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David Brooks Two Cheers For Capitalism
Together we can be one
"All for one and one for all" Is what I heard when I was young. Now I see the truth, sadly that's not
how the world works. I read this article called "Two Cheers for Capitalism'' printed by David Brooks
from The New York Times. It said ''Uber's owners have a lot of security but they deny any
responsibility for their workers' "lives, health, desire for career growth." it's sad to hear this
everyone wants to grow eventually, but why not help each other out I ask myself? I believe
socialism is like the little Smurfs striving together to make the community better than it was
yesterday.
In Socialism, I think life can be better for everyone. The wealth of our country would be equally
distributed among each other. No one will be living on the streets or be homeless. There was this
article called Socialism, American–Style by GAR ALPEROVITZ and THOMAS M. HANNA that
showed an important point. 'Such "socialism, American style," can produce odd reversals of
conservative–liberal political ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Both of the kids would be able to go to college without worrying about money and their mother may
have still been lived if they were able to afford health insurance. It is wrong not being able to
depend on someone to help you out during hard times.
Some argue that Capitalism is beneficial for everyone but that's not true at all. There is this article
called Capitalists, Arise: We Need to Deal With Income Inequality by PETER GEORGESCU from
the new york times. 'For the top 20 percent of Americans, life is pretty good.
But 40 percent are broke. Every year they spend more than they have.
While so many people are struggling, even those on the higher end of the middle class have
relatively little after paying the bills: on average, some $1,300 a month. One leaky roof and they're
in trouble.'
This the hard facts people if you don't believe look them up for yourself I'm just telling you to open
your
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The Road To Kentucky: The Road To Kentucky
The Road to Kentucky The South desired to bring the neutral state of Kentucky to the Confederacy.
The Confederacy also wanted to move its western border to the Ohio River, while diverting Union
forces from southern strongholds. Since the first artillery ordinance crossed the waters at Fort
Sumter, little did the state of Kentucky know it would play a critical role in the outcome of the Civil
War. Tennessee seceded from the union after President Abraham Lincoln called upon the Volunteer
State to overpower the rebellion; Kentucky laid just to the north and it would appear to be a strategic
advantage point in trans–Allegheny West. In the meantime, General Bragg and his top general Major
General (MG) Kirby Smith studied over their
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Analysis Of The Book ' The War Of Kentucky ' Essay
Book Review
McDonough, James L. War In Kentucky: From Shiloh to Perryville. Knoxville: University of
Tennessee Press, 1994
22 November 2016
History–108
By:
Jacob Ryan Frazier
James Lee McDonough was born June 17, 1934, in Nashville, TN. Mr. McDonough is the son of
James W. and Ora Lee McDonough. McDonough married Nancy Sharon Pinkston on May 28, 1957.
McDonough and his wife Nancy have three children David, Sharon, Carla. Mr. McDonough
received his bachelor degree at David Lipscomb College in1956. He then went on to Vanderbilt
University to do his graduate work from 1958–60. McDonough received his master degree at
Abilene Christian University in 1961 and at Florida State University in 1966 he received his PhD.
He was a professor at Auburn University upon his retirement in 2000. McDonough has published
many books including Five Tragic Hours: Battle of Franklin, Shiloh: In Hell Before Night, Stones
River: Bloody Winter in Tennessee , Chattanooga: A Death Grip On The Confederacy, and War So
Terrible: Sherman and Atlanta .He is currently 82 and resides in Lewisburg, Tennessee where he is
82 years of age. Through the whole book it is clear that McDonough believes that the defeat of the
south was unavoidable and how important Kentucky was to the war with her waterways and
railroads. The main thesis was the importance of the Western Theatre and the idea that 1862 was a
decisive year in the war, The author states how the western battles got more recognition than
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Native Indians In Native Americans
According to most people, the Native Americans were savage violent people. They were practically
animals, who lived in tents and yelled HOW! These are false accusations, actually very ignorant
accusations. It's not really one person's fault for our thinking like this, it's what's portrayed to people
through books and T.V. It's just the images that have been put into people's heads, but in reality, the
Native Americans were smart civilizations that just lived a little differently than people were used
to. People label and fear things they don't understand. They had land torn away from them, and yet
they are the ones labeled as savage and cruel. Indians, for example the Cherokees, were peaceful.
The Cherokees didn't live in tents or act like animals. They were a community and family that lived
from the land. The Cherokees were very artistic and smart, they made pipes and music, they also
learned how to survive and thrive in the Appalachians by making intricate trails. Firstly, Cherokee
indians, were no different than any average society, just slightly different to what the Americans
were used to. The word Cherokee, derives from the creek word "Chelokee" and it means "people of
different speech". The Cherokee actually had their own language, that differed from other tribes.
They spoke in a certain dialect of the Iroquoian language, while most of the other tribes spoke in a
Muskogean language. The tribes people were hunters and farmers, they grew three main crops, those
being
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Tellico Dam Controversy
It's All About Giving a Dam
"The dam and reservoir required the purchase of about 22,000 acres of land" 1–1 . This is the
number that lies at the heart of a wound and a controversy that is deeply rooted in Eastern
Tennessee. While the number is large and significant, it is not the amount of land that was lost to the
Tellico Dam project that caused the people of that area such grief. Rather, it was the meaning of the
land that once intertwined irreplaceable history, livelihoods, sport and the like of a community for
centuries. At a time in the nation's history where just the pitch for job growth and
intercommunication between urban and countryside peaked the interest of hurting rural
communities, TVA was met with harsh opposition from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
However, due to the demand for soldiers for World War II the wheels of the operation did not
officially begin until almost 30 years later (1). Approval for the Tellico project came in the early
1960s when the TVA had the unified support of congressional delegates from Tennessee, as well as
all other southeastern states that would be directly affected by the damming of the Little Tennessee
River. On April 15, 1963, after the endorsement for the project was approved, congressional funding
was sought after in order to move forward with foundational structure. Finally, after a few minor
complications in procedure, the Public Works Appropriation Act included $3.2 million to begin the
construction of the tellico Dam in March of 1967. (21) Originally, the support for the dam on the
governmental side was lacking, due to the notion that the benefit to cost ratio hovered around .6 to
1. The rationale for such dismal projections was due to the fact that Tellico Dam could not stand
alone as a power generation project. This forced the TVA to adjust how they pitched the idea to
receive enough funding to ensure that the idea received enough support.(16) Rather than focusing on
a energy efficiency and infrastructural growth as a platform, the Authority presented to plan as
social benefit the otherwise rural and quiet society. The
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The Brentwood Library Site : The Jarman Farm Site
The Brentwood Library Site, also known as the Jarman Farm Site, is located in Williamson County,
just west of the Little Harpeth River, at 8109 Concord Road Brentwood, Tennessee. The coordinates
are 35°59′45.06″N, 86°47′23.60″W. It is about 215 miles from the University of Memphis and it
takes approximately three hours to get there. The easiest way to get from the University of Memphis
to the Brentwood Library Site is to take Sam Cooper Boulevard to I–40 East, continue on I–40 for
165 miles, take exit 176 and merge onto Highway 840 East, take exit thirty one toward Nashville
and in 1.6 miles merge onto I–65 N, then take exit 71 for Concord Road toward Brentwood and
continue for 0.6 miles until you reach the Library Site. This Site is now home to the Brentwood
Public Library. The site was first explored by F.W. Putnam in 1882. Putnam, born Frederic Ward
Putnam, was an anthropologist from Massachusetts (Tozzer). He studied zoology at Harvard, and
then became a curator for the Peabody Museum at Harvard. He also helped develop the
anthropology department at the American Museum of Natural History. He also organized
archaeological excavations in several states. In 1877 the Peabody Museum financed a series of
excavations throughout Middle Tennessee; however the Brentwood Library Site was not one of
them. Putnam actually found out about the area after the owner of the land, Dr. W.H. Jarman, shared
the discovery one of his field–hands made while plowing with the editor of a
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Central Stoneroller Research Paper
According to the Peterson Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of North America North of Mexico, the
Central Stoneroller resides in various regions of Wisconsin, but it is not found throughout the state.
It occurs in the southern end of the state ranging from the Mississippi River, the lower Wisconsin
River, the Rock River, and over in the Little Fox River, to only name a few. It also occurs in the
Mississippi River on the western side of the state, a few of its tributaries such as the Chippewa River
and the Red Cedar River, and its floodplains. A small portion of central Wisconsin also has this
species, such as the Waupaca River and Wisconsin River, as well as streams in the Driftless Area.
They do not occur in the northern end of Wisconsin. The Central Stoneroller thrives in flowing
waters of rivers, ranging from large rivers to small creeks. They can be found in riffles, runs, and
pools, usually with some type of rocky substrate (Page, 195). The Fishes of Tennessee states that the
Central Stoneroller lives in "higher–gradient, gravel–bottom streams draining ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Spawning occurs once a year in the spring, mid–April through early June in this region, with ideal
water temperature of 14.5–24°C. Females prefer a more gravelly substrate when laying eggs, which
is the type of habitat they already reside in. If they can't find this substrate, they will migrate to the
right location. Males excavate bowl–shaped pits in the gravel close to riffles and guard them until a
female arrives. Females typically choose bigger males if they can. Once spawning is successful,
they both leave; no care by either parent is given to the eggs. A maximum of 4,800 eggs are laid and
appear bright yellow when fertilized. The eggs hatch in about 3 days, and the young grow very fast.
They are quite large by the end of one year, but continue to grow. Central Stonerollers typically live
4–6 years at most (Etnier, 140 and
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What Is The Topography Of The Upper Tennessee River Watershed
The topography of the watersheds throughout Sevier County vary amongst three different
watersheds in the Upper Tennessee River Basin (Upper). The Holston River Watershed covers
approximately 999 square miles and it drains into the Tennessee River (Holston). The Pigeon River
Watershed is partially located in Tennessee with only 153 square miles of its 704 square miles in
Tennessee, and it drains into the Pigeon River (Pigeon). The Lower French Broad River Watershed
is made up of 796 square miles, and it drains into the French Broad River (Lower). In Sevier
County, the most prominent place for recreational use of water is in Douglas Lake. Douglas Lake
sits at the foot of the Great Smoky Mountains which already attracts a lot of tourism in the ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
One of the prominent cities that reside on this river is Pigeon Forge. Naturally the town is centered
along the Little Pigeon River as it gives way into smaller streams deep into the rolling mountains.
This coupled with the fact that it is in a rural area and has numerous corn mills, it gave way to
multiple backwoods moonshine distilleries (Thompson). Unfortunately, the Little Pigeon River
would be discovered contaminated with fecal coliform in 1993 due to sewage leakage into the river.
The contamination of this river was due to little oversight of waste management of water being put
back into the Little Pigeon River. According to the Tennessee Department of Wildlife &
Conservation, "The sources of the bacteria were thought to be, depending on the location, overflows
from municipal sewage treatment facilities and collection systems, failing, improperly–sited and
concentrated septic tanks and the direct connection of household wastewater to streams." Though,
recently the TDEC has since recalled some of their water contact advisories due to a joint effort of
local, state, and federal governments to reverse the effects of the contamination
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Battle Of Shiloh Essay
 The Battle of Shiloh, also known as the Battle of Pittsburg Landing, was a major battle in the
Western Theater of the American Civil War, fought April 6–7, 1862, in southwestern Tennessee. A
Union force known as the Army of the Tennessee under Major General Ulysses S. Grant had moved
via the Tennessee River deep into Tennessee and was encamped principally at Pittsburg Landing,
Tennessee on the west bank of that river, where the Confederate Army of Mississippi, under General
Albert Sidney Johnston and second–in–command Pierre G. T. Beauregard, launched a surprise
attack on Grant's army from its base in Corinth, Mississippi. Johnston was mortally wounded during
the fighting; Beauregard, who thus succeeded to command of the army, decided against pressing the
attack late in the evening. Overnight Grant was reinforced by one of his own ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Johnston hoped to defeat Grant's army before the anticipated arrival of General Buell's Army of the
Ohio. The Confederate battle lines became confused during the fierce fighting, and Grant's men
instead fell back to the northeast, in the direction of Pittsburg Landing. A Union position on a
slightly sunken road, nicknamed the "Hornet's Nest," defended by the men of Brig. Gens. Benjamin
Prentiss's and William H. L. Wallace's divisions, provided critical time for the remainder of the
Union line to stabilize under the protection of numerous artillery batteries. Wallace was mortally
wounded when the position collapsed, while several regiments from the two divisions were
eventually surrounded and surrendered. General Johnston was shot in the leg and bled to death while
personally leading an attack. Beauregard, his second in command, acknowledged how tired the army
was from the day's exertions and decided against assaulting the final Union position that
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The Spanish Explorer Hernando De Luna
First explored by the Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto in 1540, Tennessee is a state located in the
south–central region of the United States Of America. Tennessee is the 36th largest and the 17th
most populous of the 50 United States. Tennessee is bordered by Kentucky and Virginia to the north,
North Carolina to the east, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi to the south, and Arkansas and
Missouri to the west. In 1559, the expedition of Tristán de Luna, which was resting at Coosa,
entered the Chattanooga area to help the Coosa chief subdue a rebellious tribe known as the
Napochies in 1567, the Pardo expedition entered the Tennessee Valley via the French Broad River,
rested for several days at Chiaha, and followed a trail to the upper Little
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O Brother Where Art Thou Analysis
–O' Brother, Where Art Thou quote: movie was centered around flooding of the valley by TVA dam
(Coen & Coen, O Brother, Where Art Thou?, 2000) –Created by the TVAAct in 1933 election of
President Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR). –New Deal which was a series of programs, 'alphabet soup,'
established during the Great Depression, restoring dignity back to the American people.
