We all know Ferdinand Magellan as the leader of the first voyage to circumnavigate the globe, but that’s not the only fascinating aspect of the famed Portuguese explorer’s journey. Launched in 1519, Magellan’s odyssey lasted three long years, claimed the lives of hundreds of people and forever changed Europe’s understanding of world geography. Nearly five centuries after Magellan’s fleet first left Europe, explore 10 little-known facts about one of naval history’s most legendary and deadly voyages.
To answer this question lets take a look at the options:
<u>Many more people served in the military than worked on the home front.</u> - False - Based in the reduction of unemployment resulted from the millions of war jobs created, we can affirm there were more people working in the home front than in the military. The shortage of job was so intense that millions of retired people, housewives, and students entered the labor force.
<u>Women worked on the home front but did not serve in the US military.</u> - False - Approximately two hundred thousand women served in the Women’s Army Corps (WAC) and the navy’s equivalent, Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES). Others joined the Marine Corps, the Coast Guard, and the Army Air Force.
<u>The efforts of soldiers and factory workers were both vital to the Allied war effort.</u> - True - The industries and induction centers of the country were mobilized to supply the Army. The military effort was strongly supported by civilians, who provided military personnel, shelter and money, as an incentive to fight in the war.
<u>The United States mobilized millions of soldiers and workers for the war effort</u>. - True - During the war, more than 16 million Americans served in the United States Armed Forces, with more than 405,000 dead in combat and more than 671,000 injured.
The answer is true.
Chesapeake women who achieved wealth did so mostly through marriage and remarriage to wealthy men.
Answer:
Yes we are fighting for democracy in world war one and no we were not living by the democratic standards.
Explanation:
Yes we are fighting for democracy in world war one and no we were not living by the democratic standards.
Explanation:
A. A constitutional amendment lowered the number of immigrants allowed.
B. Fake sciences claimed that whites were smarter and more capable than other races.
C. More whites and nonwhites married and had families.
D. Nativists worked to help the immigrants become citizens faster.