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Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Poem
"Into each life some rain must fall" ("The Rainy Day"). Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was a writer
and a poet who wrote about death often. In his life, he was given an honorary doctorate of Laws
from Harvard. The famous poet died at the age of 75 from severe stomach pains on Friday, March
24. 1882. He left behind a trail of legacies. He was one of the most popular figures in America and
Europe. He was buried next to his two wives in Mount Auburn Cemetery. Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow, an American writer, used his life and philosophical ideas to write poetry about nature,
death, and emotions.
Henry Longfellow grew up in a life where he was expected to follow in his father's footsteps but
broke away to poetry instead. At the age of fifteen, in 1822, Longfellow attended Bowdoin College
in Brunswick, Maine, along the side of his brother, Stephen H. His grandfather being the founder
and his father being a trustee, his family was well known associated with the college. ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Henry had a way of tying things going on in society, his personal life, and emotions in his poetry. He
wrote the poem, "Paul Revere's Ride," which describes the night of April 18, 1775. The poem is not
indeed spot on with the actual event because the actual event of Paul Revere's Ride was over a
hundred years older than Longfellow. The poem starts off in Boston, Massachusetts, where Paul and
a friend are speaking with one another about the British Army. The two men think that the soldiers
are going to leave boston later that night but they are having trouble knowing whether or not they
will go by sea or by land. Paul Revere has a plan to warn the people, but he needs to know what
direction he should take, the two men come up with a secret code to warn each other of the
direction. Longfellow wrote this poem, not to inform another person about the ride but to help warn
the American Union that it was in danger of
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Edwin Thomas Booth Research Paper
Edwin Thomas Booth was born on November 13, 1833 near Bel Air, Maryland. Edwin had three
siblings, two brothers and one sister. His brothers names were, Junius Brutus Booth Jr. and John
Wilkes Booth. His sister's name was Asia Booth. He and his brothers were named after their father's
colleagues. Edwin Booth had grown up on a family farm in Bel Air, Maryland. Junius Booth,
Edwin's father was so invested in his work that Edwin and his siblings were raised by, their mother
and a black woman they called " mammy ". When Edwin was seven they moved and became an
urban family. All three brothers followed their father's footsteps into acting, although they had all
only performed on a stage together once. Edwin first began his acting career in 1849 with his first
performance with his father in a production of " Richard the ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Only Edwin and John made a life lifelong career out of acting, and John's life was not very long.
Junius Jr. Booth eventually quit acting to become a doctor, and Asia had never performed before. He
then went to tour all of Europe and the United States with his father until he passed away on
November 30, 1850 on his way home to the United States after he quit acting. After taking time
prior to his father's death he went on an international tour in 1852. While Edwin Booth was waiting
to catch a train with the President's son Todd Lincoln. Todd had accidentally lost his footing and was
starting to fall. Edwin Booth grabbed him by the collar of his shirt and saved his life. The exact date
of this event is uncertain but it is to be believed that it happened in late 1864 or early 1865. Edwin
Booth had married Mary Devlin in 1860. Before Mary passed away, in 1863, they were able to have
one child. A daughter named Edwina Booth. After his wife passed away he gave up his heavy
drinking skills he had acquired from his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Contribution Of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born on February 17, 1807 in Portland, Maine (Novelist and
Prose Writers). He died at the age of 75 in 1882 after suffering from severe stomach pain. He was
buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts along with his wives. His family
was very influential in the region. His father was a prominent lawyer. His maternal grandfather,
Peleg Wadsworth, held the position of general in the American Revolutionary War and also served
as a member of Congress (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow). Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the most
popular poet in America, shaped his poetry to encourage virtues and to live life happily without
giving up on any situation that life brings. Longfellow attended Bowdoin College in Brunswick,
Maine (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow). He graduated college in 1825 and was ranked fourth in his
class (Adnax Publications). He was invited to accept the new Chair of Modern Languages, and he
taught at Bowdoin College and Harvard. While teaching at the colleges, he translated many
textbooks in French, Italian, and Spanish. He knew dozens of languages. He visited Spain, Italy,
France, Germany, and England as his additional three years of study from Bowdoin College. He
walked through the countryside and stayed at small inns. In 1834 he was appointed professor at
Harvard and once again made it to visit Europe (Adnax Publications). His first wife, Mary Potter,
accompanied him to Rotterdam. She had a miscarriage and died.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay about Dorothea Dix
Known as an American philanthropist and reformer, Dorothea Dix transformed living conditions in
prisons and established institutions for the mentally insane in 20 states, as well as Canada ("DIX").
Through her crusade for fair treatment of the mentally insane, Dorothea Dix exemplifies the ideals
of her time – to protect the rights of all human beings, no matter their age, race, or mental capacity.
