1.Moving all through the South - Freedmen stay near their previous ranches because of the way they were dealt with
2.The Right to Move - Freedmen, for the most part, moved to Atlanta, Richmond, and other southern urban areas for work since they infrequently left the south.
3.Where they Settled - Map of where African-Americans settled after the Civil War.
4.Seeking Land - The Homestead Act is passed, and Freedmen exploit it.
5.Moving to the City - Explains why the Cities were an intense place to live in on the off chance that you were an African American
6.Northern Cities - Northern Cities were less demanding to move into since they bolstered equity.
7.Promised Lands - A perspective of what spots were best to move to and their lives as free resident
People flocked to the cities in the late 1800's because during this time factories were booming and there was more opportunity in the cities. Therefore the answer is B.
The first one- <em>the public began to take action by setting up committees and supporting reform candidates</em>. The influence of the muckrakers (journalists that were pro reform) was far reaching, with labor and economic relations getting a turn for the better because of their interference, that ought to expose injustices and corruption in diverse strata of american society. Inspired and instigated by their work, the public started to take matters to their hands and started changing their local political scenery in hopes that by doing this the problems denounced by the muckrakers ceased to exist.
They feared that British troops would move to seize Patriot armories.