Answer:
Franklin D. Roosevelt, Charles Coughlin, Huey long, Dr. Francis Townsend
Explanation:
Roosevelt held the presidency from 1934 to 1945,leading the United States through the Great depression.
Charles Coughlin attracted between 30 and 45 million listeners a week making him one of America's most influential opinion-makers.
Long during the Great Depression became the country's most impassioned advocate of retribution of wealth from the rich to the poor.
Townsend plan to end the Great Depression was to open up jobs for younger workers, while forcing seniors to spend more money in the consumer economy
Answer:KID ANTRIM DID NOT ride across New Mexico Territory by himself. On October 2, 1877, he was spotted with a gang of rustlers on the old Butterfield Overland Mail route in southwestern New Mexico’s Cooke’s Canyon. Once again he had made a bad choice of associates—although as a fugitive himself, he had few options. The leader of the outlaw band, which liked to call itself “The Boys,” was Jesse Evans. Evans was approximately six years older than the Kid, and he stood five feet six inches tall, weighed around 140 pounds, and had gray eyes and light hair. Pat Garrett wrote that of the two, the Kid was slightly taller and a little heavier. Evans’s early history is as hard to pin down as Henry McCarty’s. At different times, he claimed both Missouri and Texas as his birthplace. He may have been the Jesse Evans who was arrested with his parents in Kansas in 1871, for passing counterfeit money. Tried before the U.S. District Court in Topeka, this Jesse was convicted and fined $500. Because he was so young, he received no jail time and was “most kindly admonished by the court.”
Explanation:HOPED THIS HELPED
Answer:
Im pretty sure its livestock
Explanation:
The Great Society<span> was a set of domestic programs in the United States launched by Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964–65. The main goal was the elimination of poverty and racial injustice.</span>