On April 4, 1802 in Hampden, Maine, Dorothea Lynde Dix was born to Joseph and Mary Dix. Due
to her mother's poor health, Dix assumed the household duties of tending to the house and caring for
her two younger brothers from a very young age. Meanwhile, her father traveled as a preacher who
sold religious books that Dix and her family ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
At her doctor's request, Dix spent 18 months in Liverpool, England, during which her mother and
grandmother passed away. Soon after, she returned to America, but sadly, Dix was still to drained to
resume teaching (Morin). Four years later, in 1837, Dix agreed to instruct the women at the local jail
on religion. When she arrives at the jail, she finds some of the women, who seem to be mentally
impaired, foul and freezing, so she asks that their quarters be heated, however, the man responds
that the "lunatics" do not feel the cold and therefore they do not need to waste resources keeping
them warm. Incensed, Dix recruits two respected gentlemen, Samuel Gridley Howe and Charles
Sumner, who confirm, and support her requests that conditions at the jail be bettered; in light of their
support, the jail agrees to improve their conditions. This experience motivated Dix to study the
mentally ill, in an effort to understand the cause and the best way to treat it (Morin). Early on in her
studies, Dix decided that Massachusetts should do more for their mentally ill citizens. However, at
the time, Massachusetts provided better care than many other states, and thanks to Horace Mann,
already had two insane asylums, although they were unequipped to handle the large population of
mentally ill patients that needed care. Over the next eighteen months, Dix traveled from jail to
asylum to prison to poorhouse, taking extensive
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Edwin Rutus Booth Research Paper
Born on November 13, 1883, near Bel–Air, Maryland was a boy with high potential, Edwin Thomas
Booth. His father, Junius Brutus Booth, was an alcoholic. Junius was also an American actor. His
mother, Mary Ann Holmes, gave birth to two other boys, John and Junius Jr. He grew up on a family
farm with little schooling. Like his father, Edwin wanted to become an actor. At thirteen years old,
Edwin became a partner in acting with his father. Edwin's acting career debuted on September 10,
1849. He acted in the Boston Museum as the part of Tressel in the play. His father played Richard
III. Edwin continued to play smaller parts like this one for the next two years. Two years later, when
Edwin and his father were in New York City, Edwin's father refused to play his part as Richard III.
His father was too drunk. Edwin was offered the part, and did not disappoint the audience. This was
a turning point for Edwin. Edwin went with his father to California in 1852, during the gold rush.
They were not there to mine, however. Entertainers were demanded to come down to San Francisco
at that time. Four months later, his father wanted to leave, but insisted that Edwin stay and build a
career, which is what Edwin did. Later that year, Junius Brutus Booth, a father of three, died. Two
years later, Edwin toured Australia and the Sandwich ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Edwin saved Robert Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln's son. Edwin simply grabbed, and pulled Robert's
collar when Robert lost his footing on a train platform. Publishers exaggerated this act and made it
seem as though Edwin was somewhat of a hero. President Lincoln thanked Edwin,and wrote about
his actions in the 1918 letter to Benedict. Less than a year afterwards, Edwin heard what his brother,
John, had did. On April 14, 1865, John had assassinated Abraham Lincoln. Edwin separated himself
from the stage until the January of the following year when he continued to play in
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Dorothea Dix : An Extraordinary Woman Who Wore Many Hats
Dorothea Dix was an extraordinary woman who wore many hats: family caregiver, teacher, author,
advocate, social reformer, school and hospital founder, and superintendent. Dorothea Dix held one
role more important and noteworthy than any of these however; she was a nurse. Dix's work
advocating for prisoners, the mentally ill and women changed the profession of nursing, as well as
aspects of the healthcare system, forever. Dorothea Dix was born on April 4, 1802 in Hampden,
Maine. She was the eldest of three siblings, who were born to a mentally ill mother and a fanatically
religious, alcoholic, and sometimes abusive, father. Although her childhood was far from ideal, her
father valued education and taught Dix to read and write at a young age. Dix became the caretaker
of the household at a young age and sacrificed her childhood to take care of her two younger
brothers. At age 10, Dix left Maine and moved to Boston to live and study with her grandmother. At
age 14 she began teaching in Worcester, Massachusetts and in 1819, she founded a schoolhouse for
young women called the Dix Mansion. It was not only a school for young women, but also partially
a charity; Dix allowed poor and economically challenged young women to attend for free. Dix was a
teacher for 25 years in Boston and Worcester, Massachusetts, before finding her true calling. She
began teaching Sunday classes at East Cambridge Prison, a women's prison, in March 1841. Dix
was utterly appalled at the treatment that
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Harriet Jacobs Research Paper
Harriet Jocobs was born into slavery in Edenton, North Carolina 1813. Her parents were Delilah and
Elijah Jacobs, was slaves who lived together. In Edenton she worked as a caterer she was also highly
respected by the black and whites. Delilah and Elijah both died when Harriet and her brother John
were young. After the death of her mother in 1819, Harriet went to live with Margaret Horniblow.
