a. Many Northerners blamed the South for his death and demanded vengeance" is the best option, since Lincoln was generally loved in the North and hated in the South.
B. It is proportioned with as many expenses as income.
C. It is designed for the goal of paying all monthly expenses
D. It does not allow for discretionary income.
The correct answer is C. An intended result of the Latin American revolutions was SEPARATION AND INDEPENDENCE FROM SPAIN.
The independence of the British colonies of North America in 1776 and the abdications of the Bourbon kings in 1808 after the French invasion of Spain were two events that encouraged the independence movement in the weakened Spanish Monarchy.
In response to the enthronement of King Joseph Bonaparte in Spain, between 1808 and 1810 government boards were installed that exercised sovereignty on behalf of the abdicated King Ferdinand VII, both in the Iberian Peninsula and in the American territories. The resistance of the American juntas to submit to the Central Supreme Junta formed in Spain, radicalized positions and led to the armed struggle between realists and patriots. From 1810, various American territories began to declare themselves independent national states under republican regimes, forming large "liberating" armies of continental scope, among which were those commanded by the Argentine José de San Martín and the Venezuelan Simón Bolívar. The independence of the new states was consolidated in the 1820s, after the victory at the Battle of Ayacucho. After losing El Callao in January 1826, the only territories dominated by Spaniards in America were Cuba and Puerto Rico.
Answer:
The statement is true. In 1776, General William Howe defeated George Washington in New York.
Explanation:
The War of Independence began in the spring of 1775 with the Battle of Lexington and Concord, which was immediately followed by the siege of Boston by militia and later the Continental Army. When settlers set up artillery on the nearby heights, General William Howe preferred to evacuate the city by sea and retreat to Halifax. British troops regrouped and received reinforcements from Europe.
A strategy was set up on the British side, and New York was chosen as the first target, for its central position, its great useful port for the mighty British navy, and the largest number of loyalists among its population. The capture of New York was aimed to separate New England from other colonies, and open the way to Philadelphia, the most populous city, and the meeting place of the Second Continental Congress.
Aware of the key role of New York, George Washington, while traveling from Philadelphia to Boston to oversee the siege, ordered General Charles Lee to organize defense and fortifications.
The British troops landed on Long Island in August 1776. In the ensuing battle, Washington and its army were beaten and forced to retreat, for the first time in a long series that first led them to the peninsula where Manhattan is today, then on the heights of Harlem, on the other side of the Hudson in New Jersey, and finally in November 1776 beyond the Delaware River in Pennsylvania, leaving the control of New York to the British Army and the Loyalists.
General William Howe beat George Washington in New York in 1776. Thus, the statement is true.
Washington was successful in driving the British out of Boston in 1776, but his subsequent tests under fire were failures.
With Washington virtually conquered, New York was abandoned, Fort Washington fell, and, most disastrously, Fort Lee was so slowly evacuated that the British took valuable guns, muskets, and supplies.
General George Washington's troops destroyed a force of Hessian mercenaries at Trenton after crossing the Delaware River in a dangerous storm.
The win prepared the foundation for another triumph at Princeton a week later and strengthened American morale.
Therefore, the statement is true.
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