Answer:
The boxer the question is referring to is Benny Leonard. Benny Leonard was born in the jewish ghetto of Lower East Manhattan, and became a boxer at age 15. He won the world lightweight titel in 1917. He won it against welsh boxer Freddie Welsh in Philadelphia.
They felt amazed and where happy
Americans were mostly concerned about the economy. They were also scared of communism spreading into America.
Answer:
ThecCorrect answer is the second statement: <em>It used prison labor and lobbied the federal government.</em>
Explanation:
It would take much time for the South to end its racist practices even after the Civil War (1861-1865) and the Reconstruction era (1865-1877).
One of the many racist practices that persisted in the South was the use of prison labor to build railroads. They took advantage of how the 13th Amendment abolished slavery except as a punishment for a crime and used this to keep using a type of labor they had complete control over. The vast majority of this prison labor was African-American.
After the Civil War, the federal government and Reconstruction state governments offered financial aid to create a "new South". Building railroads was seen as necessary to industrialize the region.
Answer:
ahmm sorry I don't answer that