After Margaret Horniblow's death, She became the property of her young niece the daughter of Dr.
James Norcom. He was also the owner of Molly when her mistress died but he decided to put her in
the auction. That was considered wrong but an elderly white woman bought her and emancipated
her. Molly bought A house of her own her son Joseph, escaped And disappeared, ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
It caught the attention of the son of Norcom's partner, Samuel Sawyer. Who is A lawyer who courted
Harriet through letters she decided to sleep with him to stave off Norcom. She then became pregnant
and unwelcome by Norcom's wife, Mary Matilda she assumed the child was her husband's. Harriet
went to live with her grandmother. In 1831, horrified white slave owners became violent as slave
holders tightened the control of slavery Jacobs had another child by Sawyer in 1833, this time a
daughter, Louisa Harriet learned her children were to be sent to the plantation, she decided to run
away. She spent some time in a swamp and also lived in a small space for seven years in her
grandmother's house. Norcom eventually sold John Jacobs and Harriet's two children, to Sawyer.
Harriet escaped in 1842 and went to New York. Her daughter Louisa was already there, She was
taken to the house of Sawyer's new wife's half–sister in Washington, DC and then given to Tredwell
cousins in Brooklyn. Joseph was sent to Harriet in New York then she sent him to her brother John
in New Bedford. Harriet worked in the Astor House she was the live–in baby nurse of Nathaniel
Parker, a poet and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
George W. Russell (AE Æ),- His Life, Paintings and Impact...
George W. Russell (AE Æ),– His Life, Paintings and Impact on Irish Culture
Introduction
George William Russell (Æ), poet, painter, statesman and friend of many. George Russell definitely
was all of those things. But why is it that I, a visiting student from the far North, takes such an
interest in a man who despite his greatness not many people outside Ireland has heard of. When
asked about visual arts in Ireland, names like Jack
Yeats, Paul Henry and James Barry might be heard but only people with a deep interest in Irish
culture will also mention George W. Russell, or Æ as he is more commonly known. But Æ Russell
was, and still is,
Irish culture, which is what I will try to prove to you with this paper. My first encounter with Æ ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Yeats and John Hughes. Although George Russell attended a number of schools up until the age of
18, moving more and more towards the direction of visual art, he never attended university and he
seems to be mostly self–taught after his early school years.
It was in 1884 that George Russell first started taking an interest in the mystical world and the
occult, which also can be seen in his paintings and poems. This also led up to the creation of his
pseudonym
Æ. After painting a series of pictures that shown the development of man, George Russell was
"haunted" for a name for his paintings. One night in a dream, he heard a voice saying "Call it the
birth Aeon"
(Aön), After looking up the word in a library, George Russell found out that the word "Aeon" was
used by the Gnostics to represent the first created men. For a while he then started using "Aeon" as a
signature on his work, but later shortening it to Æ, which is how he's now more commonly known.
The first works with Æ as signature appeared in 1888.
From pictures and drawings of Æ Russell that I've studied, his physical appearance in early years
was that of a small and thin boy with a nice appearance. In his more mature years, Æ Russell grew
to be a fairly tall, well proportioned but also heavy built man. Most of his life he wore a beard and in
my view he looked somewhat imposing. But Æ
Russell also had a "loud voice" and didn't mind speaking his thoughts.
Although he was born in
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
William Howard Taft Dbq
William Howard Taft once said "Action for which I become responsible, or for which my
administration becomes responsible, shall be within the law" (Brainyquote.com). Taft was the first
U.S President to throw a first pitch at a baseball game. President Taft was easy going even with the
nickname of Big Lub (because of his weight). After his Presidency, Taft lost about 70 pounds within
a few years of leaving the White House. Taft attended Yale university and came in second in his
class. In college, he stayed away from sports to focus on his studies. Taft was the twenty–seventh
president of the United states of America. He served from 1909–1913. In 1921 President Warren
Harding made Taft Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
When Roosevelt returned he gave speeches that undermined the work Taft had done. Roosevelt once
again became involved in politics but continued to attack his successors administration. He received
many letters from people wanting him to run for president. Roosevelt had decided to run for
president once again. William Taft made his nomination acceptance speech on August 1, but had a
hard time financing the campaign and most people knew he couldn't win. Governor Woodrow
Wilson was the Democratic nominee. Woodrow Wilson was to become the next President of the
United
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cultural Analysis Of Cesar Jacobs 's Cultural Analysis
Raul Rios
Professor Peters
English 2327
30 April 2016
Harriett Jacobs: Cultural Analysis Cultural analysis can be associated with a person's race, ethnicity,
gender, sexual orientation, religion, or region. An easy way to examine a person's cultural analysis is
to simply pull up a text book and or a website about the person and find very good information
about the person. Yet when it comes to famous writers of history, their cultural analysis can be
determined through their marvelous and significant pieces of writing they have created. Writers such
as Fredrick Douglas, Henry David Thoreau, Fanny Fern, and Margaret Fuller, their cultural analysis
can be determined through their pieces of writing. The reason being is that these writers ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Through her work, it's very easy to obtain a cultural analysis on her as a person because she wrote
about all the daily brutal struggles as a female slave. With Jacobs' significant piece of writing,
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Jacobs really goes into detail on how life for a slave girl that
has been a slave since she was born until she was finally free from her slave holders. It's a great
piece of writing and the way she wrote it, the story seems to come alive. The way she was able to
make her work come alive to the reader is that not only she wrote what would happen to any
ordinary slave girl, but she was able to put parts of her own life experiences within Incidents in the
Life of a Slave Girl. First, let's go over some background information and touch on Jacob's back
story and her life. As previously mentioned before, Jacobs was born into slavery in Edenton, North
Carolina, in the year of 1813. Even though Jacobs was born as a slave, as a child she was really
unaware of it. The reason being is that her parents' slave holders, allowed them to live together.
