Expanded foreign trade was the economic benefit gained by the United States of America as a result of the Spanish-American War.
C. Expanded foreign trade
<u>Explanation:</u>
Spanish–American War took place in the year of 1898 between Spain and United States of America. The Spanish-American war was started due to the explosive attack on the battleship USS Maine in Havana Harbor. The war went on for four months and came to an end after signing the "Treaty of Paris.
The government of Spain and America signed this Treaty of Paris and made Cuba independent from Spain. America got the territories in the western Pacific and Latin America. So they expanded the foreign trade.
The nicknames commonly used in the 1930s for displaced farmers who lost their lands during the Dust Bowl droughts and storms are "Okies," Arkies," and "Texies," because most of them came from Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Texas.
They were forced to migrate to other parts of the state or the country in order to find work. They usually went west, primarily to California when it comes to Okies, where they often faced discrimination and poverty.
If you want to learn about the living conditions of Okies in this period, they are the main topic of John Steinbeck's <em>The Grapes of Wrath</em>, a very famous novel published in 1939.
Answer:
The U.S. used the English (British).
Explanation:
The U.S used the English because only the English knew how to get over too 'soon to be America.' The English then started all those Acts to get the Americans to go to debt. Then, you know, they had the Boston Tea Party, the Boston Massacre, then the Revolutionary War. That way, the English would wave a white flag (surender) or lose, and we would be free. That's how the U.S. used the English to get overseas and build an empire.