Well...
I have a headcahe from answering these questions all day long. It would help if you could please just give me the answers already so i can get off
toodles (:
a brigade
December 1860 - after Lincoln had been elected as the first president from the newly-formed Republican party.
The U.S. Army was originally formed to fight in the American Revolutionary War, which began in 1775. It was established to serve as the military force for the Thirteen Colonies in their struggle for independence from British rule. The Continental Army, as it was initially known, played a crucial role in achieving victory and securing the United States' sovereignty.
Fort Hindman was fought in Arkansas - a Union victory that formed no part of the Vicksburg campaign strategy, more-or-less a diversion or distraction. But many small engagements took place on the West bank of the Mississippi during this campaign, some in Arkansas.
What is the fate of the newly formed subunits? What is the fate of the newly formed subunits?
who was the President who formed the army
a brigade
No - without gravity, galaxies would not have formed, planets would not have formed, stars would not have formed.
America was not a country when the colonies were being formed. So there was not president but when the colonies all became a county George Washington was the first president.
Dwight Eisenhower was President of the US when the Interstate highway system was formed.
Somerset County, PA was formed in 1795 when George Washington was president. Somerset County , NJ was created long before there were US president.
Naram Bithyou
the fruits which are formed without fertilization are called parthenocarpic fruits
Washington
There was no president. The marine Corps was formed in 1775 by the Continental Congress.
Harry Truman was the President when the UN began.
In 1912, Wilson was elected president in a three-way race that also included a former president (Theodore Roosevelt) and the incumbent president (William Howard Taft). Wilson won re-election in 1916 over Republican Charles Evans Hughes, a former Supreme Court justice.