Then following the tragic loss of her mother, in the year of 1825, her slave owners were Dr. and
Mrs. James Norcom. Despite all the hard work she would do for them day by day, she constantly
experienced abuse. Such as being sexually threatened by Dr. Norcom and being physically abused
by his wife. Despite the abuse she would encounter day by day, she happened
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Incidents In The Life Of A Slave Girl Essay
Harriet Jacobs wanted to tell her story, but knew she lacked the skills to write the story herself. She
had learned to read while young and enslaved, but, at the time of her escape to the North in 1842,
she was not a proficient writer. She worked at it, though, in part by writing letters that were
published by the New York Tribune, and with the help of her friend, Amy Post. Her writing skills
improved, and by 1858, she had finished the manuscript of her book, Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl. L. Maria Child, a prominent white abolitionist, agreed to edit Jacob's book, although she
apparently did little to alter the text except to rearrange some sections, suggest the removal of one
chapter, and add material to another. In a letter ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
After both her mother, Delilah, and father, Elijah, died during Jacobs's youth, their maternal
grandmother, Molly Horniblow, raised her and her younger brother, John. Jacobs learned to read,
write, and sew under her first mistress, Margaret Horniblow, and hoped to be freed by her. However,
when Jacobs was eleven years old, her mistress died and willed her to Dr. James Norcom, a binding
decision that initiated a lifetime of suffering and hardship for Jacobs. Dr. Norcom represented later
as Dr. Flint in Jacobs's narrative, sexually harassed and physically abused the teenaged Jacobs as
long as she was a servant in his household. Jacobs warded off his advances by entering into an affair
with a prominent white lawyer named Samuel Treadwell Sawyer and bearing him two children:
Joseph (b. 1829) and Louisa Matilda (c. 1833–1913), who legally belonged to Norcom. Fearing
Norcom's persistent sexual threats and hoping that he might relinquish his hold on her children;
Jacobs hid herself in the storeroom crawlspace at her grandmother's house from 1835 until 1842.
During those seven years Jacobs could do little more than sit up in the cramped space. She read,
sewed, and watched over her children from a chink in the roof, waiting for an opportunity to escape
to the North. Jacobs was finally able to make her way to New York City by boat in 1842 and was
eventually reunited with her children there. Even in New York, however, Jacobs was at the mercy of
the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Legacy Of John Carter, And Nathanial Rochester (...
James Cutler, and Nathanial Rochester (Thomas, 10–17). The many people that are brought into Mt.
Hope's grounds all bring their own unique memory to a place where it can be properly honored and
cherished as equals. Another way Douglass is honored is by marking all of his points of occupancy
as almost hollowed ground, by putting up plaques to mark their significance. The first notable
plaque resides at the now office building on Main Street. In Douglass's time he transformed the
building into the center for his newspaper. He was the editor of the paper The North Star from 1847
until 1863 ("Frederick Douglass Newspaper Office"). In the building's heyday it was used as a
stopping point along the Underground Railroad. When Douglass left the ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
His name carries the weight of thousands of individual's message, even to this day, to gain equal
rights for African American citizens. And Rochester has taken it upon themselves to label him as
their own, seen through a mass number of sites they have set aside to carry his name. This idea of
ownership and an overall message for Douglass brings up a lot of concerns, and therefore a lot of
ways one can hope to improve the situation.
This overall message showing Douglass as the human embodiment of freedom can easily be
translated over into Rochester's message. By taking great ownership of the Douglass name, and
using it to put up many monuments in his honor, the city hopes to bring forth this idea that they
greatly support racial equality. In a time where racial tensions are still extremely high, this message
is vitally important. It can be used as a cloak to hide behind when the public is unsatisfied with how
the city is handling race issues. By using Douglass as their mascot they seem to think they can do no
wrong in this department, as long as they acknowledge the themes he stood for, and now represents.