(History.com Staff, 2009)–Energy, environment, jobs, economy (Our History, n.d.) It did this
through power production, flood control, and reforestation and staying with its mission of "making
lives better for the people of the Tennessee Valley region." (How TVA Changed Lives, n.d.) –Effects
are still felt today in the citizens of the southeastern United States. (The Editors ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
As much as we hear the good and the bad from the TVA, the impacts can also be felt still to this day
throughout the region.IV. Conclusion–Purpose of the Tennessee Valley Authority still remains the
same as it did back in 1933. The statement of purpose is "To improve the navigability and to provide
for the flood control of the Tennessee River; to provide for reforestation and the proper use of
marginal lands in the Tennessee Valley; to provide for the agricultural and industrial development of
said valley...and for other purposes." (Our History, n.d.) –The 2010s brought with it some change
and by 2014, the TVA achieved for the 15thyear, 99.999 percent reliability and within the same year
also saw a lower usage in gigawatt hours. (The 2010s, n.d.) –The TVA continues to help in the
control of floods the southeastern region and is mostly under control. An example was the rains in
1994, estimated savings were approximately $1billion in damages that would have accrued through
flooding. (Lange & Ahillen, n.d.) –Some other key information about the TVA is that in 2015 it
handled approximately three percent of the nation's energy production and sold more than 158
billion kilowatt hours in electricity. (Lange & Ahillen, n.d.) –TVA recreational area, such as Fort
Loudon where there is picnicking, Percy Priest is great for water–skiing, Dale Hollow where one
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Fort Donelson: A Leadership Failure
I believe that there are a few reasons that the Union Army captured Fort Donelson. Primarily, it was
a leadership failure. If they had made better decisions, understanding their tactical advantage and
battle space, they would have won. They still had the advantage regardless of a smaller amount of
soldiers. This is an example of how a relatively little battle changed the course of the war. To start,
the Confederate Army spread its troops too thin along the Tennessee River valley. They needed to
choose what area was of the most value, leading vital areas undermanned. This was the case with
Fort Henry. As the Union Army came down the Tennessee River with the Iron Clad ships, Fort
Henry was easily defeated. Therefore, with minimal staffing and
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Essay: My Visit To Murfreesboro
Before I moved to Murfreesboro, I knew that I would be living about 40 away from Nashville. I did
not know much about Nashville, except that it was known for having outlet malls and that a variety
of concerts took place there. Little did I know that Nashville was home to an abundant amount of
history about Tennessee. Before taking Tennessee twenty thirty, I had no idea how much Tennessee
had taken part in the Civil War and other wars that I had no idea about. For my second historical
visit, I chose to go to the Tennessee State Museum. I had never been there before. I chose to go here
because I knew it had more information about the Civil War, which would add up to the information
that I got from the Stones River Battlefield. Not only was there information about the Civil War that
I did not know, but many other things I was not familiar with. There was even information about
how Memphis was founded, this is interesting because this is where I am from. The Tennessee State
Museum opened in nineteen ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
They also use photographs to show pictures of the people they are talking about and what they did to
contribute during the time and who they were. Throughout the museum they have an abundant
amount of pictures of important pictures, for example James K. Polk, who was the 11th president of
the United States and later lived and represented Tennessee. There were also frames with
information of Tennesseans during the Civil War who kept diaries. Maggie Lindsey was one of
them, she was born in Nashville and her family owned land value at one hundred and fifteen
thousand dollars and personal property of ten thousand dollars. Lindsey's family was at home during
the Nashville Battle and they had soldiers stationed at their house for protection. She said that before
the war, the soldiers removed fences and barns and cut down all the
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Native Americans: Life After The Trail Of Tears
Some wanted to fight to keep the land that their family has lived on forever. Others thought it was
more pragmatic to leave in exchange for money and other things they would need, but congress
approved the treaty anyway When the summer of 1838 came, General Winfield Scott, who did not
like the position he was put in, took 7,000 soldiers, and rounded up the Cherokee at bayonet point.
John G. Burnett who was a Cherokee messenger said that, "One can never forget the sadness and
solemnity of that morning. Chief John Ross led in prayer and when the bugle sounded and the
wagons started rolling many of the children rose to their feet and waved their little hands goodbye to
their mountain homes, knowing they were leaving them forever. Many ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
It has taught society's about what the policy in the 1800s and how much the government struggled to
unite as one. How the president would do what he wanted to do, know matter what the supreme
court said The Trail of Tears is a lesson on what the government and the society did wrong, and how
America or any other country should not repeat it. It is a historical event that is remembered by
enough people to make sure that this tragedy won't happen again. Knowing about the Native
Americans journey is knowing about The United States of America, and how much it has grown,
since the
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The Battle At Fort Donelson
Fort Donelson, Tennessee, was built on top of a hill near Dover, Tennessee, and just to the east of
Fort Henry and Fort Heiman. The Fort looks over the Cumberland River guarding it from enemy
advancement. The advancements and uproar began when Tennessee pulled out of the union. They
wanted Kentucky to follow in their foot steps in order to give the south a higher boundary against
the North. Once the North pushed through Kentucky, Grants next lead was to push through the Forts
guarding Tennessee. This battle became the first major Confederate victory in the start up of our
nation's Civil War. The defeat at Donelson gave Brigadier General Ulysses S. Grant the recognition
he later earned in the White House when he became president. Possession of the better part of two
states vital to the South depended on the outcome of the battle at Fort Donelson. When war began in
April 1861, Kentucky declared its neutrality, in response to deep conflicts of opinion among its
citizens. Considering neutrality impossible to maintain, North and South maneuvered for position
once Kentucky was opened to military operations. The Confederates constructed fortifications on
both the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers just south of the Kentucky line. They built Fort Henry on
the Tennessee River, on ground susceptible to flooding, but chose higher ground for Fort Donelson
on the Cumberland River. Both sides wanted Kentucky but recognized that the first to cross its
borders risked losing popular
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Cherokee Valley Case Study
"I'll stay here until the water comes up and float down with it when it does," Mattie Randolph, a
housewife from Eastern Tennessee told a TVA worker on his first visit to her family's house. The
TVA worker was there to buy her property which was scheduled to be submerged after the
construction of the Norris Dam in 1936. The Randolph's were one of three thousand families that
were being forced to relocate in order to complete the project. Even though all of Mattie's
neighboring families had accepted government offers to buy their land, Mattie and her family were
the only to refuse government purchase offers. This is a similar story to those that played out across
Eastern Tennessee in the 30's, 40's as the newly formed TVA sought to transform ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Citizens believed that private utility companies charged too much for electricity and could abuse
their power. This sentiment combined with the severe need for economic growth in the Tennessee
valley during the great depression lead to an idea that had been manifested ten years earlier in a
town famous for things other than hydroelectric power, Muscle Shoals. Henry Ford proposed that a
federal dam should be built in Muscle Shoals to provide electricity and fertilizer for the region and
President Coolidge insisted Muscle Shoals should be used as part of the development of the
Tennessee Valley because of hydroelectric power and nitrate fertilizer production. Coolidge,
however, did not support government intervention to build dams on the region's river systems.
Conflict simmered as some proposed the dam should be used for power, and some believed it should
be used for fertilizer. The debate continued into Herbert Hoover's presidency who greeted the
controversy with ambivalence, believing leasing the facilities at Muscle Shoals, or to use revenue
from the dam to fund fertilizer research were more appropriate responses. However, with Franklin
Roosevelt's ascension to power in 1933 the concept behind Muscle Shoals would be at the center of
the new TVA legislation. Roosevelt believed wartime facilities like Muscle Shoals, should be used
to benefit the country. He fulfilled the promises he made as a candidate and in 1933 the TVA came
to be when Congress passed the TVA act. David E Lilienthal, a member and future chairman of the
Board of Directors at the Authority, describes the TVA's purpose as to maintain and operate "the
properties now owned by the United States in the vicinity of Muscle Shoals, Alabama, in the interest
of the nation defense and for agricultural and industrial development and to improve the navigation
of the Tennessee River and Mississippi River
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The Rush West For Gold
fortune quiet, though word of the strike had reached San Francisco by the middle of that year, and
from then on, the rush west for gold was underway. In the next year, the news had spread across the
country, and even President Polk began telling the nation about the gold to be found in California.
People came in a mad rush from all over the country in search of fortune in the gold fields; some
came from the military following the war with the Spanish, others came across land from the inner
frontier, while still others came via the ocean, from the east coast and even Australia; it was truly a
monumental movement of humanity, all fueled by the lust for gold and the fortunes it brought.
Within the first few years of the strike, over 80,000 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
in all of these strikes, miners, prospectors, merchants, saloon keepers, and many others would
rapidly appear near a strike, and as soon as the metal was exhausted, the population would rapidly
plummet or disappear entirely, leaving those people to wander the west in search of the next big
strike, to repeat the process again year after year (H&F 236–38). It can be said that because of the
strikes occurring throughout the west the Indians faced insurmountable hardship. The events of
Cherokee displacement were reappearing in California, and in Colorado in 1859, the Cheyanne's fell
to the same fate. So when the Sioux discovered that miners were flooding into Montana, they
prepared for war. Moreover, they were rather successful at it; an alliance of Sioux and Cheyanne
forced the US to give up much of its military property in the region along the Bozeman trail, and
sign peace treaties guarantying the safety of the Indians who would now reside on the Sioux
reservation in 1869. However, in the Black Hills of the Dakotas, gold was discovered again, and
soon thousands of miners and their associated followers flooded into the region, and blatantly
ignored the terms of the 1868 treaty forbidding prospectors from entering the reservation lands. The
combination of
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Suttree by Cormac Mccarthy: Critical Analysis and Review...
Quote from Suttree
"But there are no absolutes in human misery and things can always get worse, only Suttree didn't
say so" (372).
This quote embodied Cormac McCarthy's fourth novel and personified the main character, Cornelius
Suttree, who traveled through the wasteland of the Tennessee River valley as a fisher of men.
Scholarship:
D. S. Butterworth's Scholarly Essay on Suttree
In Pearls As Swine: Recentering the Marginal in Cormac McCarthy's Suttree D. S. Butterworth
argued that McCarthy treated the condemned characters of the Knoxville outcasts as geological and
archaeological finds. According to Butterworth, McCarthy's characters were spirits who by
happenstance temporarily inhabit a body. Individuals were ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Therefore, time did not depend on a starting and stopping point. Butterworth noted that the three
certainties in Suttree were the passing of time, the death of characters, and the occurrence of events.
Besides McCarthy's unique manipulation of time, Butterworth also highlighted the reoccurring use
of containers and the contained, shell and pearl, or enclosure and the enclosed throughout Suttree as
a metaphor for the lifestyle each character lead throughout the novel. Each character's soul was
temporarily placed in his body––his container––until his time of death. Butterworth argued that each
character was stuck in his container without a choice, living a life where the difference between life
and death were hard to distinguish. Suttree observed after witnessing the body of the suicide victim,
"he noticed with a feeling he could not name that the dead man's watch was still running." Although
the suicide victim was dead, his watch was still alive and running. Although Suttree was still alive,
his twin brother died at birth. Therefore, according to he Butterworth, by the death of his twin
brother Suttree was already contained in death as well.
As Butterworth pointed out in his essay, each character was contained within his container in other
ways as well. Both literally and figuratively, Suttree was imprisoned on many different occasions
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Freshwater Mussel and Water Quality: a Review of the...
Proceedings of the First Freshwater Mollusk Conservation Society Symposium, 1999, pages 261–
274 © 2000 Ohio Biological Survey Freshwater mussels and water quality: A review of the effects
of hydrologic and instream habitat alterations G. Thomas Watters1 Ohio Biological Survey and
Aquatic Ecology Laboratory; 1315 Kinnear Road, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43212
ABSTRACT: Hydraulic impacts represent a suite of habitat alterations that, although having
different causes, often have similar methods of affecting the mussel fauna. For instance, logging and
channelization are very different disturbances, but both generate sediments. These “hydraulic
impacts” thus overlap each other to one degree or another. I have attempted to ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
A survey in 1970 of the reservoir found four mussel species. Prior to its impoundment, Ortmann
(1918) reported 64 species from the same general area. In addition, the 1970 survey found mussels
primarily on flooded preimpoundment land (overbank), not in the original river channel habitat. This
probably was due to critically depleted oxygen levels in the channel. Elsewhere, during construction
of the Nickajack Dam, the Tennessee River was dewatered at the construction site (Isom 1972).
Seventeen species were found. Ortmann (1925) had found 25, for a cumulative total of 33 species
reported for this reach. Missing in the latter survey were many endangered and rare species.
Whether this was due to the presence of the Hales Bar Dam, 6.4 miles upstream, or other causes was
not known. It may be argued that mussel faunal composition changes over time whether dams are
built or not. However, Parmalee et al. (1982) documented a fauna that remained essentially
unchanged for several millennia until impounded by a dam. The Chickamauga Reservoir of the
Tennessee River supported 46 species for perhaps 2,000 years prior to impoundment. After
impoundment, 28 species were 262 extirpated, and several are now extinct. Five species, mainly
soft–substrate tolerant taxa, have invaded the reservoir. Four original species that survived the
impoundment also have increased in abundance. Mussel diversity has declined from 64 species to
30 in the upper Chickamauga
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Tennessee Valley Authority
Various individuals in America contemplated whether the nation would survive. Regardless of the
way that the United States had little history of gigantic social change or topple tries against the
organization, hunger has a negative strategy for blending those interests among any people. As bread
turmoil ridden situations and shantytowns created in number, many began to search for different
choices to nothing new. Showings in the nation's capital extended, as Americans turned out to be
logically drained with President Hoover's evident inaction. The demonstrating that drew the most
national thought was the Bonus Army stroll of 1932. In 1924, Congress repaid veterans of World
War I with revelations redeemable in 1945 for $1,000 each. By 1932, ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
government association developed in 1933 to control surges, upgrade course, improve the desires for
regular solaces of farmers, and convey electrical power along the Tennessee River and its tributaries.
