Answer:
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Explanation:
Answer:
1. For the protection of their rights and the development of society to elect rulers, here comes the right to vote.
2.They achieved the protection of their rights
3. after a social, economic and political reform movement that promoted the extension of the sefrage.
4. Now all women can vote to elect their rulers, as well as men and in the same way as being elected, participating and serving in public office.
Answer: He developed the horse-drawn seed drill in 1700. It economically sowed the seeds in neatly drawn rows. He also developed a horse-drawn. Jethro Tull's ways were also adopted by many great landowners and agriculturists and it helped them to create the basis for new agriculture types.
Explanation:
1. Sincere individuals thought that if Native Americans adopted white clothing and ways, they would try first-hand how much better it was and leave behind their native culture, thought as uncivilized by that time. As they would become more assimilated to the American society, the Government wouldn't have to overlook their welfare.
2. The Dawes Act, named after its creator Senator Henry Dawes of Massachusetts, allowed the President to survey Native American tribal land and divide it into allotments to be handed to Native Americans as individual property.
3. Native Americans registered on a tribal "roll" were granted allotments of reservation land. They had to leave behind their culture and adopt the white American one. If they did so, they were granted U.S. citizenship.
4. Excess land after the distributed one to tribal members was sold on the open market. The land allotted to Native American families were a lot of the time desertic, and could not sustain them. The self-sufficient farming techniques were very different from tribal ones. Many of the tribal members didn't want to take up agriculture, and the ones that did couldn't afford tools, seeds and so to get started. Inheritance was also a problem: if there were many inherent, the parcelled allotments wasn't enough to sustain all of them.
5. The government succeeded in erasing a vital part of tribal culture, the common property of the land, setting the foundations for their assimilation and the destruction of their culture. In the long term, these various cultures still exist, despite the government's efforts on the contrary. If the government wanted to protect Native American rights, it failed.