Want this question answered?
Getting away from discrimination in America
Because it was getting more difficult to create new slave-states, and the South was in danger of being outvoted in Congress.
Westward migration in the United States intensified sectionalism. As more and more people headed west, the need of a faster way to travel grew. Farmers lost workers to the railways being built.
Getting away from discrimination in America.
he responded with remarkable optimism because the nation was getting more involved in not having slavery
To find a westward and maybe quicker way of getting to Asia, then he ran into north America and the hudson
2% out of 10%
how would you reconcile decision making from getting away from the problem???
If you're stuck somewhere with no way of getting anywhere else, you're stranded. If you run out of gas while driving in the desert, you'll be stranded until someone finds you. Good luck! If you're stranded, you probably experienced some kind of transportation failure.
There have been well over 9000 people who have faced the decision of getting married in their life. In fact, most people alive today have faced that decision.
The people are shipwrecked. The ship either sinks or breaks apart on reefs.
Westward expansion was a natural progression for the nation because it became apparent that most of the major cities in the east were getting overcrowded. To encourage people to move west, there were free land giveaway programs initiated.
It was a way of getting people and things there quicker. Supplies such as food and building materials helped in the development in the west.
well my decision is 99%
cheese
The Atlantic Ocean is growing bigger because of two divergent plate boundaries, the Eurasian Plate and the North American Plate. Each year, these two plates move farther and farther apart from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR). As these plates separate, oceanic lithosphere forms, resulting in the growth of the Atlantic Ocean.
Because it was getting harder to create new slave-states, so the South was increasingly outvoted in Congress.