Because they believed the Soviets were going to launch bombers and missiles and destroy the United States.
I am certain that it is Andrew Jackson who was the president during the Removal Act of the Native Americans.
the african americans were still in slavery during the civil war
Americans went to theaters to watch movies
Great Britain
During the Progressive Movement, Booker T. Washington encouraged Black Americans to learn trades.
Seriously, the only thing you can really hope to do is hope you a very far from it when it happens and out of any fallout plumes. Nothing you can actively do in advance will guaranty your survival. Blast shelters are worthless. Fallout shelters may help some, if you are in a fallout plume but it is unlikely you will build it and keep it properly stocked with everything needed - remember you will NOT be able to stock it during an emergency situation.
changing their diet, building studier shelters, and making warm clothes out of animal fur.
changing their diet, building studier shelters, and making warm clothes out of animal fur.
They were developed during the civil war as protection from nuclear bombs and aftermath. Families could store all necessary food, water, clothes etc in these shelters and stay underground( where they were commonly built) protected.
there were 50-1000 public shelters (street shelters) during WWII
Bulkheads are not typically designed to serve as storm shelters during tornadoes. It is safer to seek shelter in an interior room on the lowest level of a building, preferably away from windows and doors. Tornado shelters are specifically constructed to protect individuals during tornadoes, and it is important to follow safety guidelines during severe weather events.
During WWII
Ralph brings up the lack of shelters during the rain to point out the group's basic necessity for protection and to highlight the urgency of building shelters for their safety and well-being. It serves as a practical reminder of their immediate need for shelter in adverse weather conditions.
Hooverville was a term used during the Great Depression to describe shantytowns built by homeless individuals. You could use it in a sentence like, "During the 1930s, many unemployed Americans lived in Hoovervilles as they struggled to find work and make ends meet."
The Americans and French troops bombarded Yorktown with cannon fire,turning its building to rubble.
No
Great Britain definitely had bomb shelters for not only the general populace but also the government during the Blitz.