The Tennessee River was obligated to genuine irregular flooding, and course along the conduit's
middle course was upset by a movement of shores at Muscle Shoals, Ala. In 1933 the U.S. Congress
left a bill working behind the TVA, thusly joining each one of the activities of the distinctive
government associations in the zone and putting them under the control of a singular one. An
immense program of building dams, hydroelectric making stations, and surge control wanders took
after. The blend of an extensive extent of specific strengths with a sentiment social obligation to the
region made the TVA enormous as a model of regular resource masterminding. Its region is
generally limited to the leakage bowl of the Tennessee River, which covers parts of seven states:
Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. The TVA is an
open endeavor spoke to by a main collection of three administrators named by the president with the
direction and consent of the Senate. The dependability of the TVA was immediately tried upon the
association's establishment, nonetheless it was kept up by the Supreme Court by virtue of
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority (1936) and in later decisions. The most disputable
movement of the TVA is the generation and offer of electric power, which has been opposed by
exclusive power organizations. The TVA contracts with districts and cooperatives to supply discount
control for conveyance and has joined with them in obtaining the offices of exclusive electric–
service organizations in the area. These buys have set up a coordinated power benefit zone in which
the TVA is the sole provider of force. The TVA control framework, which incorporates more than 50
dams, and in addition
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Battle Between Snail Darter Fish and the Telico Dam Essay
The snail darter case can be a little ridiculous. Its between the 3–inch snail darter fish and then
whether to build the Tellico dam. The main eye attention to this argument is whether we should let
the snail darter fish live or not. If we build the Tellico dam to snail darters will die. On the other
hand its a big deal because the snail darters are on the endangered species list. In my opinion I'm on
the snail darter fish side because I think the fish should live. The cost to build the dam is eighty
million dollars. To me that a lot of cash, how about you? I can understand how this case got serious
and that some people favor the side of the dam and some other favor the side of the snail darter like
I do. Yes the snail darter fish is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Tellico Dam serves to divert water through a short canal into Fort Loudon. This dam being built is
very good for trout and bass fishing. In the 1950's thousands of dams were being built then in 1970's
they decided to build a dam. In the Little Tennessee River. Its length was 3,238 feet its height was
129 feet. Total capacity is 467,600 acre feet, the surface area is 14,200 acres.
Another thing is the Endangered Species Act it is a very important part of this argument it is the
main problem of why the Tellico dam had to stop the process of building it for a while. Basically,
the Endangered Species Act is one of the dozens of United States environmental laws passed in the
1970's. It also has a listing status which is ETC and it stands for Endangered Threatened Candidate.
The Endangered Species Act is an act to provide safety of the endangered and threatened species of
fish, wildlife, and plants, and for other purposes. My opinion too is that I think it is an amazing to
have this if we didn't have this some of our animals would be dead. Its great to know we still have
people out there who worship and care for all species of animals.
One of the reasons to keep the Snail Darters is because I care for all living things I really don't think
this fish should die. Plus it has no reason to die, what did it ever do to us?
Just because it is maybe three inches doesn't mean let it die! I say let it live. All of this mess with
court
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John Clemens : A Short Story
John Clemens, Samuel's father, was a farmer, merchant, and postmaster in a Missouri town, called
Florida. His wife, Jane Clemens, was a stirring, busy woman, who liked to get her work out of the
way and then have a real frolic. Her husband did not know what it meant to frolic. He was not very
well to begin with, and when he had any spare time, he sat by himself figuring away on an
invention, year after year. He spent a good deal of time, too, thinking what fine things he would do
for his family when he sold a great tract of land in Tennessee. He had bought seventy–five thousand
acres of land when he was much younger, for just a few cents an acre, and when that land went up in
price, he expected to be pointed out as a millionaire, at least. John Clemens was a good man and
something of a scholar, but he was not the least bit merry. His children never saw him laugh once in
his whole life! Think of it! Mrs. Clemens did not like to have any one around when she was bustling
through the housework, so the six children spent the days roaming through the country, picking nuts
and berries. When it came night and they had had their supper, they would crowd around the open
fire and coax Jennie, a slave girl, or Uncle Ned, a colored farm–hand, to tell them stories. Uncle Ned
was a famous story–teller. When he described witches and goblins, the children would look over
their shoulders as if they half expected to see the queer creatures in the room. All these stories began
"Once 'pon a
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Tennessee Coal Sludge Disaster Essay
Tennessee Coal Sludge Disaster
What Happened? The largest environmental disaster in U.S. history occurred on December 22nd,
2008 when a 84–acre pit containing toxic coal combustion residue at the Tennessee Valley Authority
Fossil Plant in Kingston, Tennessee gave way. According to a report by AECOM, the firm hired to
perform the root cause report, a "combination of the high water content of the wet ash, the
increasing height of ash, the construction of the sloping dikes over the wet ash, and the existence of
an unusual bottom layer of ash and silt were among the long–evolving conditions that caused the ash
spill at Kingston Fossil Plant" (TVA, 2010). The resulting slide sent a wave of over a billion gallons
of sludge out on the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
On top of emitting 1.9 billion tons of carbon dioxide each year, coal–fired power plants in the
United States also create 120 million tons of toxic waste. That means each of the nation's 500 coal–
fired power plants produces an average 240,000 tons of toxic waste each year. A power plant that
operates for 40 years will leave behind 9.6 million tons of toxic waste" (2009). Coal Combustion
Residue despite containing toxic metals such as arsenic, mercury, lead, selenium, and cadmium that
are proven to cause cancer, kidney problems, birth defects, and wreck havoc on the nervous system.
Coal Combustion Residue can is disposed by either being land filled, used to reclaim mine shafts, or
are stored in pits on–site of coal burning plants. Even without a spill these contaminants can leach
into the ground and pose a health risk if they are not disposed of properly.
What was dangerous about this spill? The Tennessee Coal Valley plant in a press release detailing
the extent of the disaster showed the sheer magnitude of this spill, "In just one year, the plant's
byproducts included 45,000 pounds of arsenic, 49,000 pounds of lead, 1.4 million pounds of barium,
91,000 pounds of chromium and 140,000 pounds of manganese. Those metals can cause cancer,
liver damage
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State Of Tennessee Essay
Tennessee became a state in June 1 1796. Tennessee was the 16th state. The state capital is Nashville
Tennessee. The population of the state is above 6,346,105 that was the record in 2010. The state bird
is the Mocking Bird. The state flower is Iris. The state fruit is Tomatoes. The state tree is the Tulip
Popular tree. The states nick name is The Volunteer State. The state song is called "My Homeland"
by Nell Grayson Taylor and the music was by Roy Lamont Smith. Some of the biggest cites are
Nashville, and Sevierville. Tennessee has 95 counties. Tennessee has fertile soils, an enormous
supply of water. Some of the state's most fertile soils are found in the Appalachian Ridge and Valley
Region and also in the Nashville Basin. The Appalachian ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
The Bristol Motor Speedway has earned a reputation as the world's farthest Half–Mile. Darrell
Waltrip, a resident of Tennessee, is Bristol's most successful racer of all time. Through 2010, Waltrip
had won at the Bristol Motor Speedway a record 12 times. (av2books) Tennessee's professional
football team is the Tennessee Titans. The team moved to Tennessee in 1997 and plays in Nashville
Coliseum. The Titans made it to the Super Bowl in 2000. The Nashville Predators play tin the
National Hockey League. Collage sports teams in the state include the Memphis Tigers, the
Tennessee Volunteers from Knoxville, and the Vanderbilt Commodores from Nashville. (av2books)
Dolly Parton was born on January 19 1946, in locust Ridge Tennessee. Dolly Rebecca Parton has
traveled far beyond her roots. As one of the 12 children born to a sharecropper in a one room cabin
in Tennessee mountain. Dolly was raised in a relative poverty. Wilma Rudolph was born in 1940, in
saint Bethlehem, Tennessee. She was born to early. She had many illnesses when she was very
young. When she was young she had illnesses such as pneumonia, and scarlet fever. She also had
polo, which damaged her left leg. When she was six years old she began to wear a metal leg brace
because she couldn't use her left
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The Civil War Of 1861
The Civil War took place in 1861 and it lasted up until 1865. It was a war between the United States
or, The Union army rather, and eleven deep rooted southern states known as the Confederacy. The
Civil War occurred mainly as a direct response to slavery. The South preferred to keep slavery and
the North simply wanted to preserve the Union. However, there were many other incidents that
occurred and there were different battles that caused the Civil War to have its end results. Those
battles will be addressed in the following paragraphs. The very first battle took place in 1861. It was
known as both The Battle of Bull Run and the Battle of Manassas. The Union army, led by General
Irvin Manassas, was slightly larger than the Confederate army, led by P.G.T. Beauregard. It took
place in northern Virginia when the Union army marched to Manassas in attempt to attack the
Confederates. The attack appeared to be successful, but the Confederates managed to survive. They
later went on to counterattack the Union and McDowell and his army were forced to retreat back to
Washington. This battle was very detrimental and overwhelming for the Union army, and left them
in a state of disbelief. However, in 1861 the Union were still able to make substantial progress. They
were eventually able to proclaim western Virginia a new renowned state admitted as West Virginia
in 1863. Shortly after the Battle of Bull Run, the war took a turn in favor of the Union. A Union
regiment directed by David
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The Old Mill: The Little Pigeon River
One historic site, the foundation of Pigeon Forge, is the Old Mill. The Old Mill was built in 1830. In
the early 1800's, a water–powered mill beside the Little Pigeon River was one of the main spots of
gathering in the community of Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. In those days, the mill faithfully produced
the essentials that were needed for the everyday existence of the Smokie Mountains' early settlers.
The Old Mill even made electricity for the town until 1935. One of The Old Mill's most grandest
features is the giant water wheel that keeps the flow of the Little Pigeon River. Inside the structure, a
very old yet reliable system of shafts, belts, and pulleys still gets the job done, working to turn the
4600–pound stones and grain elevators. Resident
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Foreman, Arkansas: The Town that Might be Holding You Up
Foreman, Arkansas; The Town that Might be Holding You Up Community History and Overall
Tendencies in the Population and Economic Life How Foreman was Settled In Little River County
in Arkansas, United States, there is a small town called Foreman. Forman's town website explains
how Native Americans once said that Willow Springs, the original name of Foreman, was named for
the springs that ran through the willow trees that then ran through the lime rock. Then animals
would come and drink from the springs resting under the trees. From this they called the land
"Rocky Comfort." It then mentions that by 1850 that Rocky Comfort became a booming community
over the next ten years the courthouse, inn, and blacksmith shop began to spread. And then became
the County seat by 1868, it would stay there until 1880 when it was later moved to Richmond
(History, 1). Now, according to the 2010 USA census the population is at 1011 (Teske 1). Some Big
Events One of the big event that occurred in Foreman was when the railroad that was built only a
mile north of Rocky Comfort. The town saw the potential of growth from the railroad and expanded
around this new railroad system. This newer community began to grow and with the new Postal
Service in America in 1890, the town called New Rocky Comfort would change its name. They did
this because they thought their name was too long for the mail. Therefore, they decided to change
the name to Forman to honor Ben Foreman, who was a prominent
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The Battle Of Fort Donelson
Fort Donelson, Tennessee, guarding the Cumberland River, became the site of the first major
Confederate defeat in the Civil War. Victory at Donelson started Brigadier General Ulysses S. Grant
on his road to Appomattox and the White House. His cool judgment under pressure saved the day
after the Confederates threatened to break his troop lines, yet errors by his opponents handed him a
victory that he did not fully earn on his own. Possession of the better part of two states vital to the
South depended on the outcome of the battle at Fort Donelson. When war began in April 1861,
Kentucky declared its neutrality, in response to deep conflicts of opinion among its citizens.
Considering neutrality impossible to maintain, North and South maneuvered for position once
Kentucky was opened to military operations. The Confederates constructed fortifications on both the
Tennessee and Cumberland rivers just south of the Kentucky line. They built Fort Henry on the
Tennessee River, on ground susceptible to flooding, but chose higher ground for Fort Donelson on
the Cumberland River. Both sides wanted Kentucky but recognized that the first to cross its borders
risked losing popular support. Confederate Brigadier General Gideon J. Pillow rashly seized
Columbus, Kentucky, on the Mississippi River bluffs, a move that appalled President Jefferson
Davis, who first ordered Pillow to withdraw, then allowed him to stay when he realized that the deed
could not be reversed. Grant, commanding
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The Civilian Conservation Corps and the Tennessee Valley...
