During the American Revolutionary Period (and War for Independence), numerous colonists remained loyal to Great Britain for several reasons. First, some genuinely believed that British rule was not only proper but also necessary for the survival of the colonies. Second, some distrusted the diverse set of patriot-leaders who were taking upon themselves the weighty task of founding a new nation. Third, still more were simply adhering to the convictions of their family, friends, and local community: it was most important to these colonists to stand in line with the prevailing opinions of the people most important to them.
Yes, its border with Pennsylvania is the symbolic Mason-Dixon line, and it was one of the four slave-states that voted against joining the Confederacy. Of those four states, Maryland was the one that Lincoln had the most difficulty keeping loyal, and he only managed it by (illegally) jailing local pro-Confederate politicians.
In the Civil War, the Swing States were the slave-states of the Upper South that had not voted Confederate, but were in danger of doing so. At the time of Lincoln's inauguration, there were eight of these. After the firing on Fort Sumter and Lincoln's appeal for volunteer troops, four of them declared for the Confederacy. The other four were Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland and Delaware. These were known as the Border States, and Lincoln's most urgent priority was to keep them loyal. This left eleven states in the Confederacy. (There were never eleven Swing States).
The original twelve members of NATO were the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, France, Denmark, Iceland, Italy, Norway, Portugal, Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg.
If by "government" you mean "federal government" then they wanted the Congress to have the most power because it gave more power to states through direct representation. If by "government" you mean "any government in the United States", then they wanted the states to have more power, similarly to the Articles of Confederation, the States' rights movements of the 1800s, and later the Confederate States of America
they were loyal to the states because the nation taxed them
because they pooped on them selfs
more loyal, most loyal
The nation that buys the most United States flags is the United States.
The largest denomination of the French nation is Roman Catholic. France has been a loyal catholic nation since the Medieval times.
For most of the 20th century, most states were nation-states, i.e., they were instances of that particular constitutional order. All of the great powers since the end of World War I have been nation states, just as all the great powers for most of the 19th cnetury were imperial states, a different constitutional order.
For most of the 20th century, most states were nation-states, i.e., they were instances of that particular constitutional order. All of the great powers since the end of World War I have been nation states, just as all the great powers for most of the 19th cnetury were imperial states, a different constitutional order.
Yes, most nation states have a national flag.
The three positions that are possibly going to be most loyal to the President of the United States are the Department of Foreign Affairs, The Department of the Interior, and the Department of Defense.
The United States.
Car insurance is mandatory nation-wide. Most states require a minimum coverage of liability, but some states do require more.
They are most loyal to their religion.