Goes back to chambers. that answer is correct i took the test
The question refers to the case Gibbons v. Ogden, a landmark decision by the Supreme Court of the United States. The case dealt with the power to regulate interstate commerce.
<u>Because Aaron Ogden had a state license in New York, he believed that steamboat operators without a license needed to stay out of New York waters.</u> Gibbons, however, believed he also had the right to navigate these waters as Cogress had began to regulate commerce in coastal areas. The Supreme Court sided with Gibbons, as they believed this to be a case not only of state trade but of the country's economic well-being.
Answer:
False, the Walnut Street Jail was not a place in which prisoners were employed in hard labor in the institution and released during the day to repair and clean streets and highways.
Explanation:
First of all, half of the prompt is true. The Walnut Street Jail was built in Philadelphia by the Quakers in 1773. However, it didn't employ prisoners to perform the repair of the streets during the day allowed them to walk out of the prison. It did allow them to mingle with other prisoners because it was the first institution to incarcerate them in lone-isolation. The requirement for them to mingle with the rest of the prisoners was the work of hard labor. But it took place inside the walls of the institution.