Question

A machine gun factory in "Camp Hancock" Augusta GA and then a house that has YMCA on it.
what options below relate to this
Plessy vs Ferguson
1906 Atlanta Race Massacre (Riot)
International Cotton Expositions


Leo Frank Case
Georgia in World War I
Henry Grady
The New South
Booker T Washington
W.E.B. Du Bois
Alonzo Herndon
Jim Crow Laws

Answers

Answer
machine gun isignia machine gun training center 22500 officers and men 600 machine guns camp hancock and u.s. national army cantonment camp gordon atlanta ga
Answered by GPT-4o mini
The options that relate to a machine gun factory and a YMCA in Augusta, Georgia, given the historical context, primarily focus on social and economic changes in the region, especially related to race relations and industrial development. Here are the relevant options:

1. **Georgia in World War I**: Augusta produced military equipment during World War I, including machine guns, which reflects the industrial capabilities of the region during this time.

2. **The New South**: This concept refers to the economic and social rebuilding of the South after the Civil War, focusing on industrial progress and modernization, which may relate to the establishment of factories, including those for military equipment.

3. **Jim Crow Laws**: These laws enforced racial segregation in the South, including Georgia. As factories and organizations like the YMCA were established, they often operated within the framework of these laws, affecting the social dynamics of Augusta.

While other options like the Leo Frank Case or findings related to W.E.B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington could provide context regarding race relations in Georgia, they do not directly tie to the specific locations you mentioned (the factory and YMCA). The options above are more closely related to the industrial and social environment of the time in Augusta.

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