It is thought that a city named after a Maryland slave owner ("Frederick Douglass Newspaper
Office"), Nathaniel Rochester, could greatly benefit in this day in age by updating their image to
show support for Frederick Douglass's ideals. There is a major problem that comes with this idea of
using Frederick Douglass as a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Poem

  • 1. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Poem "Into each life some rain must fall" ("The Rainy Day"). Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was a writer and a poet who wrote about death often. In his life, he was given an honorary doctorate of Laws from Harvard. The famous poet died at the age of 75 from severe stomach pains on Friday, March 24. 1882. He left behind a trail of legacies. He was one of the most popular figures in America and Europe. He was buried next to his two wives in Mount Auburn Cemetery. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, an American writer, used his life and philosophical ideas to write poetry about nature, death, and emotions. Henry Longfellow grew up in a life where he was expected to follow in his father's footsteps but broke away to poetry instead. At the age of fifteen, in 1822, Longfellow attended Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, along the side of his brother, Stephen H. His grandfather being the founder and his father being a trustee, his family was well known associated with the college. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Henry had a way of tying things going on in society, his personal life, and emotions in his poetry. He wrote the poem, "Paul Revere's Ride," which describes the night of April 18, 1775. The poem is not indeed spot on with the actual event because the actual event of Paul Revere's Ride was over a hundred years older than Longfellow. The poem starts off in Boston, Massachusetts, where Paul and a friend are speaking with one another about the British Army. The two men think that the soldiers are going to leave boston later that night but they are having trouble knowing whether or not they will go by sea or by land. Paul Revere has a plan to warn the people, but he needs to know what direction he should take, the two men come up with a secret code to warn each other of the direction. Longfellow wrote this poem, not to inform another person about the ride but to help warn the American Union that it was in danger of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Edwin Thomas Booth Research Paper Edwin Thomas Booth was born on November 13, 1833 near Bel Air, Maryland. Edwin had three siblings, two brothers and one sister. His brothers names were, Junius Brutus Booth Jr. and John Wilkes Booth. His sister's name was Asia Booth. He and his brothers were named after their father's colleagues. Edwin Booth had grown up on a family farm in Bel Air, Maryland. Junius Booth, Edwin's father was so invested in his work that Edwin and his siblings were raised by, their mother and a black woman they called " mammy ". When Edwin was seven they moved and became an urban family. All three brothers followed their father's footsteps into acting, although they had all only performed on a stage together once. Edwin first began his acting career in 1849 with his first performance with his father in a production of " Richard the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Only Edwin and John made a life lifelong career out of acting, and John's life was not very long. Junius Jr. Booth eventually quit acting to become a doctor, and Asia had never performed before. He then went to tour all of Europe and the United States with his father until he passed away on November 30, 1850 on his way home to the United States after he quit acting. After taking time prior to his father's death he went on an international tour in 1852. While Edwin Booth was waiting to catch a train with the President's son Todd Lincoln. Todd had accidentally lost his footing and was starting to fall. Edwin Booth grabbed him by the collar of his shirt and saved his life. The exact date of this event is uncertain but it is to be believed that it happened in late 1864 or early 1865. Edwin Booth had married Mary Devlin in 1860. Before Mary passed away, in 1863, they were able to have one child. A daughter named Edwina Booth. After his wife passed away he gave up his heavy drinking skills he had acquired from his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 5. Contribution Of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born on February 17, 1807 in Portland, Maine (Novelist and Prose Writers). He died at the age of 75 in 1882 after suffering from severe stomach pain. He was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts along with his wives. His family was very influential in the region. His father was a prominent lawyer. His maternal grandfather, Peleg Wadsworth, held the position of general in the American Revolutionary War and also served as a member of Congress (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow). Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the most popular poet in America, shaped his poetry to encourage virtues and to live life happily without giving up on any situation that life brings. Longfellow attended Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow). He graduated college in 1825 and was ranked fourth in his class (Adnax Publications). He was invited to accept the new Chair of Modern Languages, and he taught at Bowdoin College and Harvard. While teaching at the colleges, he translated many textbooks in French, Italian, and Spanish. He knew dozens of languages. He visited Spain, Italy, France, Germany, and England as his additional three years of study from Bowdoin College. He walked through the countryside and stayed at small inns. In 1834 he was appointed professor at Harvard and once again made it to visit Europe (Adnax Publications). His first wife, Mary Potter, accompanied him to Rotterdam. She had a miscarriage and died. