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Part of the larger transportation revolution, the Erie Canal [in New York State] played a major role in the transformation of the young Republic’s geography and economy and helped set off the industrial and marketing revolutions that swept across the northern United States early in the nineteenth century. . . .
“. . . The story of the Erie Canal . . . offers a rich perspective on the tumultuous era between the War of 1812 and the Civil War. This period in American history saw dramatic changes in the ways people perceived and organized their lives. . . . Among the middle class, these changes would be grouped together as signs of ‘progress’ or ‘improvement.’ For them progress meant, in large part, that men and women were taking an active role in realizing a divinely sanctioned movement toward perfectibility of the natural and human worlds.
“This understanding of progress would play a central role in defining Northern sectional identity in the decades leading up to the Civil War.”
a. Briefly describe ONE claim made in the excerpt.

b. Briefly describe how the developments from the mid–1800s described in the excerpt relate to earlier developments in the late 1700s and early 1800s.


c. Briefly explain how ONE piece of evidence from between 1800 and 1848 could be used to support, modify, or refute the argument made in the excerpt.

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Answer:

b)During the time of the seventeenth century, in the second half of the century, there was a lot of development going on in the European continent. It was the time of the industrial revolution in the continent leading to a lot of trade and the time of mass production especially of the consumer goods. It also increased the employment opportunities. In the first half of the eighteenth century, there was increase in the number of people who were involved in the production of the goods who were involved in the production of the goods which were to be sent to the distant markets. This increased the trade further of the region. 

Explanation:

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