1.Southern states began to leave the Union not long after this event:


a.Lincoln read and established the Emancipation Proclamation

b.the fighting at Fort Sumter in South Carolina

c.The Battle of Gettysburg was lost by the South

d.the election of Abraham Lincoln

1. A or B? I think A

What was the purpose of the Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments?

a.to ask men to join the crusade for women's rights

b.to state the case for women's rights

c.to explain to New Yorkers why women should get the vote

d.to declare the emotional issues behind women's rights

this one I do not know.. I think D?

All of your answers are wrong.

Please read your book or your lesson more carefully.

Hint: Check when the first state left the Union. Then check the dates of the other events.

1. is D.

2. C, well that's where it was started in NY, but it could be B because it had spread out to let people know about rights that women should have. I'll say B ?

Yes.

1. D
2. B

For the first question, the correct answer is B. The Southern states began to leave the Union not long after the fighting at Fort Sumter in South Carolina. To determine the correct answer, you can start by eliminating options that don't make sense. Option A, Lincoln reading and establishing the Emancipation Proclamation, occurred later in the war and did not prompt the Southern states to leave the Union. Option C, the Battle of Gettysburg being lost by the South, also occurred later in the war and did not directly lead to Southern secession. Option D, the election of Abraham Lincoln, is close to the correct answer but not the immediate event that prompted Southern states to secede. The firing on Fort Sumter marked the first armed conflict between the Union and the Confederacy, which triggered the secession of several Southern states.

For the second question, the correct answer is B. The purpose of the Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments was to state the case for women's rights. The declaration, which was drafted at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, detailed the injustices and inequalities faced by women and called for their social and political rights. Option A, asking men to join the crusade for women's rights, is not the main purpose of the declaration but rather a broader goal. Option C, explaining to New Yorkers why women should get the vote, is specific to the right to vote and not the overall purpose of the declaration. Option D, declaring the emotional issues behind women's rights, is too vague and does not capture the comprehensive nature of the document.