Answer: New York, originally named NEW NETHERLAND.
Explanation:
The Dutch colony was older than New England, having been planted when the two Protestant powers allied in opposition to Catholic Spain. The Dutch East India Company (organized in 1602) had hired an English captain, Henry Hudson, to explore America in hopes of finding a northwest passage to the spice-rich Indies. In 1610 the Dutch established lucrative fur-trading posts on Manhattan Island and upriver at Fort Orange (later Albany). The Dutch then built a fort at the lower end of the island. The village of New Amsterdam, which grew up around the fort, became the capital of New Netherland and developed into a rollicking commercial powerhouse.
New York was originally founded by the Dutch.
The 1920s in the United States, called “roaring” because of the exuberant, freewheeling popular culture of the decade. The Roaring Twenties was a time when many people defied Prohibition, indulged in new styles of dancing and dressing, and rejected many traditional moral standards.
Hope this helped. Good luck! :)
Answer:
It remains true today.
Explanation:
Everyone in the United States, with the exception of Native Americans, are immigrants or the descendants of immigrants.
Despite recent restrictions, for most of its existence the United States had very porous and open borders. The nation was populated by immigrants from Europe, Asia, South and Central America, Australia, Africa--all the other continents of the world.
And even though several generations have passed since the first immigrants came to America some 400 years ago, many of the people living here today are first, second, or third generation residents--not really enough time for everyone to have lost the roots of whatever culture they came from.
We don't know what may happen in the future, but for now the United States is a multi-cultural, kaleidoscopic society made up of many different nationalities and peoples, a large number of whom came from somewhere else.
Answer:
Well, this question I don't really think you can get it wrong. But one good question you could write down is: Should government powers check and balance each other?
Explanation:
I will write down a couple more options just in case,
Are good intentions more important than written laws?
Should Congress or bureaucrats make the laws?
Should the Supreme Court function as a “super-legislature”?
Should the collective be able to do whatever it wants to the individual?
Are good intentions more important than written laws?
A. Islam
B. Christianity
C. Judaism
Answer:
the answer is B.
Explanation:
Answer:
a
Explanation:
Theodore Roosevelt
James Monroe
Woodrow Wilson
Answer:
Theodore Roosevelt
Explanation: