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WITCHER [35]
3 years ago
14

IN YOUR OWN WORDS

History
2 answers:
andreev551 [17]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

for me I think it's

Explanation:

by reducing the price of advertisement

By reducing cost of newspapers

sleet_krkn [62]3 years ago
5 0

Answer: Some strategies that media or newspapers can use to get the public on their side are the following: utilize social media platform for more direct contact with the public, write engaging content that will be interesting for the public, avoid using clickbait and publish honest, non-biased information.

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Which civil rights protest in 1965 resulted in an incident known as Bloody Sunday?
Fynjy0 [20]
The civil rights movement that became known as the Bloody Sunday that took place in 1965 is the Selma, Alabama March or the Selma to Montgomery March. This lasted for 18 days from March 7 until March 25, 1965. 

Hope my answer has come to your help.
4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
I
Virty [35]

Answer:

where is the video?

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
“The press has too long basked in a white world, looking out of it, if at all, with white men’s eyes and a white perspective.”
beks73 [17]
It means that throughout history one main perspective or viewpoint has been shown off or presented as fact while others have been ignored. The Caucasian perspective. However this quote is also an opinion and should NOT be taken as fact.
8 0
4 years ago
How were indentured servants different from slaves?
alina1380 [7]

Explanation:

D. Indentured servants were forced to come to America, but they were paid for their voyage.

hope this helps you

have a nice day

6 0
3 years ago
Create a list of four to five
IrinaVladis [17]

Answer:

In the fall of 1781, American and British troops fought the last major battle of the American Revolutionary War in Yorktown, Virginia.

A combined American and French force, led by George Washington and French General Comte de Rochambeau, completely surrounded and captured British General Charles Cornwallis and about 9,000 British troops during the Siege of Yorktown.

When news of the British defeat at Yorktown reached England, support for the war in America faded in both the British Parliament and the public. England agreed to begin peace negotiations with the Americans to end the Revolutionary War.

Peace Negotiations

After Yorktown, the Continental Congress appointed a small group of statesmen to travel to Europe and negotiate a peace treaty with the British: John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, John Jay, Thomas Jefferson and Henry Laurens.

Jefferson, however, was not able to leave the United States for the negotiations, and Laurens had been captured by a British warship and held captive in the Tower of London until the end of the war, so the principal American negotiators were Franklin, Adams and Jay.

Franklin, who served as America’s first ambassador to France, had been in Paris since the start of the Revolution and was instrumental in securing French assistance during the war. Peace negotiations between British and American diplomats began there in the spring of 1782 and continued into the fall.

The British wanted to end the costly war, but peace negotiations stalled when England wouldn’t recognize United States independence – a point on which the American delegation refused to budge. After the election of a new, more pro-American Parliament, Great Britain soon gave in and accepted terms of American independence.

Treaty of Paris Terms

In 1782, the newly elected British Prime Minister Lord Shelburne saw American independence as an opportunity to build a lucrative trade alliance with the new nation without the administrative and military costs of running and defending the colonies.

As a result, Treaty of Paris terms were very favorable to the United States with Great Britain making major concessions.

The treaty, signed by Franklin, Adams and Jay at the Hotel d’York in Paris, was finalized on September 3, 1783, and ratified by the Continental Congress on January 14, 1784.

Here are the key terms of the Treaty of Paris:

Great Britain finally gave formal recognition to its former colonies as a new and independent nation: the United States of America.

Defined the U.S. border, with Great Britain granting the Northwest Territory to the United States.

Secured fishing rights to the Grand Banks and other waters off the British-Canadian coastline for American boats.

Opened up the Mississippi River to navigation by citizens of both the United States and Great Britain.

Resolved issues with American debts owed to British creditors.

Provided for fair treatment of American citizens who had remained loyal to Great Britain during the war.

Northwest Territory

Perhaps as important as U.S. independence, the Treaty of Paris also established generous boundaries for the new nation. As part of the agreement, the British ceded a vast area known as the Northwest Territory to the United States.

The Northwest Territory – which included the present-day states of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and parts of Minnesota – doubled the land area of the United States and helped set the stage for the westward expansion that was to come over the next century.

Peace of Paris

In addition to the American colonists, other nations including France, Spain and the Netherlands fought against the British during the American Revolution. Alongside the Treaty of Paris, Great Britain signed separate peace treaties with each these nations in September 1783.

In the treaties, known collectively as the Peace of Paris, Great Britain returned to Spain parts of Florida that it had won in the last Treaty of Paris. (Spain had ceded Spanish Florida to the British Empire in 1763 at the culmination of the French and Indian War.)

Treaty of Paris Aftermath

Though the Treaty of Paris, 1783 formally ended the war for independence between America and Great Britain, tensions continued to rise between the two nations over issues that remained unresolved by the treaty.

The British, for instance, refused to relinquish several of its forts in the former Northwest Territory, while the Americans, for their part, continued to confiscate property from citizens that had remained loyal to the British Crown during the war.

In 1795, John Jay returned to Europe to resolve these issues with Great Britain. The resulting agreement, known as Jay’s Treaty, helped to delay another costly war between the two countries.

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
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