Most slaves worked on Plantations
<span>Elizabeth Blackwell
</span><span>First American woman awarded a medical degree by a college. Attended Geneva College in New York after she was rejected by all the major medical schools in the nation because of her sex. Elizabeth Blackwell later founded a women’s medical college to train other women physicians.
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<span>Clara Barton
</span>Clara Barton got involved with tending the needy when she treated injured Union soldiers on the battlefield during the Civil War. She later was the founder and first president of the American Red Cross.
<span>Susan B. Anthony
</span><span>The 19th century women’s movement’s most powerful organizer.
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<span>Louisa May Alcott
</span><span>Author who produced the first literature for the mass market of juvenile girls in the 19th century.
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Pearl S. Buck
<span>With her novels about American and Asian culture, she became the first woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. </span>
The U.S. Army was a major factor in the development of Oklahoma from the United ... at least seven phases in the story of the military's presence and activity in the state. The first phase, 1803–19, was largely a time of exploration so A
D. that she may profit from the building project
Look at the evidence within the question information. The author has 20 years of experience in construction and owns a local construction company. So if the city or town is considering a building initiative that will cost the town millions of dollars, the author of the editorial quite possibly hopes to bid for some of that construction work. It would be very good for her business.
Now, the fact that a construction company owner favors the building initiative doesn't mean her views should be rejected simply because of her position in the construction industry. If her views are valid and provide solid arguments in favor of the project, those views should be considered on their merits. At the same time, perspectives from other local citizens should be considered too, in terms of environmental impact of the project, costs and affordability, how the building initiative will benefit residents of the community, etc.
Factors affecting slavery in the United States that encouraged enslaved revolts were:
- Suppression of freedom for enslaved people.
- Brutal treatment of enslaved people.
Factors that encouraged slavery were:
- The need for a cheap labor force in the South.
- The need by many Southerners to feel above African Americans.
<h3>What were some factors affecting slavery in the U.S.?</h3><h3 />
Slavery in the United States continued because the South needed a cheap labor force to engage in the labor-intensive cash crop business.
Some people like the Yeomen farmers, also wanted to feel a sense of superiority over people to feel better about themselves and their poor way of life.
Enslaved revolts broke out because enslaved people were subjected to brutal conditions which they were trying to escape such as beatings, mutilations, and inhumane working hours and conditions.
Find out more on the slave revolts at brainly.com/question/5021931.
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