No country in South America can currently be considered a monarchy; most are politically independent republics. The only exception is Aruba and whichever Dutch Antilles are within South America, as they are part of the Constitutional Monarchy of the Netherlands
they pooped on my face
By the 1850s, hemp had become the third largest agricultural crop grown in North America.
It's closer to South America, but politically the Caribbean is usually treated as part of North America, so Trinidad and Tobago is a North American country.
no it wasnt
# North # South # West
By the 1850s, the south and north were becoming more alike.
1850s
By the 1850s, a pronounced sectionalism had developed between the industrial North and agricultural South. The two sections disagreed about economics, statehood, and slavery- issues that, in the minds of politically active Southerners, comprised one main issue: states' rights.
slavery
In the 1850s, Australia did not have states: it had colonies.The colonies wereNew South WalesVictoriaVan Diemen's Land (the name was changed to Tasmania in 1856)South AustraliaWestern AustraliaQueensland separated from New South Wales and became a colony of its own in 1859.
Me
California Virginia and South Carolina
in the 1860's there was 1253 blacks in the south
It was more important in the North than the South. (Apex)
The rich in the south sold cotton to Britain, whereas the rich in the north didn't.
By the 1850s, the south and north were becoming more alike.