What do the patterns of the internal slave trade in the first half of the nineteenth century suggest?

A) that there was a strong and growing demand for slaves in the Upper South
B) that demand for slaves in the Lower South was in decline
C) that there was a strong and growing demand for slaves in the Lower South
D) that demand for slaves was equally strong in the Upper and Lower South


Answer: C) that there was a strong and growing demand for slaves in the Lower South

History

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__________ was/were the most dynamic force for racial change in the 1950s and early 1960s.

a. The federal government b. The Democratic Party c. The Republican Party d. African Americans themselves

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The clientele of speakeasies was typically:

a. working class men. b. homeless alcoholics. c. immigrants. d. more affluent men and women.

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Black baseball players __________

A) sometimes played in the white minor leagues B) usually stayed with one team their whole career C) were, as a group, poorly paid D) played in well-organized, stable leagues

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Unlike the pure serfdom of the servile manors, whose tenants had no original claim to be part of the land, the tenancy obligations on free manors tended to be ________, and the tenants' rights more carefully defined

Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).

History