No, more Americans have died in vehicle collisions than in combat. According to statistics, tens of thousands of people die in traffic accidents each year in the U.S., while combat-related fatalities, including those from conflicts like World War II, Vietnam, and more recent wars, total in the hundreds of thousands but are significantly lower than the annual death toll from motor vehicle collisions. Overall, vehicle-related deaths far exceed combat fatalities over time.
The number of Americans who died in combat is 2,757,196.
About 2 times as many Americans have died in automobile accidents as in all of America's wars, combined. Wars have taken the lives of about 1.2 million Americans.
American deaths since the Revolutionary WarAbout 1,200,000 Americans have died since the Revolutionary war.
In World War I, approximately 116,516 Americans died, while in World War II, the number of American deaths was significantly higher, totaling around 405,399. These figures reflect both combat and non-combat-related deaths during the respective conflicts. The impact of these losses shaped American society and military policy in the years that followed.
About half of the 60 Pilgrims had died when the Native Americans began to provide help, so there would have been more Native Americans.
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Influenza was the viral disease that caused more deaths during WWI than combat.
The answer to your question is that the civil war was fought between Americans, while in other wars, they were fought between America and other countries so twice as many Americans died.
They were affected because as the plantations grew the African Americans were put to work more which meant that they had to get more African Americans and put the African Americans to work even harder and some of them even died
Around 250,000. 150,000 of these are on death road in America.
About 51000 Americans died in the Vietnam conflict.
Without specifying the war or the battle, the question can only be answered in broad strokes. In every war where both US Americans and Canadians participated, more Americans gave their lives than Canadians. This is more a function of the US's larger military and more active combat role. In particular battles, however, Canadian deaths outstrip American deaths. For example, Juno Beach on D-Day was entirely "run" by Canada and therefore almost all casualties on Juno Beach were Canadian.