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 7. Essay about Dorothea Dix Known as an American philanthropist and reformer, Dorothea Dix transformed living conditions in prisons and established institutions for the mentally insane in 20 states, as well as Canada ("DIX"). Through her crusade for fair treatment of the mentally insane, Dorothea Dix exemplifies the ideals of her time – to protect the rights of all human beings, no matter their age, race, or mental capacity. On April 4, 1802 in Hampden, Maine, Dorothea Lynde Dix was born to Joseph and Mary Dix. Due to her mother's poor health, Dix assumed the household duties of tending to the house and caring for her two younger brothers from a very young age. Meanwhile, her father traveled as a preacher who sold religious books that Dix and her family ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... At her doctor's request, Dix spent 18 months in Liverpool, England, during which her mother and grandmother passed away. Soon after, she returned to America, but sadly, Dix was still to drained to resume teaching (Morin). Four years later, in 1837, Dix agreed to instruct the women at the local jail on religion. When she arrives at the jail, she finds some of the women, who seem to be mentally impaired, foul and freezing, so she asks that their quarters be heated, however, the man responds that the "lunatics" do not feel the cold and therefore they do not need to waste resources keeping them warm. Incensed, Dix recruits two respected gentlemen, Samuel Gridley Howe and Charles Sumner, who confirm, and support her requests that conditions at the jail be bettered; in light of their support, the jail agrees to improve their conditions. This experience motivated Dix to study the mentally ill, in an effort to understand the cause and the best way to treat it (Morin). Early on in her studies, Dix decided that Massachusetts should do more for their mentally ill citizens. However, at the time, Massachusetts provided better care than many other states, and thanks to Horace Mann, already had two insane asylums, although they were unequipped to handle the large population of mentally ill patients that needed care. Over the next eighteen months, Dix traveled from jail to asylum to prison to poorhouse, taking extensive ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. Edwin Rutus Booth Research Paper Born on November 13, 1883, near Bel–Air, Maryland was a boy with high potential, Edwin Thomas Booth. His father, Junius Brutus Booth, was an alcoholic. Junius was also an American actor. His mother, Mary Ann Holmes, gave birth to two other boys, John and Junius Jr. He grew up on a family farm with little schooling. Like his father, Edwin wanted to become an actor. At thirteen years old, Edwin became a partner in acting with his father. Edwin's acting career debuted on September 10, 1849. He acted in the Boston Museum as the part of Tressel in the play. His father played Richard III. Edwin continued to play smaller parts like this one for the next two years. Two years later, when Edwin and his father were in New York City, Edwin's father refused to play his part as Richard III. His father was too drunk. Edwin was offered the part, and did not disappoint the audience. This was a turning point for Edwin. Edwin went with his father to California in 1852, during the gold rush. They were not there to mine, however. Entertainers were demanded to come down to San Francisco at that time. Four months later, his father wanted to leave, but insisted that Edwin stay and build a career, which is what Edwin did. Later that year, Junius Brutus Booth, a father of three, died. Two years later, Edwin toured Australia and the Sandwich ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Edwin saved Robert Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln's son. Edwin simply grabbed, and pulled Robert's collar when Robert lost his footing on a train platform. Publishers exaggerated this act and made it seem as though Edwin was somewhat of a hero. President Lincoln thanked Edwin,and wrote about his actions in the 1918 letter to Benedict. Less than a year afterwards, Edwin heard what his brother, John, had did. On April 14, 1865, John had assassinated Abraham Lincoln. Edwin separated himself from the stage until the January of the following year when he continued to play in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 11. Dorothea Dix : An Extraordinary Woman Who Wore Many Hats Dorothea Dix was an extraordinary woman who wore many hats: family caregiver, teacher, author, advocate, social reformer, school and hospital founder, and superintendent. Dorothea Dix held one role more important and noteworthy than any of these however; she was a nurse. Dix's work advocating for prisoners, the mentally ill and women changed the profession of nursing, as well as aspects of the healthcare system, forever. Dorothea Dix was born on April 4, 1802 in Hampden, Maine. She was the eldest of three siblings, who were born to a mentally ill mother and a fanatically religious, alcoholic, and sometimes abusive, father. Although her childhood was far from ideal, her father valued education and taught Dix to read and write at a young age. Dix became the caretaker of the household at a young age and sacrificed her childhood to take care of her two younger brothers. At age 10, Dix left Maine and moved to Boston to live and study with her grandmother. At age 14 she began teaching in Worcester, Massachusetts and in 1819, she founded a schoolhouse for young women called the Dix Mansion. It was not only a school for young women, but also partially a charity; Dix allowed poor and economically challenged young women to attend for free. Dix was a teacher for 25 years in Boston and Worcester, Massachusetts, before finding her true calling. She began teaching Sunday classes at East Cambridge Prison, a