Answer:
Most white Southerners, if directly questioned on the matter, would not have admitted that they held any fear of a slave insurrection. To have done so would have been to deny one of the central tenets of their way of life: that slaves were fundamentally docile and content beings who fully accepted the notion that they were the primary beneficiaries of the "peculiar institution." Southern newspapers, when they addressed rumors of impending slave uprisings at all, generally absolved slaves of responsibility for leading these conspiracies, instead accusing outside agitators—most commonly Northern abolitionists or free African Americans—of being responsible for stirring discontent. Yet the general hysteria that inevitably followed news of an actual attempted rebellion—or even vague rumors of such a plot—demonstrates the self-deception that lay at the heart of this reassuring claim, while private correspondence reveals the depth of concern felt by many Southerners over the slave population's potential to rise up in rebellion.
Answer: (quit)
Explanation: By the summer of 1787, many participants in the rebellion received pardons from newly-elected Governor John Hancock. The new legislature placed a moratorium on debts and cut taxes, easing the economic burden the rebels were struggling to overcome. Shays was pardoned the following year
I'm not entirely sure but i think it was The Great Depression.
Answer:
The Tudor dynasty was the line of kings and queens of England ruled from 1485 until 1603.
Explanation:
The dynasty started with Henry Tudor after he defeated Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field (the Wars of the Roses). Henry Tudor became King Henry VII of England.
Henry VIII married six times. The political unification and need for a healthy male heir drove him to marry several times.
Henry VIII wanted a divorce from Catherine of Aragon because as his first wife, she was not able to give him a son which he wanted for his future heir to the England throne.
The Act of Supremacy declared Henry VIII the head of the Church of England.
Anne of Cleves was a German princess whom Henry married for political reasons but divorced soon after.
Catherine Howard and Anne Boleyn were two wives beheaded by Henry VIII accused of taking lovers.
it's B. its a place where Quakers could worship freely.