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Alla [95]
3 years ago
15

Write short notes Sports and movies ​

History
1 answer:
forsale [732]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

<h2>SPORTS: </h2>

Sport (or sports) is all forms of usually competitive physical activity which, through casual or organised participation, aim to use, maintain or improve physical ability and skills while providing entertainment to participants, and in some cases, spectators.

<h2>MOVIE: </h2>

A movie, or film, is a type of visual communication which uses moving pictures and sound to tell stories or teach people something. Most people watch (view) movies as a type of entertainment or a way to have fun. For some people, fun movies can mean movies that make them laugh, while for others it can mean movies that make them cry, or feel afraid.

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The Great Migration was prompted in part by*
Mandarinka [93]

Answer:

The Great Migration was prompted, in part, by the impact of World War I. Workers were needed to keep Chicago's factories rolling. Immigration restrictions imposed in the 1920s further opened factory jobs with better pay to black workers.

Explanation:you pick which one this goes for

6 0
3 years ago
What impacts did African Americans have on American history ?​
sweet-ann [11.9K]

Answer:

By 1775 more than a half-million African Americans, most of them enslaved, were living in the 13 colonies. Early in the 18th century a few New England ministers and conscientious Quakers, such as George Keith and John Woolman, had questioned the morality of slavery but they were largely ignored. By the 1760s, however, as the colonists began to speak out against British tyranny, more Americans pointed out the obvious contradiction between advocating liberty and owning slaves. In 1774 Abigail Adams wrote, “it always appeared a most iniquitious scheme to me to fight ourselves for what we are daily robbing and plundering from those who have as good a right to freedom as we have.”

Widespread talk of liberty gave thousands of slaves high expectations, and many were ready to fight for a democratic revolution that might offer them freedom. In 1775 at least 10 to 15 black soldiers, including some slaves, fought against the British at the battles of Lexington and Bunker Hill. Two of these men, Salem Poor and Peter Salem, earned special distinction for their bravery. By 1776, however, it had become clear that the revolutionary rhetoric of the founding fathers did not include enslaved blacks. The Declaration of Independence promised liberty for all men but failed to put an end to slavery; and although they had proved themselves in battle, the Continental Congress adopted a policy of excluding black soldiers from the army.

In spite of these discouragements, many free and enslaved African Americans in New England were willing to take up arms against the British. As soon states found it increasingly difficult to fill their enlistment quotas, they began to turn to this untapped pool of manpower. Eventually every state above the Potomac River recruited slaves for military service, usually in exchange for their freedom. By the end of the war from 5,000 to 8,000 blacks had served the American cause in some capacity, either on the battlefield, behind the lines in noncombatant roles, or on the seas. By 1777 some states began enacting laws that encouraged white owners to give slaves for the army in return for their enlistment bounty, or allowing masters to use slaves as substitutes when they or their sons were drafted. In the South the idea of arming slaves for military service met with such opposition that only free blacks were normally allowed to enlist in the army.

Most black soldiers were scattered throughout the Continental Army in integrated infantry regiments, where they were often assigned to support roles as wagoners, cooks, waiters or artisans. Several all-black units, commanded by white officers, also were formed and saw action against the British. Rhode Island’s Black Battalion was established in 1778 when that state was unable to meet its quota for the Continental Army. The legislature agreed to set free slaves who volunteered for the duration of the war, and compensated their owners for their value. This regiment performed bravely throughout the war and was present at Yorktown where an observer noted it was “the most neatly dressed, the best under arms, and the most precise in its maneuvers.”

Although the Southern states were reluctant to recruit enslaved African Americans for the army, they had no objections to using free and enslaved blacks as pilots and able-bodied seaman. In Virginia alone, as many as 150 black men, many of them slaves, served in the state navy. After the war, the legislature granted several of these men their freedom as a reward for faithful service. African Americans also served as gunners, sailors on privateers and in the Continental Navy during the Revolution. While the majority of blacks who contributed to the struggle for independence performed routine jobs, a few, such as James Lafayette, gained renown serving as spies or orderlies for well-known military leaders.

Black participation in the Revolution, however, was not limited to supporting the American cause, and either voluntarily or under duress thousands also fought for the British. Enslaved blacks made their own assessment of the conflict and supported the side that offered the best opportunity to escape bondage. Most British officials were reluctant to arm blacks, but as early as 1775, Virginia’s royal governor, Lord Dunmore, established an all-black “Ethiopian Regiment” composed of  runaway slaves. By promising them freedom, Dunmore enticed over 800 slaves to escape from “rebel” masters. Whenever they could, enslaved blacks continued to join him until he was defeated and forced to leave Virginia in 1776. Dunmore’s innovative strategy met with disfavor in England, but to many blacks the British army came to represent liberation.

4 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Why are Napoleon and the events of his life significant to history as well as to modern society?
nadezda [96]
<span>Napoleon impacted both Europe and the world in a number of ways.  When thinking about Napoleon’s impact, we have to realize that he did not necessarily intend to have the impacts that he did.  Instead, much of his impact came about inadvertently or even in response to his actions.
Source:Enote advall</span>
6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Which of the following describes many of the bonanza farms of the late 1800s?
mash [69]

The history of the bonanza farm started with the arrival of the railroad, as with the history of America’s westward expansion. A group of entrepreneurs dreamed of building a railroad across the northern territory to the Pacific Ocean during the mid-1860s. The newly-formed Northern Pacific Railroad began construction with financing from Jay Cooke and his banking institution, as well as the millions of acres in government land grants. Entering present-day North Dakota., the NP has traversed the Red River by 1872.

 

<span>The NP and the entire country was in a financial panic since Jay Cooke went bankrupt a year later. The NP allowed stockholders, who were holding deflated stock, to purchase huge tracts of land at a cost comparable with land sold by the government, in order to raise money that was needed to continue the railroads construction.</span>

7 0
3 years ago
Give two reasons the Sioux were angry and worried about their future?​
Kazeer [188]

Answer:

In 2016 a major Texas-based energy transfer partners company began construction Dakota Access Pipeline and work arrived near the The Standing Rock Reservation, which encompasses parts of both North and South Dakota.

Sioux's were angry and afraid that so much oil would destroy nature, pollute Missouri, and demolish Native American holy sites. They are worried as this constructing will be direct threat to their ancient burial grounds and cultural sites of historic importance, which remain last resorts of the tribe.

Explanation:

Descendants of the Sioux celebrities began storming social campaign to stop this contruction and under Obama, the environmental impact assessment was initiated, however ended by President Trump who authorized the construction.

South and North Dakota are located in the Midwest US. They are named after the tribe of the great Native American people of the Sioux, which stretches between the Rocky Mountains and the Mississippi River. The word Dakota, in Sioux, means - allies or friends. Both Dakotas are split in half by the largest tributaries of the Mississippi - Missouri. 750,000 people live in the North, 100,000 more in the South. In both states, there are 15 Native American reservations.

3 0
3 years ago
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