<p>Thomas Paine and “Common Sense” led people to believe that they should fight for independence, blahblah.</p>
<p>Jamtes Otis and his book [forgot what it was called] that was denouncing writs of assistance? lol</p>
<p>Thomas Paine and “Common Sense” led people to believe that they should fight for independence, blahblah.</p>
<p>Jamtes Otis and his book [forgot what it was called] that was denouncing writs of assistance? lol</p>
<p>Question: What are the differences between the Yalta, Potsdam and Tehran Conference</p>
<p>*Boston Massacre was a response to the Townshend Acts, which put taxes on basically everything lol</p>
<p>the election of 1877
Hays got the presidency and they agreed to stop reconstruction.</p>
<p>I think boston massacre was response to the townshend? Tea acts were passed in 1773 and boston massacre was 1770.</p>
<p>Kowloon: Election of 1876?
This was also known as the “Compromise of 1877” cus Hayes won through some type of corrupt bargain to gain electoral votes and in order for him to win he had to promise Democrats that he would take troops out of the South/end Reconstruction. </p>
<p>Question: What was the Olive Branch Petition?</p>
<p>Wait- wat was the ‘Critical Era’?</p>
<p>Are you supposed to directly quote the articles for the DBQ?</p>
<p>Tehran Conference - plan to liberate of france and USSR agrees to invade germany
Yalta - plans after victory in Europe (sry i forgot specifics)
Potsdam - set up nuremberg trials and warned Japanese to surrender</p>
<p>Alright, here goes another question:
Name all the significant compromises regarding slavery</p>
<p>Missouri Compromise
Compromise of 1850
Compromise of 1877 [kind of]</p>
<p>Compromise of 1850 - Abolishing the slave trade in D.C., California’s a free state, New Mexico and Utah are adopte with terms of popular sovereignity. What else made up the Compromise?</p>
<p>(answering my own question)
Missouri compromise (1820?) –> make missouri slave state, divide massachusets into Maine (free state)
Compromise of 1850 –> California and some other previously mexican states are admitted as slave states, but fugitive slave law enforced more strictly</p>
<p>Tallmade amendment? even though it wasn’t passed
crittenden compromise wasn’t either</p>
<p>labor at the turn of the century</p>
<p>satwizard1: No, just paraphrase and state the source.</p>
<p>3/5 compromise : slaves were counted as 3/5s of a person
Missouri Compromise, free and slave states had to be even
…forgot the rest.</p>
<p>Prior to the 1804 election what problem kept plaguing the presidential election?</p>
<p>Another question:
What were the effects of the Kansas-nebraska act?</p>
<p>prez and vp on different ballots?</p>
<p>wait someone explain what the ‘critical’ era was? never even heard of it.</p>