The correct answer is C.Britain seized American sailors for service in the Royal Navy.
Forcing men into service was a common English practice that dated back to medieval times. It was one the causes for the War of 1812 because most Americans were angered by the impressment of American sailors into the Royal Navy
The Anaconda Plan is the name applied to a U.S. Union Army outline strategy for suppressing the Confederacy at the beginning of the American Civil War.[1] Proposed by General-in-Chief Winfield Scott, the plan emphasized a Union blockade of the Southern ports, and called for an advance down the Mississippi River to cut the South in two. Because the blockade would be rather passive, it was widely derided by a vociferous faction of Union generals who wanted a more vigorous prosecution of the war, and who likened it to the coils of an anaconda suffocating its victim. The snake image caught on, giving the proposal its popular name.
In the early days of the Civil War, General-in-Chief Winfield Scott's proposed strategy for the war against the South had two prominent features: first, all ports in the seceding states were to be rigorously blockaded; second, a strong column of perhaps 80,000 men should use the Mississippi River as a highway to thrust completely through the Confederacy. A spearhead, a relatively small amphibious force of army troops transported by boats and supported by gunboats, should advance rapidly, capturing the Confederate positions down the river in sequence.
The correct answer is A) The electoral vote was overwhelming democratic. As you can see in the pie graph labeled "Electoral Vote," in the bottom right hand corner, Democrat Lyndon Johnson had 90.5% of the electoral vote.
Answer: religious freedom, land, and economic opportunity
Explanation:
Englishmen were looking for ways to invest their wealth, others were not so fortunate, England also looked at the settlement of colonies as a way of fulfilling its desire to sell more goods and resources to other countries than it bought and have a sort of freedom about their social constructs