The wave of immigration to the United States in the late 1800s and early 1900s affected the country's population distribution and regional cultures because
- Immigrants introduced new languages, customs, and traditions.
- More of the immigrants came from southern and eastern Europe and Asia
- Immigrants entered the country primarily through southern cities
<h3>Immigration During the 1800s and 1900s</h3>
Immigration into the United States during the 1800s and the 1900s was primarily due to the growing US economy which made Jobs readily available
Many immigrants during the waves of "new immigration" of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, were leaving home in an effort to find work.
The booming US economy and the rise of the machine age were creating large amounts of factory jobs in the urban centers of the North East. Many immigrants entered into cities such as New York, Boston and Philadelphia, found work and settled there.
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Wilson outlined fourteen points that included the end of secret diplomacy, armament reductions, freedom of the seas, and the creation of an international organization with representatives of every nation to avoid any conflict escalation.
But the European allied nations were more interested in retribution than peace and Germany was forced to pay unlimited reparations. While the Fourteen Points were all ignored, Wilson did get approval for a league of nations. However, back in the US, he encountered opposition from isolationist Republicans in Congress who thought the League could limit the country’s autonomy and drag the country into another war.
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Many procedures in Congress in the United States are organized around "historical precedent," since the Constitution isn't clear on many of the specific details regarding procedures surrounding legislation. <span />
Answer:
C) Was part of an attempt by the United States to acquire Cuba.
Explanation:
The Ostend Manifesto was a written document that invited the American Government to purchase Cuba from Spain, and in case Spain refused to sell, to invade Cuba with military force.
It takes the name from the city of Ostend, Belgium, were three American diplomats: James Buchanan, Pierre Soulé, and John Y. Mason met to draft the document.
The rationale behind the manifesto was to enlarge the U.S. territory, to protect national security from a weak, but anyways hostile Spain, and to establish a new slave state.
This manifesto was largely rejected by northerners, who saw it as just another attempt to extend slavery, and it in the end, it failed to gather support.