The Civilian Conservation Corps and the Tennessee Valley Authority had positive impacts on work
and the environment during the great depression. The bill proposing the Civilian Conservation
Corps was voted on and passed on March 31, 1933 under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In
addition, the Tennessee Valley Authority was formed May 18 of this same year to work on easing
environmental strains in the Tennessee Valley. Roosevelt's goal when he became president was to
improve the economy and environment, and to help raise America from the depression. When he
had been governor of New York he had created a public works program similar to the TVA on a
smaller scale and it had been met with success. As a result he was encouraged to expand ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Easy navigation and flood control encouraged trade along the river, which boosted the economy and
led to an increase in jobs for traders, deckhands, etc. (US History TVA). In addition to providing
increased trade opportunities, large amounts of money that would have been spent on the flood
damage that were saved by the construction of these dams. A few years into the program, stations
were created in the area to monitor flooding. Reports from these stations, in addition to computer
calculations, show that the total cost of the flood damage up until 2007 would have been $5.8 billion
(TVA River Neighbors). The flooding would have destroyed not only people's homes, but also their
businesses and livelihoods., which would have led to further unemployment. The TVA was more
successful in helping the environment because it greatly improved the condition of the land in the
Tennessee Valley, which was thought to be irreparable. A major goal of Roosevelts going into his
first presidential term was land preservation. "A nation that destroys its soils destroys itself. Forests
are the lungs of our land, purifying the air and giving fresh strength to our people"(Roosevelt). The
area of the Tennessee Valley was so badly damaged, the land was believed by some to be nearly
beyond repair. As reported by the assistant secretary of agriculture at the time, Rexford Tugwell, the
land conditions in the Tennessee Valley were "little better, if any, than that of the early
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An Examination of the Modernization in the American...
The novel Evidence of Things Unseen by Marianne Wiggins identifies several ways in which the
American Society modernized during the interwar period, the time period between World War 1 and
World War 2. To be considered modern a country had to become industrialized. "Industrialism is a
way of life that encompasses profound economic, social, political, and cultural changes."
(Modernization) America made three profound social changes which modernized the nation. The
American government tried to improve education throughout the nation, especially focusing on rural
areas. This and combined with the prosperity during the 1920s allowed science and technology to
develop at a rapid pace which also had brought some downsides with them. Women were ... Show
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In many states, including Tennessee, it was common to teach the Bible's way of creation of
mankind. However, modernized education led to "the Bible and evolution conflicting" (Wiggins
152). In Tennessee the law did not allow teacher to teach evolution. Nevertheless a high school tried
to do exactly that and it led to a famous trial called the Scopes Trial. "The case reflected a collision
of traditional views and values with more modern ones" (Scopes Trial). This new rise in literacy was
at danger since "the 1930's were a perilous time for public education" (American Cultural History
1930 – 1939) because of the stock market crash. People were paying less taxes because of lower
wages, therefore the Government could not fund rural and even some urban schools. "With cash
money in short supply parents were unable to provide their children with the necessary clothes,
supplies, and textbooks (...) to attend school" (American Cultural History 1930 – 1939). The
government tried its best by funding mobile libraries in rural areas. These would cover large areas
without being as expensive as educational buildings. Opal, one main character in the novel, "had
been drafted by (...) [the] Mobile Library Corps" (Wiggins 213) which would go from house to
house in the rural areas. The new, educated generation spurred an increase in science and
technology. As a result of all time high economics and high literacy levels, new technologies were
invented in the 1920s. Many families bought
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Little Tennessee River Basin Research Paper
Little Tennessee River Basin
The Little Tennessee river species are threatened, unique animal and plant life and a large in
population and impact.
The Little Tennessee River is a one hundred thirty five mile long. The start off the river is in
Chattahoochee National Forest then travels through the mountains of western North Carolina then
the river basin goes through other national forest lakes,through the Fontana lake and the will
eventually emerge with Tennessee river in Knoxville and the ends near the southeastern of the the
United States of America. Little Tennessee main tributaries though are Cullasaja River, Nantahala,
Cheoah,Tuskegee and Oconaluftee.
There are over 3,000 species of plants, and a huge diversity of aquatic life. Some
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
A Small Place Analysis
Tyrisha Patterson
ENG 203
10/12/17
Fort Payne's Memories
Kincaid wrote A Small Place after she had left the island nineteen years ago. During this period, she
had been a creative writer living permanently in the United States. She had spent much of her time
on the island. Her hostile verbal talk after coming back to the island is an indication of how she is
both a tourist and native as she claims 'every native of every place is a potential tourist, and every
tourist is a native of somewhere'(Kincaid,18). She beautifully describes Antigua and describes it as a
place where the sky and sea meet to exaggerate the island's surrealism. It shows that attachment
place. Her style makes me recall my childhood and teenage experiences of living in Fort Payne that
helped shape my identity. Kincaid's style of writing establishes an intriguing reflection journey for
the reader to undergo. The surrealism of Antigua remains as the same as it was back before Kincaid
relocated elsewhere. In her book, A Small Place, Kincaid illustrates how Antigua holds different
meaning to different people. To the white people, Antigua is a place for people to get away from
their lives as indicated 'a life of overwhelming and crushing banality and boredom' (Kincaid, 18).
Kincaid's description of the island is amazingly beautiful that to some extent it appears unreal.
Despite the fact that the place is beautiful, the depicted poorness of the people appears unreal. It
indicates that the beauty of the area is
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Vacation Of Tennessee
Tennessee is by far my most memorable place. This place is far from my little town "the watta," and
getting there is a long ride. One can take a plane or drive all the way there but whichever you choose
when you arrive it's like going to paradise. The feeling of arriving you get is irreplaceable. Viewing
the mountains from far is truly a peaceful place. It is filled with so much nature, it reminds us of
how beautiful this world truly is with it. The smoky mountains, one of the main attractions of
Tennessee, its enormous but one cannot fail to notice the wonders of nature within it. One you walk
the peaceful trails it offer you cannot fail to admire the wonderful experience. The air is filled with
happiness and laughter, where one is walking ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Especially going to Memphis, Tennessee where Elvis Presley Graceland is located at. This is an
attraction to visit especially if you are a fan of his music. In Memphis the smell of the outdoors as
you walk the trails reminds us of how wonderful life is; refreshing yourself by swimming the ice
cold river after a long walk in the trial is the best it can get. The people are friendly and surely
Tennessee will always be ready to make your visit worth remembering. One can go to town where
the chatter of family's voices, the laughs of children and smiles everyone fill up the sky gives you
the greatest feeling of why this place is like Americas #1 happy state. When you stroll the town, you
can see almost everything, and taste everything within its just so enormous like its own country you
need more than a couple of days. In winter Tennessee is like a giant icy kingdom, where everything
is dazzling white and silent. During this time most of the animals are hibernating. But one can still
feel the happiness of the state, deer still roaming the mountains while the big large bears sleep.
Many people visit Tennessee during this time it rises to its glory. As people visit Tennessee during
this time to encounter the wonders of this beautiful time. I will soon visit Tennessee once again and
visit this amazing
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Water Pollution
Water pollution in Tennessee is a major environmental issue. Polluted rivers and streams are major
problems because the water inside of them is supposed to be a clean source of water, but sadly that's
not the case. In order to stop this, we have to keep moving forward to find a solution.
First, the Tennessee River is one of the United States most polluted rivers. In 2015, the West
Morgan–East Lawrence Water Authority and three North Alabama residents filed a class action
lawsuit against 3M Company, Dyneon, and Daikin America for polluting the Tennessee River with
perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS). These are man–made
chemicals that are used for making items fire resistant and oil, stain, grease, and water repellant. The
lawsuit states that the chemicals can cause health issues such as cancer, immune system issues,
thyroid disease, ulcerative colitis, and high cholesterol.
The 3M Company knew that the levels for safe drinking water were inadequate and that the PFOS
and PFOA levels in the water were dangerously high. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry analyzed the blood serum of 121 people in nearby locations and found that elevated levels
of PFOA were found in the blood. The Tennessee River supplies at least four million people with
drinking water. Electric power production from hydropower and coal–fired power plants has
dramatically changed the river. A series of dams has significantly altered the river's shape and has
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Middle Tennessee Disaster Analysis
There are many disasters that occur everyday, but not always in the area in which one lives. The
largest disaster in the area of middle Tennessee was the Cumberland river flooding in 2010. This
disaster was the largest in the history of middle Tennessee, and doubled the previous record rainfall
(Grigsby, 2015). This disaster ruined many historical locations, and displaced many people and
businesses (Grisby, 2015). There were 11,000 buildings, and 10,000 people displaced (Grisby,
2015).
The flooding of the Cumberland river killed 29 people, with the last victim being found months later
(Grisby, 2015). From the thousands of properties destroyed there was over two billion dollars worth
of damage done along the river (Grisby, 2015). The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The 2010 flooding of the Cumberland river around the area of Nashville was the largest disaster in
the immediate area. This disaster began 1–2 May 2010, when the largest rainfall on record hit the
area. This caused the massive flooding, and left many without jobs, or homes. It also destroyed
landmarks and attempted to take the soul of Nashville, the Grand Ole Opry. However, the city
banded together, cleaned up, and moved forward. The area is now more prepared for any future
flooding, and is a city on the rise.
References:
Grigsby, K., (2015). 20 Things to Know About the 2010 Nashville Flood. Retrieved from:
http://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/2015/04/30/nashville–flood–20–things–to–
know/26653901/
The largest disaster in the middle Tennessee area was the flooding of the Cumberland River in 2010.
There were disaster mitigation efforts made before and after the disaster. Disaster mitigation is the
first of the four pillars of disaster preparedness (Siminovi, 2011). This is one of the most important
pillars, as this is where real change can be physically made in order to possibly change the path of
any future disaster.
Prior to the disaster of 2010, there was some work done to prevent flooding. One can see a wall
protecting the area of downtown from the river, but it was not large enough to protect from the flood
of 2010. After the 2010 flooding, and into the year
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Underground Railroad Research Paper
As it is stated above, it was illegal to help slaves to escape, which means that neither slaves nor the
helpers could behave completely aboveboard. As a result, many evidence of the Underground
Railroad system remain secret: there was little document left that told the whole story of the system,
and only reminiscences of the men who participate could disclose some of the facts that happened
during that time (3,142). What people could know and be sure of is that there are various ways for
both the slaves and helpers to reach the goal of freedom by using the Underground Railroad.
Northerners raised money to hire some agents or conductors for the system, and with the help of
these people, some secret places were built in the South (3, 142). First step for these conductors was
to spread the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This was one of the most normal way of how the system was working. However, the Underground
Railroad was clearly not strong enough to help all the slaves to escape through the process. There
were many other ways for the fugitives to seek help secretly. For example, the many Underground
Railroad stations used some symbols or signals so that the slaves could realize it was a safe place to
go. Some places "left a lamp lit in a window at night"; others "hung lit lanterns on gates and statues"
so that slaves could see them (19,101). Even though most slaves were not allowed to read and write,
they used the most traditional ways to pass the secret of Underground Railroad from one to another:
stories and songs. For example, there was a song called "The Drinking Gourd", it showed codes and
directions for the runaway slaves to the north. One section of its lyrics sung, "Where the great big
river meets the little river; Follow the drinking gourd; the old man is a–waiting to take you to
freedom; if you follow the drinking
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The United States Civil War Essay
The United States Civil War can be considered as one of the darkest times in American history. The
Southern states were fighting for their way of life, and the Northern states were fighting to preserve
the Union. The war had begun in the year of 1861, and it would end in 1865 with the capture of
Jefferson Davis and surrender of Robert E. Lee. The war had begun at the battle of Fort Sumter.
After this battle, the newly elected Abraham Lincoln called for volunteers to join the Union forces.
In 1862, Union and Confederate forces would meet again at the battle of Fort Henry and Donelson.
With the Union succeeding at pushing the Confederate forces further back into the South, General
Grant and his army made their way down the Tennessee River. The forces would meet again at the
Battle of Shiloh and Pittsburg Landing. There have been many arguments supporting the theory that
the Confederacy did in fact win at the Battle of Shiloh. Although the Union lost more troops at this
battle, the Confederacy failed in many ways. In order to determine how exactly they failed, it is
important to study what the goal of the Confederacy was at Shiloh and whether or not they
accomplished this goal. In this essay, the Confederacy's goals for attacking Grant's troops at Shiloh
and their failure to accomplish those goals will show just how unsuccessful the Confederate army
truly was at this battle.1
There had been decades of tension between the Southern and Northern states of America. The
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I Am Nkem Book Report
I am Nkem. I am fourteen years old. I come from Oyo, one of four states inland near the gulf of
Guinea. Oyo is the most successful of all four kingdoms because of its thriving forests and because
we didn't have the tsetse fly or any other diseases so we were able to breed horses. We had many
farmlands with slave labor and we had many slaves which were traded to the Europeans for guns,
clothes, and metal goods. I lived with my mother, father, and my younger brother. This is the story
of how I got kidnapped, taken away from my family, was brought to Mississippi to have everything
changed completely and how I became Charlotte.
On an unbearably hot day with everything and everyone sweating, I was helping my mother with
chores around the house. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
There was talk about a man named Peg Leg who was helping slaves escape to freedom by following
the drinking gourd. The path to freedom was to walk up the bank of the Tombigbee river following
the dead trees. We would come to two mountains where the river stopped and continued on the other
side. We then would walk up the Tennessee river and cross the Ohio river where Peg Leg would take
us the rest of the journey to freedom. We were to leave in the winter when the days were shorter and
the nights longer to travel at night and hide during the day. We started the week, maybe month long
journey the next night sneaking away from everything that had brought us here. There were seven of
us including the women and man who were bought with me. We started along the paths Peg Leg had
directed following the drinking gourd pointing to the North star. Each night we made it a little
farther and each day was spent resting and hiding. Following the river banks and climbing over
mountains. Days turned into weeks and weeks turned into months. Soon enough we came to Peg
Leg, the man who was supposed to take us to freedom. After being taken from my home, thrown on
a ship, being bought like animals, and working for hours through rough days, it was over. I was
about to be brought to a free state where my life would start
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Gold Rush And The Silver Rush
Gold rush Today I will be talking about the gold rush and I think it will be a lot of fun so I will just
let you read about the gold rush It started when some men were working and they were digging.then
they found gold it pretty much spread immediately. People came from everywhere to find gold.
