Before Rosa Parks, A Teenager Defied Segregation On An Alabama Bus. A teenage Claudette Colvin refused to give up her bus seat to a white passenger during the segregation era in Montgomery
"In the late 1800's" is an introductory adverbial prepositional phrase. We can safely ignore it. All it does is modify the verb "were".
Answer: No it shouldn't
Explanation:
"Unless "city" is part of the name (i.e. "Carson City" or "New York City"), it's not capitalized after the city's name. Even used before (as in "City of"), the capitalization only happens if the title of the city in question actually has that name ("City of London", "City of New York")."
A. I think because Cadence, in music, the ending of a phrase, perceived as a rhythmic or melodic articulation or a harmonic change or all of these; in a larger sense, a cadence may be a demarcation of a half-phrase, of a section of music, or of an entire movement. (I am sorry if I am wrong )