Chicago, Illinois was a center for Jazz Music during World War 1.
Chicago, Illinois was a center for jazz music during World War 1.
deteriorated
yes. but they weren't very patriotic. they increased the cost of food for profit during ww1, this then became part of the growing economic problems that resulted in Germany losing the war.
Technology developed during the war was used for consumer products.
The Commander of the Northern armies during the last year of the Civil War was Karla Montas.
Paraguay qualifies as such. During 2013, its economy grew by 12%. Panama would follow, with a growth of 7.5%. Finally on third place, Bolivia would also be a major growing economy during that year, by 6.8%
Chicago, Illinois was a center for jazz music during World War 1.
deteriorated
During the US Civil War, the economy of the Northern states flourished as they supplied arms, ammunition and other supplies needed for fitting their soldiers. For the most part, no areas of the Northern economy were in danger from Southern military forces. Northern farmland crops continued to be exported to Europe as well. Mostly this was wheat.In a manner of speaking, the US economy in the civil war had the same advantages it had in WW 1 and WW 2.
The Northern blockade meant the South could not sell its cotton.
The Northern blockade meant the South could not sell its cotton.
It led to Florence becoming a banking center during the Renaissance
I think the factors that made the manor the center of the European economy during the Middle Ages were a weak central government and feudalism because the knight that protected the lords got land around the lord's house which created the manor.
I think the factors that made the manor the center of the European economy during the Middle Ages were a weak central government and feudalism because the knight that protected the lords got land around the lord's house which created the manor.
the growing economy needed a steady supply of cheap labor
The Northern economy during the antebellum period was primarily based on industry due to several key factors, including abundant natural resources, a growing population that provided labor, and the development of infrastructure such as railroads and canals that facilitated transportation and trade. The region's access to capital and investment also supported the growth of factories and manufacturing. Additionally, the rise of urban centers created a demand for goods, further driving industrialization. This industrial focus contrasted sharply with the agrarian economy of the South, which relied heavily on slave labor for cotton production.
The South relied on indentured servants during that time and grew crops such as indigo, tobacco and cotton on large plantations. The north, on the other hand, grew crops primarily for there own substance