at Point No Point, on the northern tip of the Kitsap Peninsula.[1] Governor of Washington Territory, Isaac Stevens, convened the treaty council on January 25, with the S'Klallam, the Chimakum, and the Skokomish tribes.[2][1] Under the terms of the treaty, the original inhabitants of northern Kitsap Peninsula and Olympic Peninsula were to cede ownership of their land in exchange for small reservations along Hood Canal and a payment of $60,000 from the federal government. The treaty required the natives to trade only with the United States, to free all their slaves, and it abjured them not to acquire any new slaves.