women's prison, in March 1841. Dix was utterly appalled at the treatment that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Harriet Jacobs Research Paper Harriet Jocobs was born into slavery in Edenton, North Carolina 1813. Her parents were Delilah and Elijah Jacobs, was slaves who lived together. In Edenton she worked as a caterer she was also highly respected by the black and whites. Delilah and Elijah both died when Harriet and her brother John were young. After the death of her mother in 1819, Harriet went to live with Margaret Horniblow. After Margaret Horniblow's death, She became the property of her young niece the daughter of Dr. James Norcom. He was also the owner of Molly when her mistress died but he decided to put her in the auction. That was considered wrong but an elderly white woman bought her and emancipated her. Molly bought A house of her own her son Joseph, escaped And disappeared, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It caught the attention of the son of Norcom's partner, Samuel Sawyer. Who is A lawyer who courted Harriet through letters she decided to sleep with him to stave off Norcom. She then became pregnant and unwelcome by Norcom's wife, Mary Matilda she assumed the child was her husband's. Harriet went to live with her grandmother. In 1831, horrified white slave owners became violent as slave holders tightened the control of slavery Jacobs had another child by Sawyer in 1833, this time a daughter, Louisa Harriet learned her children were to be sent to the plantation, she decided to run away. She spent some time in a swamp and also lived in a small space for seven years in her grandmother's house. Norcom eventually sold John Jacobs and Harriet's two children, to Sawyer. Harriet escaped in 1842 and went to New York. Her daughter Louisa was already there, She was taken to the house of Sawyer's new wife's half–sister in Washington, DC and then given to Tredwell cousins in Brooklyn. Joseph was sent to Harriet in New York then she sent him to her brother John in New Bedford. Harriet worked in the Astor House she was the live–in baby nurse of Nathaniel Parker, a poet and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. George W. Russell (AE Æ),- His Life, Paintings and Impact... George W. Russell (AE Æ),– His Life, Paintings and Impact on Irish Culture Introduction George William Russell (Æ), poet, painter, statesman and friend of many. George Russell definitely was all of those things. But why is it that I, a visiting student from the far North, takes such an interest in a man who despite his greatness not many people outside Ireland has heard of. When asked about visual arts in Ireland, names like Jack Yeats, Paul Henry and James Barry might be heard but only people with a deep interest in Irish culture will also mention George W. Russell, or Æ as he is more commonly known. But Æ Russell was, and still is, Irish culture, which is what I will try to prove to you with this paper. My first encounter with Æ ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Yeats and John Hughes. Although George Russell attended a number of schools up until the age of 18, moving more and more towards the direction of visual art, he never attended university and he seems to be mostly self–taught after his early school years. It was in 1884 that George Russell first started taking an interest in the mystical world and the occult, which also can be seen in his paintings and poems. This also led up to the creation of his pseudonym Æ. After painting a series of pictures that shown the development of man, George Russell was "haunted" for a name for his paintings. One night in a dream, he heard a voice saying "Call it the birth Aeon" (Aön), After looking up the word in a library, George Russell found out that the word "Aeon" was used by the Gnostics to represent the first created men. For a while he then started using "Aeon" as a signature on his work, but later shortening it to Æ, which is how he's now more commonly known. The first works with Æ as signature appeared in 1888. From pictures and drawings of Æ Russell that I've studied, his physical appearance in early years was that of a small and thin boy with a nice appearance. In his more mature years, Æ Russell grew to be a fairly tall, well proportioned but also heavy built man. Most of his life he wore a beard and in my view he looked somewhat imposing. But Æ Russell also had a "loud voice" and didn't mind speaking his thoughts. Although he was born in
  • 16. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17.
  • 18. William Howard Taft Dbq William Howard Taft once said "Action for which I become responsible, or for which my administration becomes responsible, shall be within the law" (Brainyquote.com). Taft was the first U.S President to throw a first pitch at a baseball game. President Taft was easy going even with the nickname of Big Lub (because of his weight). After his Presidency, Taft lost about 70 pounds within a few years of leaving the White House. Taft attended Yale university and came in second in his class. In college, he stayed away from sports to focus on his studies. Taft was the twenty–seventh president of the United states of America. He served from 1909–1913. In 1921 President Warren Harding made Taft Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When Roosevelt returned he gave speeches that undermined the work Taft had done. Roosevelt once again became involved in politics but continued to attack his successors administration. He received many letters from people wanting him to run for president. Roosevelt had decided to run for president once again. William Taft made his nomination acceptance speech on August 1, but had a hard time financing the campaign and most people knew he couldn't win. Governor Woodrow Wilson was the Democratic nominee. Woodrow Wilson was to become the next President of the United ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19.