Then they started to make towns and people wanted the gold. They started to fight and it became
kaos. After people moved in to the gold land people were charging 19 million to live there. But
people did not like the cost to live there. So they went somewhere eventually they found gold. About
1 year later it was a ghost town(a ghost is a town is a town that had a lot of people but now they all
leave). In Helena people found gold in 1864. People went nuts and wanted that gold. So they went
to Helena and got all that gold and went a way. A few years later they found gold in grasshopper
creek. In conclusion I think the gold rush is very important.Next week I will be talking about the
battle of the little bighorn.So please try to read it. Goodbye!
The Oregon trail
I will talk to you today about the Oregon trail it will be a blast! It will be about how long it was and
some weird things will happen
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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David Brooks Two Cheers For Capitalism

  • 1. David Brooks Two Cheers For Capitalism Together we can be one "All for one and one for all" Is what I heard when I was young. Now I see the truth, sadly that's not how the world works. I read this article called "Two Cheers for Capitalism'' printed by David Brooks from The New York Times. It said ''Uber's owners have a lot of security but they deny any responsibility for their workers' "lives, health, desire for career growth." it's sad to hear this everyone wants to grow eventually, but why not help each other out I ask myself? I believe socialism is like the little Smurfs striving together to make the community better than it was yesterday. In Socialism, I think life can be better for everyone. The wealth of our country would be equally distributed among each other. No one will be living on the streets or be homeless. There was this article called Socialism, American–Style by GAR ALPEROVITZ and THOMAS M. HANNA that showed an important point. 'Such "socialism, American style," can produce odd reversals of conservative–liberal political ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Both of the kids would be able to go to college without worrying about money and their mother may have still been lived if they were able to afford health insurance. It is wrong not being able to depend on someone to help you out during hard times. Some argue that Capitalism is beneficial for everyone but that's not true at all. There is this article called Capitalists, Arise: We Need to Deal With Income Inequality by PETER GEORGESCU from the new york times. 'For the top 20 percent of Americans, life is pretty good. But 40 percent are broke. Every year they spend more than they have. While so many people are struggling, even those on the higher end of the middle class have relatively little after paying the bills: on average, some $1,300 a month. One leaky roof and they're in trouble.' This the hard facts people if you don't believe look them up for yourself I'm just telling you to open your ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. The Road To Kentucky: The Road To Kentucky The Road to Kentucky The South desired to bring the neutral state of Kentucky to the Confederacy. The Confederacy also wanted to move its western border to the Ohio River, while diverting Union forces from southern strongholds. Since the first artillery ordinance crossed the waters at Fort Sumter, little did the state of Kentucky know it would play a critical role in the outcome of the Civil War. Tennessee seceded from the union after President Abraham Lincoln called upon the Volunteer State to overpower the rebellion; Kentucky laid just to the north and it would appear to be a strategic advantage point in trans–Allegheny West. In the meantime, General Bragg and his top general Major General (MG) Kirby Smith studied over their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Analysis Of The Book ' The War Of Kentucky ' Essay Book Review McDonough, James L. War In Kentucky: From Shiloh to Perryville. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1994 22 November 2016 History–108 By: Jacob Ryan Frazier James Lee McDonough was born June 17, 1934, in Nashville, TN. Mr. McDonough is the son of James W. and Ora Lee McDonough. McDonough married Nancy Sharon Pinkston on May 28, 1957. McDonough and his wife Nancy have three children David, Sharon, Carla. Mr. McDonough received his bachelor degree at David Lipscomb College in1956. He then went on to Vanderbilt University to do his graduate work from 1958–60. McDonough received his master degree at Abilene Christian University in 1961 and at Florida State University in 1966 he received his PhD. He was a professor at Auburn University upon his retirement in 2000. McDonough has published many books including Five Tragic Hours: Battle of Franklin, Shiloh: In Hell Before Night, Stones River: Bloody Winter in Tennessee , Chattanooga: A Death Grip On The Confederacy, and War So Terrible: Sherman and Atlanta .He is currently 82 and resides in Lewisburg, Tennessee where he is 82 years of age. Through the whole book it is clear that McDonough believes that the defeat of the south was unavoidable and how important Kentucky was to the war with her waterways and railroads. The main thesis was the importance of the Western Theatre and the idea that 1862 was a decisive year in the war, The author states how the western battles got more recognition than ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Native Indians In Native Americans According to most people, the Native Americans were savage violent people. They were practically animals, who lived in tents and yelled HOW! These are false accusations, actually very ignorant accusations. It's not really one person's fault for our thinking like this, it's what's portrayed to people through books and T.V. It's just the images that have been put into people's heads, but in reality, the Native Americans were smart civilizations that just lived a little differently than people were used to. People label and fear things they don't understand. They had land torn away from them, and yet they are the ones labeled as savage and cruel. Indians, for example the Cherokees, were peaceful. The Cherokees didn't live in tents or act like animals. They were a community and family that lived from the land. The Cherokees were very artistic and smart, they made pipes and music, they also learned how to survive and thrive in the Appalachians by making intricate trails. Firstly, Cherokee indians, were no different than any average society, just slightly different to what the Americans were used to. The word Cherokee, derives from the creek word "Chelokee" and it means "people of different speech". The Cherokee actually had their own language, that differed from other tribes. They spoke in a certain dialect of the Iroquoian language, while most of the other tribes spoke in a Muskogean language. The tribes people were hunters and farmers, they grew three main crops, those being ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. Tellico Dam Controversy It's All About Giving a Dam "The dam and reservoir required the purchase of about 22,000 acres of land" 1–1 . This is the number that lies at the heart of a wound and a controversy that is deeply rooted in Eastern Tennessee. While the number is large and significant, it is not the amount of land that was lost to the Tellico Dam project that caused the people of that area such grief. Rather, it was the meaning of the land that once intertwined irreplaceable history, livelihoods, sport and the like of a community for centuries. At a time in the nation's history where just the pitch for job growth and intercommunication between urban and countryside peaked the interest of hurting rural communities, TVA was met with harsh opposition from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, due to the demand for soldiers for World War II the wheels of the operation did not officially begin until almost 30 years later (1). Approval for the Tellico project came in the early 1960s when the TVA had the unified support of congressional delegates from Tennessee, as well as all other southeastern states that would be directly affected by the damming of the Little Tennessee River. On April 15, 1963, after the endorsement for the project was approved, congressional funding was sought after in order to move forward with foundational structure. Finally, after a few minor complications in procedure, the Public Works Appropriation Act included $3.2 million to begin the construction of the tellico Dam in March of 1967. (21) Originally, the support for the dam on the governmental side was lacking, due to the notion that the benefit to cost ratio hovered around .6 to 1. The rationale for such dismal projections was due to the fact that Tellico Dam could not stand alone as a power generation project. This forced the TVA to adjust how they pitched the idea to receive enough funding to ensure that the idea received enough support.(16) Rather than focusing on a energy efficiency and infrastructural growth as a platform, the Authority presented to plan as social benefit the otherwise rural and quiet society. The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. The Brentwood Library Site : The Jarman Farm Site The Brentwood Library Site, also known as the Jarman Farm Site, is located in Williamson County, just west of the Little Harpeth River, at 8109 Concord Road Brentwood, Tennessee. The coordinates are 35°59′45.06″N, 86°47′23.60″W. It is about 215 miles from the University of Memphis and it takes approximately three hours to get there. The easiest way to get from the University of Memphis to the Brentwood Library Site is to take Sam Cooper Boulevard to I–40 East, continue on I–40 for 165 miles, take exit 176 and merge onto Highway 840 East, take exit thirty one toward Nashville and in 1.6 miles merge onto I–65 N, then take exit 71 for Concord Road toward Brentwood and continue for 0.6 miles until you reach the Library Site. This Site is now home to the Brentwood Public Library. The site was first explored by F.W. Putnam in 1882. Putnam, born Frederic Ward Putnam, was an anthropologist from Massachusetts (Tozzer). He studied zoology at Harvard, and then became a curator for the Peabody Museum at Harvard. He also helped develop the anthropology department at the American Museum of Natural History. He also organized archaeological excavations in several states. In 1877 the Peabody Museum financed a series of excavations throughout Middle Tennessee; however the Brentwood Library Site was not one of them. Putnam actually found out about the area after the owner of the land, Dr. W.H. Jarman, shared the discovery one of his field–hands made while plowing with the editor of a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Central Stoneroller Research Paper According to the Peterson Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of North America North of Mexico, the Central Stoneroller resides in various regions of Wisconsin, but it is not found throughout the state. It occurs in the southern end of the state ranging from the Mississippi River, the lower Wisconsin River, the Rock River, and over in the Little Fox River, to only name a few. It also occurs in the Mississippi River on the western side of the state, a few of its tributaries such as the Chippewa River and the Red Cedar River, and its floodplains. A small portion of central Wisconsin also has this species, such as the Waupaca River and Wisconsin River, as well as streams in the Driftless Area. They do not occur in the northern end of Wisconsin. The Central Stoneroller thrives in flowing waters of rivers, ranging from large rivers to small creeks. They can be found in riffles, runs, and pools, usually with some type of rocky substrate (Page, 195). The Fishes of Tennessee states that the Central Stoneroller lives in "higher–gradient, gravel–bottom streams draining ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Spawning occurs once a year in the spring, mid–April through early June in this region, with ideal water temperature of 14.5–24°C. Females prefer a more gravelly substrate when laying eggs, which is the type of habitat they already reside in. If they can't find this substrate, they will migrate to the right location. Males excavate bowl–shaped pits in the gravel close to riffles and guard them until a female arrives. Females typically choose bigger males if they can. Once spawning is successful, they both leave; no care by either parent is given to the eggs. A maximum of 4,800 eggs are laid and appear bright yellow when fertilized. The eggs hatch in about 3 days, and the young grow very fast. They are quite large by the end of one year, but continue to grow. Central Stonerollers typically live 4–6 years at most (Etnier, 140 and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. What Is The Topography Of The Upper Tennessee River Watershed The topography of the watersheds throughout Sevier County vary amongst three different watersheds in the Upper Tennessee River Basin (Upper). The Holston River Watershed covers approximately 999 square miles and it drains into the Tennessee River (Holston). The Pigeon River Watershed is partially located in Tennessee with only 153 square miles of its 704 square miles in Tennessee, and it drains into the Pigeon River (Pigeon). The Lower French Broad River Watershed is made up of 796 square miles, and it drains into the French Broad River (Lower). In Sevier County, the most prominent place for recreational use of water is in Douglas Lake. Douglas Lake sits at the foot of the Great Smoky Mountains which already attracts a lot of tourism in the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One of the prominent cities that reside on this river is Pigeon Forge. Naturally the town is centered along the Little Pigeon River as it gives way into smaller streams deep into the rolling mountains. This coupled with the fact that it is in a rural area and has numerous corn mills, it gave way to multiple backwoods moonshine distilleries (Thompson). Unfortunately, the Little Pigeon River would be discovered contaminated with fecal coliform in 1993 due to sewage leakage into the river. The contamination of this river was due to little oversight of waste management of water being put back into the Little Pigeon River. According to the Tennessee Department of Wildlife & Conservation, "The sources of the bacteria were thought to be, depending on the location, overflows from municipal sewage treatment facilities and collection systems, failing, improperly–sited and concentrated septic tanks and the direct connection of household wastewater to streams." Though, recently the TDEC has since recalled some of their water contact advisories due to a joint effort of local, state, and federal governments to reverse the effects of the contamination ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. Battle Of Shiloh Essay  The Battle of Shiloh, also known as the Battle of Pittsburg Landing, was a major battle in the Western Theater of the American Civil War, fought April 6–7, 1862, in southwestern Tennessee. A Union force known as the Army of the Tennessee under Major General Ulysses S. Grant had moved via the Tennessee River deep into Tennessee and was encamped principally at Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee on the west bank of that river, where the Confederate Army of Mississippi, under General Albert Sidney Johnston and second–in–command Pierre G. T. Beauregard, launched a surprise attack on Grant's army from its base in Corinth, Mississippi. Johnston was mortally wounded during the fighting; Beauregard, who thus succeeded to command of the army, decided against pressing the attack late in the evening. Overnight Grant was reinforced by one of his own ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Johnston hoped to defeat Grant's army before the anticipated arrival of General Buell's Army of the Ohio. The Confederate battle lines became confused during the fierce fighting, and Grant's men instead fell back to the northeast, in the direction of Pittsburg Landing. A Union position on a slightly sunken road, nicknamed the "Hornet's Nest," defended by the men of Brig. Gens. Benjamin Prentiss's and William H. L. Wallace's divisions, provided critical time for the remainder of the Union line to stabilize under the protection of numerous artillery batteries. Wallace was mortally wounded when the position collapsed, while several regiments from the two divisions were eventually surrounded and surrendered. General Johnston was shot in the leg and bled to death while personally leading an attack. Beauregard, his second in command, acknowledged how tired the army was from the day's exertions and decided against assaulting the final Union position that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. The Spanish Explorer Hernando De Luna First explored by the Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto in 1540, Tennessee is a state located in the south–central region of the United States Of America. Tennessee is the 36th largest and the 17th most populous of the 50 United States. Tennessee is bordered by Kentucky and Virginia to the north, North Carolina to the east, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi to the south, and Arkansas and Missouri to the west. In 1559, the expedition of Tristán de Luna, which was resting at Coosa, entered the Chattanooga area to help the Coosa chief subdue a rebellious tribe known as the Napochies in 1567, the Pardo expedition entered the Tennessee Valley via the French Broad River, rested for several days at Chiaha, and followed a trail to the upper Little ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. O Brother Where Art Thou Analysis –O' Brother, Where Art Thou quote: movie was centered around flooding of the valley by TVA dam (Coen & Coen, O Brother, Where Art Thou?, 2000) –Created by the TVAAct in 1933 election of President Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR). –New Deal which was a series of programs, 'alphabet soup,' established during the Great Depression, restoring dignity back to the American people. (History.com Staff, 2009)–Energy, environment, jobs, economy (Our History, n.d.) It did this through power production, flood control, and reforestation and staying with its mission of "making lives better for the people of the Tennessee Valley region." (How TVA Changed Lives, n.d.) –Effects are still felt today in the citizens of the southeastern United States. (The Editors ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As much as we hear the good and the bad from the TVA, the impacts can also be felt still to this day throughout the region.IV. Conclusion–Purpose of the Tennessee Valley Authority still remains the same as it did back in 1933. The statement of purpose is "To improve the navigability and to provide for the flood control of the Tennessee River; to provide for reforestation and the proper use of marginal lands in the Tennessee Valley; to provide for the agricultural and industrial development of said valley...and for other purposes." (Our History, n.d.) –The 2010s brought with it some change and by 2014, the TVA achieved for the 15thyear, 99.999 percent reliability and within the same year also saw a lower usage in gigawatt hours. (The 2010s, n.d.) –The TVA continues to help in the control of floods the southeastern region and is mostly under control. An example was the rains in 1994, estimated savings were approximately $1billion in damages that would have accrued through flooding. (Lange & Ahillen, n.d.) –Some other key information about the TVA is that in 2015 it handled approximately three percent of the nation's energy production and sold more than 158 billion kilowatt hours in electricity. (Lange & Ahillen, n.d.) –TVA recreational area, such as Fort Loudon where there is picnicking, Percy Priest is great for water–skiing, Dale Hollow where one ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. Fort Donelson: A Leadership Failure I believe that there are a few reasons that the Union Army captured Fort Donelson. Primarily, it was a leadership failure. If they had made better decisions, understanding their tactical advantage and battle space, they would have won. They still had the advantage regardless of a smaller amount of soldiers. This is an example of how a relatively little battle changed the course of the war. To start, the Confederate Army spread its troops too thin along the Tennessee River valley. They needed to choose what area was of the most value, leading vital areas undermanned. This was the case with Fort Henry. As the Union Army came down the Tennessee River with the Iron Clad ships, Fort Henry was easily defeated. Therefore, with minimal staffing and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Essay: My Visit To Murfreesboro Before I moved to Murfreesboro, I knew that I would be living about 40 away from Nashville. I did not know much about Nashville, except that it was known for having outlet malls and that a variety of concerts took place there. Little did I know that Nashville was home to an abundant amount of history about Tennessee. Before taking Tennessee twenty thirty, I had no idea how much Tennessee had taken part in the Civil War and other wars that I had no idea about. For my second historical visit, I chose to go to the Tennessee State Museum. I had never been there before. I chose to go here because I knew it had more information about the Civil War, which would add up to the information that I got from the Stones River Battlefield. Not only was there information about the Civil War that I did not know, but many other things I was not familiar with. There was even information about how Memphis was founded, this is interesting because this is where I am from. The Tennessee State Museum opened in nineteen ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They also use photographs to show pictures of the people they are talking about and what they did to contribute during the time and who they were. Throughout the museum they have an abundant amount of pictures of important pictures, for example James K. Polk, who was the 11th president of the United States and later lived and represented Tennessee. There were also frames with information of Tennesseans during the Civil War who kept diaries. Maggie Lindsey was one of them, she was born in Nashville and her family owned land value at one hundred and fifteen thousand dollars and personal property of ten thousand dollars. Lindsey's family was at home during the Nashville Battle and they had soldiers stationed at their house for protection. She said that before the war, the soldiers removed fences and barns and cut down all the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Native Americans: Life After The Trail Of Tears Some wanted to fight to keep the land that their family has lived on forever. Others thought it was more pragmatic to leave in exchange for money and other things they would need, but congress approved the treaty anyway When the summer of 1838 came, General Winfield Scott, who did not like the position he was put in, took 7,000 soldiers, and rounded up the Cherokee at bayonet point. John G. Burnett who was a Cherokee messenger said that, "One can never forget the sadness and solemnity of that morning. Chief John Ross led in prayer and when the bugle sounded and the wagons started rolling many of the children rose to their feet and waved their little hands goodbye to their mountain homes, knowing they were leaving them forever. Many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It has taught society's about what the policy in the 1800s and how much the government struggled to unite as one. How the president would do what he wanted to do, know matter what the supreme court said The Trail of Tears is a lesson on what the government and the society did wrong, and how America or any other country should not repeat it. It is a historical event that is remembered by enough people to make sure that this tragedy won't happen again. Knowing about the Native Americans journey is knowing about The United States of America, and how much it has grown, since the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. The Battle At Fort Donelson Fort Donelson, Tennessee, was built on top of a hill near Dover, Tennessee, and just to the east of Fort Henry and Fort Heiman. The Fort looks over the Cumberland River guarding it from enemy advancement. The advancements and uproar began when Tennessee pulled out of the union. They wanted Kentucky to follow in their foot steps in order to give the south a higher boundary against the North. Once the North pushed through Kentucky, Grants next lead was to push through the Forts guarding Tennessee. This battle became the first major Confederate victory in the start up of our nation's Civil War. The defeat at Donelson gave Brigadier General Ulysses S. Grant the recognition he later earned in the White House when he became president. Possession of the better part of two states vital to the South depended on the outcome of the battle at Fort Donelson. When war began in April 1861, Kentucky declared its neutrality, in response to deep conflicts of opinion among its citizens. Considering neutrality impossible to maintain, North and South maneuvered for position once Kentucky was opened to military operations. The Confederates constructed fortifications on both the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers just south of the Kentucky line. They built Fort Henry on the Tennessee River, on ground susceptible to flooding, but chose higher ground for Fort Donelson on the Cumberland River. Both sides wanted Kentucky but recognized that the first to cross its borders risked losing popular ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Cherokee Valley Case Study "I'll stay here until the water comes up and float down with it when it does," Mattie Randolph, a housewife from Eastern Tennessee told a TVA worker on his first visit to her family's house. The TVA worker was there to buy her property which was scheduled to be submerged after the construction of the Norris Dam in 1936. The Randolph's were one of three thousand families that were being forced to relocate in order to complete the project. Even though all of Mattie's neighboring families had accepted government offers to buy their land, Mattie and her family were the only to refuse government purchase offers. This is a similar story to those that played out across Eastern Tennessee in the 30's, 40's as the newly formed TVA sought to transform ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Citizens believed that private utility companies charged too much for electricity and could abuse their power. This sentiment combined with the severe need for economic growth in the Tennessee valley during the great depression lead to an idea that had been manifested ten years earlier in a town famous for things other than hydroelectric power, Muscle Shoals. Henry Ford proposed that a federal dam should be built in Muscle Shoals to provide electricity and fertilizer for the region and President Coolidge insisted Muscle Shoals should be used as part of the development of the Tennessee Valley because of hydroelectric power and nitrate fertilizer production. Coolidge, however, did not support government intervention to build dams on the region's river systems. Conflict simmered as some proposed the dam should be used for power, and some believed it should be used for fertilizer. The debate continued into Herbert Hoover's presidency who greeted the controversy with ambivalence, believing leasing the facilities at Muscle Shoals, or to use revenue from the dam to fund fertilizer research were more appropriate responses. However, with Franklin Roosevelt's ascension to power in 1933 the concept behind Muscle Shoals would be at the center of the new TVA legislation. Roosevelt believed wartime facilities like Muscle Shoals, should be used to benefit the country. He fulfilled the promises he made as a candidate and in 1933 the TVA came to be when Congress passed the TVA act. David E Lilienthal, a member and future chairman of the Board of Directors at the Authority, describes the TVA's purpose as to maintain and operate "the properties now owned by the United States in the vicinity of Muscle Shoals, Alabama, in the interest of the nation defense and for agricultural and industrial development and to improve the navigation of the Tennessee River and Mississippi River ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. The Rush West For Gold fortune quiet, though word of the strike had reached San Francisco by the middle of that year, and from then on, the rush west for gold was underway. In the next year, the news had spread across the country, and even President Polk began telling the nation about the gold to be found in California. People came in a mad rush from all over the country in search of fortune in the gold fields; some came from the military following the war with the Spanish, others came across land from the inner frontier, while still others came via the ocean, from the east coast and even Australia; it was truly a monumental movement of humanity, all fueled by the lust for gold and the fortunes it brought. Within the first few years of the strike, over 80,000 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... in all of these strikes, miners, prospectors, merchants, saloon keepers, and many others would rapidly appear near a strike, and as soon as the metal was exhausted, the population would rapidly plummet or disappear entirely, leaving those people to wander the west in search of the next big strike, to repeat the process again year after year (H&F 236–38). It can be said that because of the strikes occurring throughout the west the Indians faced insurmountable hardship. The events of Cherokee displacement were reappearing in California, and in Colorado in 1859, the Cheyanne's fell to the same fate. So when the Sioux discovered that miners were flooding into Montana, they prepared for war. Moreover, they were rather successful at it; an alliance of Sioux and Cheyanne forced the US to give up much of its military property in the region along the Bozeman trail, and sign peace treaties guarantying the safety of the Indians who would now reside on the Sioux reservation in 1869. However, in the Black Hills of the Dakotas, gold was discovered again, and soon thousands of miners and their associated followers flooded into the region, and blatantly ignored the terms of the 1868 treaty forbidding prospectors from entering the reservation lands. The combination of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. Suttree by Cormac Mccarthy: Critical Analysis and Review... Quote from Suttree "But there are no absolutes in human misery and things can always get worse, only Suttree didn't say so" (372). This quote embodied Cormac McCarthy's fourth novel and personified the main character, Cornelius Suttree, who traveled through the wasteland of the Tennessee River valley as a fisher of men. Scholarship: D. S. Butterworth's Scholarly Essay on Suttree In Pearls As Swine: Recentering the Marginal in Cormac McCarthy's Suttree D. S. Butterworth argued that McCarthy treated the condemned characters of the Knoxville outcasts as geological and archaeological finds. According to Butterworth, McCarthy's characters were spirits who by happenstance temporarily inhabit a body. Individuals were ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Therefore, time did not depend on a starting and stopping point. Butterworth noted that the three certainties in Suttree were the passing of time, the death of characters, and the occurrence of events. Besides McCarthy's unique manipulation of time, Butterworth also highlighted the reoccurring use of containers and the contained, shell and pearl, or enclosure and the enclosed throughout Suttree as a metaphor for the lifestyle each character lead throughout the novel. Each character's soul was temporarily placed in his body––his container––until his time of death. Butterworth argued that each character was stuck in his container without a choice, living a life where the difference between life and death were hard to distinguish. Suttree observed after witnessing the body of the suicide victim, "he noticed with a feeling he could not name that the dead man's watch was still running." Although the suicide victim was dead, his watch was still alive and running. Although Suttree was still alive, his twin brother died at birth. Therefore, according to he Butterworth, by the death of his twin brother Suttree was already contained in death as well. As Butterworth pointed out in his essay, each character was contained within his container in other ways as well. Both literally and figuratively, Suttree was imprisoned on many different occasions ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Freshwater Mussel and Water Quality: a Review of the... Proceedings of the First Freshwater Mollusk Conservation Society Symposium, 1999, pages 261– 274 © 2000 Ohio Biological Survey Freshwater mussels and water quality: A review of the effects of hydrologic and instream habitat alterations G. Thomas Watters1 Ohio Biological Survey and Aquatic Ecology Laboratory; 1315 Kinnear Road, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43212 ABSTRACT: Hydraulic impacts represent a suite of habitat alterations that, although having different causes, often have similar methods of affecting the mussel fauna. For instance, logging and channelization are very different disturbances, but both generate sediments. These “hydraulic impacts” thus overlap each other to one degree or another. I have attempted to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A survey in 1970 of the reservoir found four mussel species. Prior to its impoundment, Ortmann (1918) reported 64 species from the same general area. In addition, the 1970 survey found mussels primarily on flooded preimpoundment land (overbank), not in the original river channel habitat. This probably was due to critically depleted oxygen levels in the channel. Elsewhere, during construction of the Nickajack Dam, the Tennessee River was dewatered at the construction site (Isom 1972). Seventeen species were found. Ortmann (1925) had found 25, for a cumulative total of 33 species reported for this reach. Missing in the latter survey were many endangered and rare species. Whether this was due to the presence of the Hales Bar Dam, 6.4 miles upstream, or other causes was not known. It may be argued that mussel faunal composition changes over time whether dams are built or not. However, Parmalee et al. (1982) documented a fauna that remained essentially unchanged for several millennia until impounded by a dam. The Chickamauga Reservoir of the Tennessee River supported 46 species for perhaps 2,000 years prior to impoundment. After impoundment, 28 species were 262 extirpated, and several are now extinct. Five species, mainly soft–substrate tolerant taxa, have invaded the reservoir. Four original species that survived the impoundment also have increased in abundance. Mussel diversity has declined from 64 species to 30 in the upper Chickamauga ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Tennessee Valley Authority Various individuals in America contemplated whether the nation would survive. Regardless of the way that the United States had little history of gigantic social change or topple tries against the organization, hunger has a negative strategy for blending those interests among any people. As bread turmoil ridden situations and shantytowns created in number, many began to search for different choices to nothing new. Showings in the nation's capital extended, as Americans turned out to be logically drained with President Hoover's evident inaction. The demonstrating that drew the most national thought was the Bonus Army stroll of 1932. In 