Answer:
Explanation:
There was a post-war economic boom in the United States after World War II. There was also significant population growth, which caused an expansion of cities into suburbs. The prices of homes in suburbs were more affordable to middle class families, due to lower land prices and new building practices like tract housing. With the growth of the suburbs, improvement of roadways became a priority. Highway improvement was also a priority of President Eisenhower for the sake of national security. The Federal-Aid Highway Act passed in 1956 allocated $26 billion (in 1956 dollars!) to a monumental road-building effort that created the interstate highway system.
The growth of the suburbs had a negative counter-effect, however. Suburban culture had the tendency to segregate white Americans in the suburbs from blacks in the cities' inner core neighborhoods, leading to racial segregation and inner city poverty issues that we're still dealing with today.
Founding the African Methodist Episcopal Church
Opening a school for black children in Philadelphia
Earning an honorary degree
With his friend Absalom Jones, founding the Free African Society
Going to Africa and resettling
Answer:
Richard Allen is known for founding the African Methodist Episcopal Church , opening a school for black children in Philadelphia and, with his friend Absalom Jones, founding the Free African Society.
Explanation:
Richard Allen was an African American religious leader. He was born a slave, in 1760, in a family belonging to a successful Pennsylvania lawyer, Benkamin Chew, being sold with his family to a Delawer farmer in 1768. In 1777, after most of his family had been resold, he converted to methodism. Around the age of twenty, he managed to buy his freedom, becoming a Methodist preacher, even among whites, something infrequent in the United States at the time. At twenty-seven he was one of the founders of the Free African Society of Philadelphia, perhaps the first independent organization of free blacks in the USA. At thirty-five, he was the spiritual leader of Philadelphia's largest black congregation, the African Methodist Episcopal Church. In 1817 he was forced to break with the white leadership of the Methodist church that controlled and limited the activity of black religious congregations. Self-taught, he was the author of many sermons and texts related to his activism. He also worked on establishing schools for blacks and creating mutual aid societies to free free blacks from dependence on whites.
- Founding the African Methodist Episcopal Church
- Earning an honorary degree
- Founded the Free African Society
map with the
cope
50
Choose an answer from the letter
list and then click Done.
number 5
number 4
number 3
number 6
Answer:
Number four
Explanation:
Not too sure if there's really much of an explanation I can give.
If there's anything you'd like to know, just comment it under my answer :)
Buddhism
Islam
Hinduism
Answer:
islam
Explanation:
i tried every other answer and got them wrong lol