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Advocard [28]
2 years ago
9

Need help finding the other words.​

History
1 answer:
DanielleElmas [232]2 years ago
7 0

Explanation:

Hopes this helps!!!!!!

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Topic: Francisco Madero<br> Who was he?<br> What was his contribution?
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Answer:

Francisco Ignacio Madero González ( 30 October 1873 – 22 February 1913) was a Mexican revolutionary, writer and statesman who served as the 33rd president of Mexico from 1911 until shortly before his assassination in 1913. He was an advocate for social justice and democracy. Madero was notable for challenging Mexican President Porfirio Díaz for the presidency in 1910 and being instrumental in sparking the Mexican Revolution.

Explanation:

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3 years ago
The United States formally entered World War II following the Japanese attack on
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America did not enter war until Japan attacked Pearl Harbor
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2 years ago
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Write a review of Mabel Barbee Lee's title Cripple Creek Days, a book about life in one of the world's most famous and important
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Answer:

Explanation:

Summary

After a youth spent in a Colorado gold mining town toward the finish of the nineteenth century and the turn of the twentieth, Mabel Barbee Lee documented her encounters in a diary named Cripple Creek Days. First distributed in 1958, the book is like an eye-witness record of the town's blast days from the perspective of a little youngster who has an eye for detail. Challenged person Creek Days opens with a forward from Lowell Thomas, one of Lee's students when she turned into the town's schoolmarm, who names his previous educator "The Mark Twain of Cripple Creek."  

Lee was conceived in 1884, and when she was eight years of age, her dad carried the family to a boondocks town in Colorado's Pikes Peaks area. In 1892, Cripple Creek was only a makeshift camp settled in the mountains at a height of 9,500 feet. The Lees were there without a moment to spare to witness "the entire spot go to gold."  

Lee's dad was a "gold seer," or miner, who chose to bring his hesitant spouse and three kids to search for metal in this new hotspot. Lee portrays exactly how troublesome and hardscrabble life was in a mining camp that had scarcely any comforts or markers of human advancement. Her dad is cherishing and fair, however hard-drinking and not generally the best chief. In the long run, he and his "divining pole" do locate a paying gold case on Beacon Hill, however the Lees barely miss turning out to be tycoons when he undercuts his case as opposed to completely investigating the find.  

While Lee watches her dad's battles, she is likewise a sharp, wide-peered toward watcher of different occasions in the developing town. His story winds up being a microcosm for the destinies of many, plus or minus a godsend: "Challenged person Creek, by 1902, had created a sum of $111,361,633 and between thirty-five or forty bonanza rulers. Be that as it may, numerous who had unearthed fortunes, disregarding themselves, had a personnel for shedding them."  

A great part of the activity of the book rotates around the appearance and advancement of trains. While making Cripple Creek famous, trains are regularly associated with wrecks that take phenomenal quantities of lives. All the more by and by, one of the most energizing occasions throughout Lee's life happens on a train that is assaulted by outlaws. As the criminals strip the payload and ransack the travelers, Lee conceals a silver dollar in her mouth trying to get it past them – ineffectively. She is fortunate to pull off her life.  

Life at the turn of the twentieth century could be very hard for reasons having nothing to do with business astuteness. Lee unassumingly reports unforeseen debacles, for example, every single expending fire that are amazingly damaging in a town where most structures are wood, maladies of irresistible sickness that assault the occupants one after another before anti-toxins. A portion of these repulsion visit Lee's own family. Her dad experiences excavator's lung, an irritation of the bronchial tissues, while her more youthful sister agreements and kicks the bucket from one of seasonal influenza pandemics that clear its path through the town, slaughtering unpredictably during a time before influenza antibodies were accessible.  

All through the diary, what comes through best is the amount Lee cherished her life at Cripple Creek regardless of its difficulties and her family's discontinuous torment. For her, the spot is associated permanently with her affection for her dad.

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3 years ago
Why was the Philippines colonized by Spain? Explain​
pychu [463]

Answer:

The Spanish at first viewed the Philippines as a stepping-stone to the riches of the East Indies (Spice Islands), but, even after the Portuguese and Dutch had foreclosed that possibility, the Spanish still maintained their presence in the archipelago

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3 years ago
After independence, what did each former colony first need to do?
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Answer:Although some believe that the history of the American Revolution began long before the first shots were fired in 1775, England and America did not begin an overt parting of the ways until 1763, more than a century and a half after the founding of the first permanent settlement at Jamestown, Virginia. In 1763, the end of the Seven Years’ War and the French and Indian War left England in control of Canada and all of North America east of the Mississippi. The colonies long accustomed to a large measure of independence, were now demanding more freedom. They had grown vastly in economic strength and cultural attainment, and virtually all had long years of self-government behind them.

The British government, which needed more money to support its growing empire, started a new financial policy. Money for the colonies’ defense was to be extracted from the colonists through a stronger central administration. This would come at the expense of colonial self-government. The colonists resisted the new taxes and regulations imposed by England, such as the Sugar Act, the Stamp Act, the Townshend Act or the Coercive Act. They insisted that they could be taxed only by their own colonial assemblies, and the colonists rallied behind the slogan “no taxation without representation.” The conflict escalated and King George III issued a proclamation on August 23, 1775, declaring the colonies to be in a state of rebellion. On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted a Declaration of Independence. Armed conflict between America and England lasted until 1783. Known as the Treaty of Paris, the peace settlement acknowledged the independence, freedom and sovereignty of the 13 former colonies, now states, to which Great Britain granted the territory west to the Mississippi River, north to Canada and south to Florida, which was returned to Spain.

The 13 colonies were now “free and united independent states” – but not yet one united nation. The success of the Revolution gave Americans the opportunity to give legal form to their ideals as expressed in the Declaration of Independence, and to remedy some of their grievances through state constitutions. As early as May 10, 1776, Congress had passed a resolution advising the colonies to form new governments. On a national level, the “Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union” produced by John Dickinson in 1776, were adopted by the Continental Congress in November 1777, and they went into effect in 1781. The governmental framework established by the Articles had many weaknesses, for example the national government lacked the authority to set up tariffs, to regulate commerce and to levy taxes. It lacked sole control of international relations: a number of states had begun their own negotiations with foreign countries. Nine states had organized their own armies, and several had their own navies.

In May 1787, a convention met in Philadelphia to draft a new Constitution which established a stronger federal government empowered to collect taxes, conduct diplomacy, maintain armed forces and regulate foreign trade and commerce among the states. The Constitution divides the government into three branches, each separate and distinct from one another. The powers given to each are delicately balanced by the powers of the other two; and each branch serves as a check on potential excesses of the others. Within two years of its adoption, ten amendments, collectively known as the Bill of Rights, were added to the Constitution.

Explanation: Read that and you'll get your answer i hope this helps you~! <\3

7 0
3 years ago
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