  • 20. Cultural Analysis Of Cesar Jacobs 's Cultural Analysis Raul Rios Professor Peters English 2327 30 April 2016 Harriett Jacobs: Cultural Analysis Cultural analysis can be associated with a person's race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, religion, or region. An easy way to examine a person's cultural analysis is to simply pull up a text book and or a website about the person and find very good information about the person. Yet when it comes to famous writers of history, their cultural analysis can be determined through their marvelous and significant pieces of writing they have created. Writers such as Fredrick Douglas, Henry David Thoreau, Fanny Fern, and Margaret Fuller, their cultural analysis can be determined through their pieces of writing. The reason being is that these writers ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Through her work, it's very easy to obtain a cultural analysis on her as a person because she wrote about all the daily brutal struggles as a female slave. With Jacobs' significant piece of writing, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Jacobs really goes into detail on how life for a slave girl that has been a slave since she was born until she was finally free from her slave holders. It's a great piece of writing and the way she wrote it, the story seems to come alive. The way she was able to make her work come alive to the reader is that not only she wrote what would happen to any ordinary slave girl, but she was able to put parts of her own life experiences within Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. First, let's go over some background information and touch on Jacob's back story and her life. As previously mentioned before, Jacobs was born into slavery in Edenton, North Carolina, in the year of 1813. Even though Jacobs was born as a slave, as a child she was really unaware of it. The reason being is that her parents' slave holders, allowed them to live together. Then following the tragic loss of her mother, in the year of 1825, her slave owners were Dr. and Mrs. James Norcom. Despite all the hard work she would do for them day by day, she constantly experienced abuse. Such as being sexually threatened by Dr. Norcom and being physically abused by his wife. Despite the abuse she would encounter day by day, she happened ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21.
  • 22. Incidents In The Life Of A Slave Girl Essay Harriet Jacobs wanted to tell her story, but knew she lacked the skills to write the story herself. She had learned to read while young and enslaved, but, at the time of her escape to the North in 1842, she was not a proficient writer. She worked at it, though, in part by writing letters that were published by the New York Tribune, and with the help of her friend, Amy Post. Her writing skills improved, and by 1858, she had finished the manuscript of her book, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. L. Maria Child, a prominent white abolitionist, agreed to edit Jacob's book, although she apparently did little to alter the text except to rearrange some sections, suggest the removal of one chapter, and add material to another. In a letter ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... After both her mother, Delilah, and father, Elijah, died during Jacobs's youth, their maternal grandmother, Molly Horniblow, raised her and her younger brother, John. Jacobs learned to read, write, and sew under her first mistress, Margaret Horniblow, and hoped to be freed by her. However, when Jacobs was eleven years old, her mistress died and willed her to Dr. James Norcom, a binding decision that initiated a lifetime of suffering and hardship for Jacobs. Dr. Norcom represented later as Dr. Flint in Jacobs's narrative, sexually harassed and physically abused the teenaged Jacobs as long as she was a servant in his household. Jacobs warded off his advances by entering into an affair with a prominent white lawyer named Samuel Treadwell Sawyer and bearing him two children: Joseph (b. 1829) and Louisa Matilda (c. 1833–1913), who legally belonged to Norcom. Fearing Norcom's persistent sexual threats and hoping that he might relinquish his hold on her children; Jacobs hid herself in the storeroom crawlspace at her grandmother's house from 1835 until 1842. During those seven years Jacobs could do little more than sit up in the cramped space. She read, sewed, and watched over her children from a chink in the roof, waiting for an opportunity to escape to the North. Jacobs was finally able to make her way to New York City by boat in 1842 and was eventually reunited with her children there. Even in New York, however, Jacobs was at the mercy of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 24. The Legacy Of John Carter, And Nathanial Rochester (... James Cutler, and Nathanial Rochester (Thomas, 10–17). The many people that are brought into Mt. Hope's grounds all bring their own unique memory to a place where it can be properly honored and cherished as equals. Another way Douglass is honored is by marking all of his points of occupancy as almost hollowed ground, by putting up plaques to mark their significance. The first notable plaque resides at the now office building on Main Street. In Douglass's time he transformed the building into the center for his newspaper. He was the editor of the paper The North Star from 1847 until 1863 ("Frederick Douglass Newspaper Office"). In the building's heyday it was used as a stopping point along the Underground Railroad. When Douglass left the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His name carries the weight of thousands of individual's message, even to this day, to gain equal rights for African American citizens. And Rochester has taken it upon themselves to label him as their own, seen through a mass number of sites they have set aside to carry his name. This idea of ownership and an overall message for Douglass brings up a lot of concerns, and therefore a lot of ways one can hope to improve the situation. This overall message showing Douglass as the human embodiment of freedom can easily be translated over into Rochester's message. By taking great ownership of the Douglass name, and using it to put up many monuments in his honor, the city hopes to bring forth this idea that they greatly support racial equality. In a time where racial tensions are still extremely high, this message is vitally important. It can be used as a cloak to hide behind when the public is unsatisfied with how the city is handling race issues. By using Douglass as their mascot they seem to think they can do no wrong in this department, as long as they acknowledge the themes he stood for, and now represents. It is thought that a city named after a Maryland slave owner ("Frederick Douglass Newspaper Office"), Nathaniel Rochester, could greatly benefit in this day in age by updating their image to show support for Frederick Douglass's ideals. There is a major problem that comes with this idea of using Frederick Douglass as a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...