1924, Congress repaid veterans of World War I with revelations redeemable in 1945 for $1,000 each. By 1932, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... government association developed in 1933 to control surges, upgrade course, improve the desires for regular solaces of farmers, and convey electrical power along the Tennessee River and its tributaries. The Tennessee River was obligated to genuine irregular flooding, and course along the conduit's middle course was upset by a movement of shores at Muscle Shoals, Ala. In 1933 the U.S. Congress left a bill working behind the TVA, thusly joining each one of the activities of the distinctive government associations in the zone and putting them under the control of a singular one. An immense program of building dams, hydroelectric making stations, and surge control wanders took after. The blend of an extensive extent of specific strengths with a sentiment social obligation to the region made the TVA enormous as a model of regular resource masterminding. Its region is generally limited to the leakage bowl of the Tennessee River, which covers parts of seven states: Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. The TVA is an open endeavor spoke to by a main collection of three administrators named by the president with the direction and consent of the Senate. The dependability of the TVA was immediately tried upon the association's establishment, nonetheless it was kept up by the Supreme Court by virtue of Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority (1936) and in later decisions. The most disputable movement of the TVA is the generation and offer of electric power, which has been opposed by exclusive power organizations. The TVA contracts with districts and cooperatives to supply discount control for conveyance and has joined with them in obtaining the offices of exclusive electric– service organizations in the area. These buys have set up a coordinated power benefit zone in which the TVA is the sole provider of force. The TVA control framework, which incorporates more than 50 dams, and in addition ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Battle Between Snail Darter Fish and the Telico Dam Essay The snail darter case can be a little ridiculous. Its between the 3–inch snail darter fish and then whether to build the Tellico dam. The main eye attention to this argument is whether we should let the snail darter fish live or not. If we build the Tellico dam to snail darters will die. On the other hand its a big deal because the snail darters are on the endangered species list. In my opinion I'm on the snail darter fish side because I think the fish should live. The cost to build the dam is eighty million dollars. To me that a lot of cash, how about you? I can understand how this case got serious and that some people favor the side of the dam and some other favor the side of the snail darter like I do. Yes the snail darter fish is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Tellico Dam serves to divert water through a short canal into Fort Loudon. This dam being built is very good for trout and bass fishing. In the 1950's thousands of dams were being built then in 1970's they decided to build a dam. In the Little Tennessee River. Its length was 3,238 feet its height was 129 feet. Total capacity is 467,600 acre feet, the surface area is 14,200 acres. Another thing is the Endangered Species Act it is a very important part of this argument it is the main problem of why the Tellico dam had to stop the process of building it for a while. Basically, the Endangered Species Act is one of the dozens of United States environmental laws passed in the 1970's. It also has a listing status which is ETC and it stands for Endangered Threatened Candidate. The Endangered Species Act is an act to provide safety of the endangered and threatened species of fish, wildlife, and plants, and for other purposes. My opinion too is that I think it is an amazing to have this if we didn't have this some of our animals would be dead. Its great to know we still have people out there who worship and care for all species of animals. One of the reasons to keep the Snail Darters is because I care for all living things I really don't think this fish should die. Plus it has no reason to die, what did it ever do to us? Just because it is maybe three inches doesn't mean let it die! I say let it live. All of this mess with court ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. John Clemens : A Short Story John Clemens, Samuel's father, was a farmer, merchant, and postmaster in a Missouri town, called Florida. His wife, Jane Clemens, was a stirring, busy woman, who liked to get her work out of the way and then have a real frolic. Her husband did not know what it meant to frolic. He was not very well to begin with, and when he had any spare time, he sat by himself figuring away on an invention, year after year. He spent a good deal of time, too, thinking what fine things he would do for his family when he sold a great tract of land in Tennessee. He had bought seventy–five thousand acres of land when he was much younger, for just a few cents an acre, and when that land went up in price, he expected to be pointed out as a millionaire, at least. John Clemens was a good man and something of a scholar, but he was not the least bit merry. His children never saw him laugh once in his whole life! Think of it! Mrs. Clemens did not like to have any one around when she was bustling through the housework, so the six children spent the days roaming through the country, picking nuts and berries. When it came night and they had had their supper, they would crowd around the open fire and coax Jennie, a slave girl, or Uncle Ned, a colored farm–hand, to tell them stories. Uncle Ned was a famous story–teller. When he described witches and goblins, the children would look over their shoulders as if they half expected to see the queer creatures in the room. All these stories began "Once 'pon a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Tennessee Coal Sludge Disaster Essay Tennessee Coal Sludge Disaster What Happened? The largest environmental disaster in U.S. history occurred on December 22nd, 2008 when a 84–acre pit containing toxic coal combustion residue at the Tennessee Valley Authority Fossil Plant in Kingston, Tennessee gave way. According to a report by AECOM, the firm hired to perform the root cause report, a "combination of the high water content of the wet ash, the increasing height of ash, the construction of the sloping dikes over the wet ash, and the existence of an unusual bottom layer of ash and silt were among the long–evolving conditions that caused the ash spill at Kingston Fossil Plant" (TVA, 2010). The resulting slide sent a wave of over a billion gallons of sludge out on the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... On top of emitting 1.9 billion tons of carbon dioxide each year, coal–fired power plants in the United States also create 120 million tons of toxic waste. That means each of the nation's 500 coal– fired power plants produces an average 240,000 tons of toxic waste each year. A power plant that operates for 40 years will leave behind 9.6 million tons of toxic waste" (2009). Coal Combustion Residue despite containing toxic metals such as arsenic, mercury, lead, selenium, and cadmium that are proven to cause cancer, kidney problems, birth defects, and wreck havoc on the nervous system. Coal Combustion Residue can is disposed by either being land filled, used to reclaim mine shafts, or are stored in pits on–site of coal burning plants. Even without a spill these contaminants can leach into the ground and pose a health risk if they are not disposed of properly. What was dangerous about this spill? The Tennessee Coal Valley plant in a press release detailing the extent of the disaster showed the sheer magnitude of this spill, "In just one year, the plant's byproducts included 45,000 pounds of arsenic, 49,000 pounds of lead, 1.4 million pounds of barium, 91,000 pounds of chromium and 140,000 pounds of manganese. Those metals can cause cancer, liver damage ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. State Of Tennessee Essay Tennessee became a state in June 1 1796. Tennessee was the 16th state. The state capital is Nashville Tennessee. The population of the state is above 6,346,105 that was the record in 2010. The state bird is the Mocking Bird. The state flower is Iris. The state fruit is Tomatoes. The state tree is the Tulip Popular tree. The states nick name is The Volunteer State. The state song is called "My Homeland" by Nell Grayson Taylor and the music was by Roy Lamont Smith. Some of the biggest cites are Nashville, and Sevierville. Tennessee has 95 counties. Tennessee has fertile soils, an enormous supply of water. Some of the state's most fertile soils are found in the Appalachian Ridge and Valley Region and also in the Nashville Basin. The Appalachian ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Bristol Motor Speedway has earned a reputation as the world's farthest Half–Mile. Darrell Waltrip, a resident of Tennessee, is Bristol's most successful racer of all time. Through 2010, Waltrip had won at the Bristol Motor Speedway a record 12 times. (av2books) Tennessee's professional football team is the Tennessee Titans. The team moved to Tennessee in 1997 and plays in Nashville Coliseum. The Titans made it to the Super Bowl in 2000. The Nashville Predators play tin the National Hockey League. Collage sports teams in the state include the Memphis Tigers, the Tennessee Volunteers from Knoxville, and the Vanderbilt Commodores from Nashville. (av2books) Dolly Parton was born on January 19 1946, in locust Ridge Tennessee. Dolly Rebecca Parton has traveled far beyond her roots. As one of the 12 children born to a sharecropper in a one room cabin in Tennessee mountain. Dolly was raised in a relative poverty. Wilma Rudolph was born in 1940, in saint Bethlehem, Tennessee. She was born to early. She had many illnesses when she was very young. When she was young she had illnesses such as pneumonia, and scarlet fever. She also had polo, which damaged her left leg. When she was six years old she began to wear a metal leg brace because she couldn't use her left ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. The Civil War Of 1861 The Civil War took place in 1861 and it lasted up until 1865. It was a war between the United States or, The Union army rather, and eleven deep rooted southern states known as the Confederacy. The Civil War occurred mainly as a direct response to slavery. The South preferred to keep slavery and the North simply wanted to preserve the Union. However, there were many other incidents that occurred and there were different battles that caused the Civil War to have its end results. Those battles will be addressed in the following paragraphs. The very first battle took place in 1861. It was known as both The Battle of Bull Run and the Battle of Manassas. The Union army, led by General Irvin Manassas, was slightly larger than the Confederate army, led by P.G.T. Beauregard. It took place in northern Virginia when the Union army marched to Manassas in attempt to attack the Confederates. The attack appeared to be successful, but the Confederates managed to survive. They later went on to counterattack the Union and McDowell and his army were forced to retreat back to Washington. This battle was very detrimental and overwhelming for the Union army, and left them in a state of disbelief. However, in 1861 the Union were still able to make substantial progress. They were eventually able to proclaim western Virginia a new renowned state admitted as West Virginia in 1863. Shortly after the Battle of Bull Run, the war took a turn in favor of the Union. A Union regiment directed by David ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. The Old Mill: The Little Pigeon River One historic site, the foundation of Pigeon Forge, is the Old Mill. The Old Mill was built in 1830. In the early 1800's, a water–powered mill beside the Little Pigeon River was one of the main spots of gathering in the community of Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. In those days, the mill faithfully produced the essentials that were needed for the everyday existence of the Smokie Mountains' early settlers. The Old Mill even made electricity for the town until 1935. One of The Old Mill's most grandest features is the giant water wheel that keeps the flow of the Little Pigeon River. Inside the structure, a very old yet reliable system of shafts, belts, and pulleys still gets the job done, working to turn the 4600–pound stones and grain elevators. Resident ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Foreman, Arkansas: The Town that Might be Holding You Up Foreman, Arkansas; The Town that Might be Holding You Up Community History and Overall Tendencies in the Population and Economic Life How Foreman was Settled In Little River County in Arkansas, United States, there is a small town called Foreman. Forman's town website explains how Native Americans once said that Willow Springs, the original name of Foreman, was named for the springs that ran through the willow trees that then ran through the lime rock. Then animals would come and drink from the springs resting under the trees. From this they called the land "Rocky Comfort." It then mentions that by 1850 that Rocky Comfort became a booming community over the next ten years the courthouse, inn, and blacksmith shop began to spread. And then became the County seat by 1868, it would stay there until 1880 when it was later moved to Richmond (History, 1). Now, according to the 2010 USA census the population is at 1011 (Teske 1). Some Big Events One of the big event that occurred in Foreman was when the railroad that was built only a mile north of Rocky Comfort. The town saw the potential of growth from the railroad and expanded around this new railroad system. This newer community began to grow and with the new Postal Service in America in 1890, the town called New Rocky Comfort would change its name. They did this because they thought their name was too long for the mail. Therefore, they decided to change the name to Forman to honor Ben Foreman, who was a prominent ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. The Battle Of Fort Donelson Fort Donelson, Tennessee, guarding the Cumberland River, became the site of the first major Confederate defeat in the Civil War. Victory at Donelson started Brigadier General Ulysses S. Grant on his road to Appomattox and the White House. His cool judgment under pressure saved the day after the Confederates threatened to break his troop lines, yet errors by his opponents handed him a victory that he did not fully earn on his own. Possession of the better part of two states vital to the South depended on the outcome of the battle at Fort Donelson. When war began in April 1861, Kentucky declared its neutrality, in response to deep conflicts of opinion among its citizens. Considering neutrality impossible to maintain, North and South maneuvered for position once Kentucky was opened to military operations. The Confederates constructed fortifications on both the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers just south of the Kentucky line. They built Fort Henry on the Tennessee River, on ground susceptible to flooding, but chose higher ground for Fort Donelson on the Cumberland River. Both sides wanted Kentucky but recognized that the first to cross its borders risked losing popular support. Confederate Brigadier General Gideon J. Pillow rashly seized Columbus, Kentucky, on the Mississippi River bluffs, a move that appalled President Jefferson Davis, who first ordered Pillow to withdraw, then allowed him to stay when he realized that the deed could not be reversed. Grant, commanding ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. The Civilian Conservation Corps and the Tennessee Valley... The Civilian Conservation Corps and the Tennessee Valley Authority had positive impacts on work and the environment during the great depression. The bill proposing the Civilian Conservation Corps was voted on and passed on March 31, 1933 under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In addition, the Tennessee Valley Authority was formed May 18 of this same year to work on easing environmental strains in the Tennessee Valley. Roosevelt's goal when he became president was to improve the economy and environment, and to help raise America from the depression. When he had been governor of New York he had created a public works program similar to the TVA on a smaller scale and it had been met with success. As a result he was encouraged to expand ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Easy navigation and flood control encouraged trade along the river, which boosted the economy and led to an increase in jobs for traders, deckhands, etc. (US History TVA). In addition to providing increased trade opportunities, large amounts of money that would have been spent on the flood damage that were saved by the construction of these dams. A few years into the program, stations were created in the area to monitor flooding. Reports from these stations, in addition to computer calculations, show that the total cost of the flood damage up until 2007 would have been $5.8 billion (TVA River Neighbors). The flooding would have destroyed not only people's homes, but also their businesses and livelihoods., which would have led to further unemployment. The TVA was more successful in helping the environment because it greatly improved the condition of the land in the Tennessee Valley, which was thought to be irreparable. A major goal of Roosevelts going into his first presidential term was land preservation. "A nation that destroys its soils destroys itself. Forests are the lungs of our land, purifying the air and giving fresh strength to our people"(Roosevelt). The area of the Tennessee Valley was so badly damaged, the land