yes
Industrialisation through innovation in manufacturing processes first started with the Industrial Revolution in the north-west and midlands of England in the eighteenth century. It spread to Europe and North America in the nineteenth century, and to the rest of the world in the twentieth.
Susan B. Anthony.
tea
from scituate?
Here in America touch football was invented the mid-nineteenth century with the first college game taking place in 1869. It was in the twentieth century that touch football gained in popularity.
Thoreau
A. I. Andreev has written: 'Russian discoveries in the Pacific and in North America in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries'
Both 19th century Latin America and 20th century Middle East saw the rise of nation states following periods of colonial rule. Latin American countries gained independence from European powers in the 19th century, leading to the formation of sovereign nation states. In the 20th century, the Middle East experienced decolonization and the establishment of new nation states following the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire after World War I. Despite similar trajectories, the specific contexts and challenges in each region led to distinct outcomes in the formation of nation states.
South America does not have territories, it has countries.
Industrialisation through innovation in manufacturing processes first started with the Industrial Revolution in the north-west and midlands of England in the eighteenth century. It spread to Europe and North America in the nineteenth century, and to the rest of the world in the twentieth.
American immigration history can be viewed in four epochs: the colonial period, the mid-nineteenth century, the turn of the twentieth, and post-1965. Each epoch brought distinct national groups - and races and ethnicities - to the United States. The mid-nineteenth century saw mainly an influx from northern Europe; the early twentieth-century mainly from Southern and Eastern Europe; post-1965 mostly from Latin America and Asia.
In the late nineteenth century America cities: The middle and upper classes lived in the newer suburbs
Virtually all the distinguished historians of early-nineteenth-century America came from New England
there is three major territories in south america. but i am not sure which ones but i am positive that there is 3
Edmund David Cronon has written: 'Government and the economy: some nineteenth-century views' -- subject- s -: Economic policy 'Twentieth century America' 'Contemporary labor-management relations' -- subject- s -: Industrial relations
America is not considered a province. Canada, which is part of North America is subdivided into provinces (and territories) however.
MexicoCentral AmericaThe CaribbeanSouth America