The Homestead Act became law on May 20,1862. With the Homestead Act people who wanted land would have to compete in a race, put their marker out and then live there for five years.If the settler was willing to pay $1.25 an acre, he could obtain the land after only six months’ residence. Many people died while competing in the race, wagons would fall apart, …show more content…
Not long after these resistance groups formed, the resistance groups started collapsing, causing the end of the war. However, the majority of US public opinion was in favor of the war, so the movement was unsuccessful. It wasn’t surprising that a strong resistance movement, the Anti-Imperialists, would rise up. An organization known as the Anti-Imperialist League arose in the US, standing in opposition to American expansion and imperialism. McKinley said he had seen too much carnage at battles like Antietam to be enthusiastic about war with Spain. "I've been through one war. I have seen the dead piled up, and I do not want to see …show more content…
During this project I mainly researched the KKK, but I do however know some of the things that occurred during the Great Depression.
The Klu Klux Klan(KKK or Klan) was founded in 1866 by ex-Confederate soldiers and other Southerners after the Civil War. The first branch of the Ku Klux Klan as a social club in Pulaski, Tennessee, in 1866. The Klan later disbanded, but 50 years later in 1915 the Klan was revived by “Colonel” William Joseph Simmons. Simmons started making his living by selling membership sales. His very first official act was climbing on top of a local mountain to set a cross on fire to mark the rebirth of the new Klan. Before the rebirth of the Klu Klux Klan, they only targeted blacks, but in the new KKK, they started targeting Catholics, Jews, and foreigners. The Klan now stood for fundamentalism, devout patriotism, and white supremacy.They blasted bootleggers, motion pictures and espoused a return to "clean" living. The Klan mainly appealed to the people who really didn’t care about having their normal life changed. The Klan’s message struck people a certain way, causing a boom in membership in the