was believed by some to be nearly beyond repair. As reported by the assistant secretary of agriculture at the time, Rexford Tugwell, the land conditions in the Tennessee Valley were "little better, if any, than that of the early ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. An Examination of the Modernization in the American... The novel Evidence of Things Unseen by Marianne Wiggins identifies several ways in which the American Society modernized during the interwar period, the time period between World War 1 and World War 2. To be considered modern a country had to become industrialized. "Industrialism is a way of life that encompasses profound economic, social, political, and cultural changes." (Modernization) America made three profound social changes which modernized the nation. The American government tried to improve education throughout the nation, especially focusing on rural areas. This and combined with the prosperity during the 1920s allowed science and technology to develop at a rapid pace which also had brought some downsides with them. Women were ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In many states, including Tennessee, it was common to teach the Bible's way of creation of mankind. However, modernized education led to "the Bible and evolution conflicting" (Wiggins 152). In Tennessee the law did not allow teacher to teach evolution. Nevertheless a high school tried to do exactly that and it led to a famous trial called the Scopes Trial. "The case reflected a collision of traditional views and values with more modern ones" (Scopes Trial). This new rise in literacy was at danger since "the 1930's were a perilous time for public education" (American Cultural History 1930 – 1939) because of the stock market crash. People were paying less taxes because of lower wages, therefore the Government could not fund rural and even some urban schools. "With cash money in short supply parents were unable to provide their children with the necessary clothes, supplies, and textbooks (...) to attend school" (American Cultural History 1930 – 1939). The government tried its best by funding mobile libraries in rural areas. These would cover large areas without being as expensive as educational buildings. Opal, one main character in the novel, "had been drafted by (...) [the] Mobile Library Corps" (Wiggins 213) which would go from house to house in the rural areas. The new, educated generation spurred an increase in science and technology. As a result of all time high economics and high literacy levels, new technologies were invented in the 1920s. Many families bought ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Little Tennessee River Basin Research Paper Little Tennessee River Basin The Little Tennessee river species are threatened, unique animal and plant life and a large in population and impact. The Little Tennessee River is a one hundred thirty five mile long. The start off the river is in Chattahoochee National Forest then travels through the mountains of western North Carolina then the river basin goes through other national forest lakes,through the Fontana lake and the will eventually emerge with Tennessee river in Knoxville and the ends near the southeastern of the the United States of America. Little Tennessee main tributaries though are Cullasaja River, Nantahala, Cheoah,Tuskegee and Oconaluftee. There are over 3,000 species of plants, and a huge diversity of aquatic life. Some ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. A Small Place Analysis Tyrisha Patterson ENG 203 10/12/17 Fort Payne's Memories Kincaid wrote A Small Place after she had left the island nineteen years ago. During this period, she had been a creative writer living permanently in the United States. She had spent much of her time on the island. Her hostile verbal talk after coming back to the island is an indication of how she is both a tourist and native as she claims 'every native of every place is a potential tourist, and every tourist is a native of somewhere'(Kincaid,18). She beautifully describes Antigua and describes it as a place where the sky and sea meet to exaggerate the island's surrealism. It shows that attachment place. Her style makes me recall my childhood and teenage experiences of living in Fort Payne that helped shape my identity. Kincaid's style of writing establishes an intriguing reflection journey for the reader to undergo. The surrealism of Antigua remains as the same as it was back before Kincaid relocated elsewhere. In her book, A Small Place, Kincaid illustrates how Antigua holds different meaning to different people. To the white people, Antigua is a place for people to get away from their lives as indicated 'a life of overwhelming and crushing banality and boredom' (Kincaid, 18). Kincaid's description of the island is amazingly beautiful that to some extent it appears unreal. Despite the fact that the place is beautiful, the depicted poorness of the people appears unreal. It indicates that the beauty of the area is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Vacation Of Tennessee Tennessee is by far my most memorable place. This place is far from my little town "the watta," and getting there is a long ride. One can take a plane or drive all the way there but whichever you choose when you arrive it's like going to paradise. The feeling of arriving you get is irreplaceable. Viewing the mountains from far is truly a peaceful place. It is filled with so much nature, it reminds us of how beautiful this world truly is with it. The smoky mountains, one of the main attractions of Tennessee, its enormous but one cannot fail to notice the wonders of nature within it. One you walk the peaceful trails it offer you cannot fail to admire the wonderful experience. The air is filled with happiness and laughter, where one is walking ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Especially going to Memphis, Tennessee where Elvis Presley Graceland is located at. This is an attraction to visit especially if you are a fan of his music. In Memphis the smell of the outdoors as you walk the trails reminds us of how wonderful life is; refreshing yourself by swimming the ice cold river after a long walk in the trial is the best it can get. The people are friendly and surely Tennessee will always be ready to make your visit worth remembering. One can go to town where the chatter of family's voices, the laughs of children and smiles everyone fill up the sky gives you the greatest feeling of why this place is like Americas #1 happy state. When you stroll the town, you can see almost everything, and taste everything within its just so enormous like its own country you need more than a couple of days. In winter Tennessee is like a giant icy kingdom, where everything is dazzling white and silent. During this time most of the animals are hibernating. But one can still feel the happiness of the state, deer still roaming the mountains while the big large bears sleep. Many people visit Tennessee during this time it rises to its glory. As people visit Tennessee during this time to encounter the wonders of this beautiful time. I will soon visit Tennessee once again and visit this amazing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Water Pollution Water pollution in Tennessee is a major environmental issue. Polluted rivers and streams are major problems because the water inside of them is supposed to be a clean source of water, but sadly that's not the case. In order to stop this, we have to keep moving forward to find a solution. First, the Tennessee River is one of the United States most polluted rivers. In 2015, the West Morgan–East Lawrence Water Authority and three North Alabama residents filed a class action lawsuit against 3M Company, Dyneon, and Daikin America for polluting the Tennessee River with perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS). These are man–made chemicals that are used for making items fire resistant and oil, stain, grease, and water repellant. The lawsuit states that the chemicals can cause health issues such as cancer, immune system issues, thyroid disease, ulcerative colitis, and high cholesterol. The 3M Company knew that the levels for safe drinking water were inadequate and that the PFOS and PFOA levels in the water were dangerously high. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry analyzed the blood serum of 121 people in nearby locations and found that elevated levels of PFOA were found in the blood. The Tennessee River supplies at least four million people with drinking water. Electric power production from hydropower and coal–fired power plants has dramatically changed the river. A series of dams has significantly altered the river's shape and has ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. Middle Tennessee Disaster Analysis There are many disasters that occur everyday, but not always in the area in which one lives. The largest disaster in the area of middle Tennessee was the Cumberland river flooding in 2010. This disaster was the largest in the history of middle Tennessee, and doubled the previous record rainfall (Grigsby, 2015). This disaster ruined many historical locations, and displaced many people and businesses (Grisby, 2015). There were 11,000 buildings, and 10,000 people displaced (Grisby, 2015). The flooding of the Cumberland river killed 29 people, with the last victim being found months later (Grisby, 2015). From the thousands of properties destroyed there was over two billion dollars worth of damage done along the river (Grisby, 2015). The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The 2010 flooding of the Cumberland river around the area of Nashville was the largest disaster in the immediate area. This disaster began 1–2 May 2010, when the largest rainfall on record hit the area. This caused the massive flooding, and left many without jobs, or homes. It also destroyed landmarks and attempted to take the soul of Nashville, the Grand Ole Opry. However, the city banded together, cleaned up, and moved forward. The area is now more prepared for any future flooding, and is a city on the rise. References: Grigsby, K., (2015). 20 Things to Know About the 2010 Nashville Flood. Retrieved from: http://www.tennessean.com/story/news/local/2015/04/30/nashville–flood–20–things–to– know/26653901/ The largest disaster in the middle Tennessee area was the flooding of the Cumberland River in 2010. There were disaster mitigation efforts made before and after the disaster. Disaster mitigation is the first of the four pillars of disaster preparedness (Siminovi, 2011). This is one of the most important pillars, as this is where real change can be physically made in order to possibly change the path of any future disaster. Prior to the disaster of 2010, there was some work done to prevent flooding. One can see a wall protecting the area of downtown from the river, but it was not large enough to protect from the flood of 2010. After the 2010 flooding, and into the year ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Underground Railroad Research Paper As it is stated above, it was illegal to help slaves to escape, which means that neither slaves nor the helpers could behave completely aboveboard. As a result, many evidence of the Underground Railroad system remain secret: there was little document left that told the whole story of the system, and only reminiscences of the men who participate could disclose some of the facts that happened during that time (3,142). What people could know and be sure of is that there are various ways for both the slaves and helpers to reach the goal of freedom by using the Underground Railroad. Northerners raised money to hire some agents or conductors for the system, and with the help of these people, some secret places were built in the South (3, 142). First step for these conductors was to spread the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This was one of the most normal way of how the system was working. However, the Underground Railroad was clearly not strong enough to help all the slaves to escape through the process. There were many other ways for the fugitives to seek help secretly. For example, the many Underground Railroad stations used some symbols or signals so that the slaves could realize it was a safe place to go. Some places "left a lamp lit in a window at night"; others "hung lit lanterns on gates and statues" so that slaves could see them (19,101). Even though most slaves were not allowed to read and write, they used the most traditional ways to pass the secret of Underground Railroad from one to another: stories and songs. For example, there was a song called "The Drinking Gourd", it showed codes and directions for the runaway slaves to the north. One section of its lyrics sung, "Where the great big river meets the little river; Follow the drinking gourd; the old man is a–waiting to take you to freedom; if you follow the drinking ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. The United States Civil War Essay The United States Civil War can be considered as one of the darkest times in American history. The Southern states were fighting for their way of life, and the Northern states were fighting to preserve the Union. The war had begun in the year of 1861, and it would end in 1865 with the capture of Jefferson Davis and surrender of Robert E. Lee. The war had begun at the battle of Fort Sumter. After this battle, the newly elected Abraham Lincoln called for volunteers to join the Union forces. In 1862, Union and Confederate forces would meet again at the battle of Fort Henry and Donelson. With the Union succeeding at pushing the Confederate forces further back into the South, General Grant and his army made their way down the Tennessee River. The forces would meet again at the Battle of Shiloh and Pittsburg Landing. There have been many arguments supporting the theory that the Confederacy did in fact win at the Battle of Shiloh. Although the Union lost more troops at this battle, the Confederacy failed in many ways. In order to determine how exactly they failed, it is important to study what the goal of the Confederacy was at Shiloh and whether or not they accomplished this goal. In this essay, the Confederacy's goals for attacking Grant's troops at Shiloh and their failure to accomplish those goals will show just how unsuccessful the Confederate army truly was at this battle.1 There had been decades of tension between the Southern and Northern states of America. The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. I Am Nkem Book Report I am Nkem. I am fourteen years old. I come from Oyo, one of four states inland near the gulf of Guinea. Oyo is the most successful of all four kingdoms because of its thriving forests and because we didn't have the tsetse fly or any other diseases so we were able to breed horses. We had many farmlands with slave labor and we had many slaves which were traded to the Europeans for guns, clothes, and metal goods. I lived with my mother, father, and my younger brother. This is the story of how I got kidnapped, taken away from my family, was brought to Mississippi to have everything changed completely and how I became Charlotte. On an unbearably hot day with everything and everyone sweating, I was helping my mother with chores around the house. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... There was talk about a man named Peg Leg who was helping slaves escape to freedom by following the drinking gourd. The path to freedom was to walk up the bank of the Tombigbee river following the dead trees. We would come to two mountains where the river stopped and continued on the other side. We then would walk up the Tennessee river and cross the Ohio river where Peg Leg would take us the rest of the journey to freedom. We were to leave in the winter when the days were shorter and the nights longer to travel at night and hide during the day. We started the week, maybe month long journey the next night sneaking away from everything that had brought us here. There were seven of us including the women and man who were bought with me. We started along the paths Peg Leg had directed following the drinking gourd pointing to the North star. Each night we made it a little farther and each day was spent resting and hiding. Following the river banks and climbing over mountains. Days turned into weeks and weeks turned into months. Soon enough we came to Peg Leg, the man who was supposed to take us to freedom. After being taken from my home, thrown on a ship, being bought like animals, and working for hours through rough days, it was over. I was about to be brought to a free state where my life would start ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. Gold Rush And The Silver Rush Gold rush Today I will be talking about the gold rush and I think it will be a lot of fun so I will just let you read about the gold rush It started when some men were working and they were digging.then they found gold it pretty much spread immediately. People came from everywhere to find gold. Then they started to make towns and people wanted the gold. They started to fight and it became kaos. After people moved in to the gold land people were charging 19 million to live there. But people did not like the cost to live there. So they went somewhere eventually they found gold. About 1 year later it was a ghost town(a ghost is a town is a town that had a lot of people but now they all leave). In Helena people found gold in 1864. People went nuts and wanted that gold. So they went to Helena and got all that gold and went a way. A few years later they found gold in grasshopper creek. In conclusion I think the gold rush is very important.Next week I will be talking about the battle of the little bighorn.So please try to read it. Goodbye! The Oregon trail I will talk to you today about the Oregon trail it will be a blast! It will be about how long it was and some weird things will happen ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...