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Without the louisiana purchase, we would not have the west coast today. We would still only control half of the U.S.
It remains the basis for the Louisiana laws.
1802, and remember that the Louisiana Purchase didn't just cover the STATE of Louisiana as we know it today, the Purchase stretched from the Appalachians to modern day Oregon.
yes?
The sale of the Louisiana Purchase changed the US geography.
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President Kennedy is not known to have made a statement one way or another about it. When he was president closing schools permanently was not the issue that it is today. He did not make any statement about schools closing for emergencies or weather, either, but it can be assumed that he wanted students to be safe and would want schools to close if driving was unsafe.
Apparently, Scotlandville was a part of what was called the West Florida Parishes, since it is in East Baton Rouge Parish, and East Baton Rouge Parish was included in The Republic of West Florida (which had nothing to do with the state of Florida, by the way), which covered some of the southern counties in Alabama and several in Mississippi, as well as those in today's Louisiana.
They are closing their 9 Ontario locations effective as of today. They are closing their 9 Ontario locations effective as of today.
colonial schools were harsh today is fair
There are many ways to find out what the curriculums for the schools today are. You could ask the schools for example.
Ancient schools and schools today are similar because they teach kids lessons.
OFFICIALLY Jamaica has THREE cities. 1. Kingston (capital of Jamaica) 2. Montego Bay (second city) 3. Portmore (Newest City) Spanish Town used to be the capital of Jamaica, but is not technically defined as a city. There are 14 parishes in Jamaica and each parish has a capital, but these capitals are TOWNS, not cities.
Henry Schuyler Thibodeaux a governor of Louisiana, founded and gave his name to Thibodeauxville, the town that eventually became Thibodaux, Louisiana. (The suffix -ville was dropped, yielding Thibodeaux, and eventually the e was also dropped, which is the current spelling. Even so, in South Louisiana today you will find people whose surname is spelled both Thibodeaux and Thibodaux. By the way, both Thibodaux and Thibodeaux are pronounced in the French fashion, "Tib-oh-dough""The parish of Thibodaux, Louisiana" is another matter. Louisiana is the only state in the United states that has parishes (sometimes called civil parishes) instead of counties. The parish in which Thibodaux finds itself is Lafourche Parish, which is one of sixty-four parishes in Louisiana. In French, "La fourche" means "the pitchfork", so called because Bayou Lafourche runs down the middle of the parish (which is long and narrow) and on a map Bayou Lafourche looks more or less like a pitchfork.And also in French, la fourche (the pitchfork) is not to be confused with la fourchette (the little fork, the kind you eat with). As far as is known, there is no parish or Bayou in Louisiana named Lafourchette, after common table forks. On the other hand. it is just barely conceivable that the young ladies' basketball team at Lafourche High School might be named "Les Fourchettes."
Without the louisiana purchase, we would not have the west coast today. We would still only control half of the U.S.
pioneer schools where one story buildings. unlike schools today
If, by today you mean March 5, 2011 then yes. An EF2 tornado hit the town of Rayne, Louisiana and killed 1 person.