Ina Garten has become a household name for many. This professional chef was born on February 2, 1948, in New York City. In 1978, Ina Garten found herself working in the White House on nuclear energy policy. She remembers herself thinking, “There's got to be more to life than this!" She saw an ad for a small food store for sale in Long Island. She and her husband drove up to investigate and instantly made the owner an offer. Thinking she had days to think about her decision, she drove home. The next morning, the owner Two months later she began the job of owner of Barefoot Contessa, a small specialty food…
Mckenna Quincy’s life on Quincy Farms was often boring and normal. The Quincy family does every normal thing a farm family would do, harvest, feed animals, and work day after day cleaning the shed and the house. Mckenna's older brother, Aiden Quincy, thought he was her boss and the boss of the farm. He was often annoying and trying to make her do things for him. Mckenna’s mom was fairly ill and struggling to get better. Their dad was on a business trip in Kenya. Mckenna and Aiden were basically living on their own.…
Fought during the Siege of Boston, this battle was very important. After the British planned to take Dorchester heights, the colonists became alarmed. To beat the British to the high ground, an American general took 1200 of his men to fortify the hill. At dawn, the British dispatched 2300 men to take control of the hill. As the British charged to take over the hill, colonists remained calm. They didn’t fire until they saw the whites of the British’s eyes. This order was so that the colonists would save ammo. After being driven back twice, the British finally broke through a colonist line. This helped the British sieze the…
In 1900 at age 27 she became pastor’s assistant for Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis in Plymouth Church, in Brooklyn N.Y. Alice spent two years at the Hartford, Connecticut, Theological Seminary, specializing in Old Testament history with the intention of giving lectures on “The Message of the Prophets for Today.” While attending the seminary she spent two vacations filling summer pulpits in Congregational Home Missionary churches in Maine, thereby becoming the first woman preacher in that state. She then went on and gave her lecture at bible schools and many churches throughout the East and Middle West, including Oklahoma. While in Oklahoma, Alice married Frank Wells, a member of a pioneer Wisconsin family. Mr. and Mrs. Wells had three children, Ramona, Raymond, and Gardner. Frank eventually became ill which lead to her return to the professional field as a social worker.…
In Lowell Massachusetts in the early 1800’s, most of the land had been used for farming and agriculture. However, with the advancement in industry, the town started to produce new goods, instead crops and plants.…
Born Sarah Breedlove on December 23, 1867 on a Louisiana plantation,Walker transformed herself from an uneducated farm worker of the twentieth century's most successful, self-made women entrepreneurs. Orphaned at age seven, she often said, "I got my start by giving myself a start." She and her older sister, Louvenia, survived by working in the cotton fields of Vicksburg, Mississippi. At 14, she married Moses McWilliams to escape abuse from her cruel brother-in-law, Jesse Powell.…
She continued her education in Milledgeville, Georgia at Peabody Laboratory school that was associated with Georgia State College for Women (GSCW). During this time her father died from lupus so she decided to stay in Milledgeville and attend GSCW in an accelerated…
She started her educational career in 1838, that lasted more than 12 years in Georgia, becoming one of the first women to teach during the 1800s’. Barton enjoyed teaching so much, that she decided to attend the Liberal Clinton institute in New York, to improve her writing and language skills. Clara opened the first public school in New York. Her goal was to teach young children that didn’t have opportunities to attend school due to low income. After years of working as an educator, Clara decides to Work as a clerk in the US Patents Office, becoming the first woman to work for the Federal Government and to have an equal pay as men. Many men and political opposed with her position. Clara was a woman and an African-American rights activist, she was part of woman’s suffrage movement. Clara wrote plenty of books about her life; In 1907 Clara published her autobiography book “The Story of My Childhood”. The Red Cross awarded Clara with the International Red Cross medal.…
Furthermore, she is a chef, animal activist, and a philanthropist, which is someone who gives their money away to charitable causes. She has three tv shows, “30 minute meals”, “Tasty…
John Dickinson’s famous pieces of writing were a way of addressing unconstitutional wrongs from the British during the time 1767 when several letters were written. Dickinson thoroughly explains his argument of the rights taken away from the colonists along with showing his respect for the British Constitution. He uses his knowledge of the unfavorable laws as well as what is written in the constitution to justify his reasoning concerning their rights as Englishman in America being taken away from them. As a result these letters became the start of petitions and calls for boycotts due to Dickinson’s argument of the British simply using the colonies for money and his value of every Englishman now in America’s rights. He made his discontent with the acts that only took the colonists money rather than helping them very clear throughout the letter.…
Mary Walker was born on November 26, 1832 in Oswego, New York (Unknown, Women in History ). She can accredit her leadership style and personality to her father, Alvah. Her father was a farmer, abolitionist, and a self-taught doctor. During this time, most women did not attend school or work outside the home, but because Mary’s father believed that women should be well educated, he built the first schoolhouse in Oswego on their land known as the Bunker Hill Farm (Unknown, Women in History ). In addition, this farm served as a “station” in the Underground Railroad system that assisted southern slaves to freedom—mainly from western New York into Canada (D. L. Walker 29-30) . Alvah also believed that women’s clothing was too tight and because his daughters had to help on the farm, he prohibited them from wearing the traditional clothing and corsets (Unknown, Women in History ).…
In addition, Mrs. Benson was well-educated and very intelligent. In elementary school, she showed signs of being adventurous and independent. Even at a young age she published her first piece of writing. At age 14, her story appeared in a fiction magazine “St. Nicholas.” When she entered high school, Mildred was bright and was able to graduate early. She went straight to college and she graduated with a degree in English and a master’s in Journalism at the University of Iowa. Writing was a big part of Mildred’s life, and she wrote for Stratmeyer during college.…
A woman once said "Educate a boy, you educate a man, but educate a girl and you educate a family" (Face To Face: We Founded, n.d. pg.1). This woman was Adelaide Hunter Hoodless, born on February 27, 1857, who was an incredible woman with the qualities of a leader and inspiring other women with her speeches (Adelaide Hunter Hoodless Homestead, n.d. pg.1). She changed many women's lives as she made education beyond grade 8 possible for women and girls as well as helping women reach equality with men. It all started when Adelaide went to Ladies College and met John Hoodless whom she married and later had 4 children (Who Is Adelaide Hunter Hoodless, n.d. pg.1). Then, tragedy struck in the family. Her fourth son died because of drinking impure milk which was Adelaide's motivation and encouragement to not let this happen to any other women (ibib). So, she made many organizations that taught women and girls about Domestic Sciences (household work), nutrition and hygiene (Adelaide’s Story, n.d. pg.1). Her contributions to Canada, their impact on the society and how it has evolved today's world will be discussed in the following paragraphs.…
America as a country is known for their pride of being an “independent nation”, however the land of the free has not always been free from the nation across the pond. When the pilgrims first arrived in the New World, all they wanted was for Britain to help them. When the colonists were fighting in what seemed like a war they would never win, Loyalists stuck with their home country despite their lack of freedom. Great writers of American Literature were representatives of the two sides and were determined to set this country apart from the rest of the world, even if that meant going to war or asking other countries for help. In William Bradford’s Of Plymouth Plantation, he talks about the successes of the pilgrims so far as if trying to convince…
It was here that she met Calvin Stowe, a theology professor. On January 6, 1836 she married Calvin. They had seven children, one son died at eighteen months old from cholera. The death of her son hit her hard, she was truly hurt but it helped motivate her to write Uncle Tom’s Cabin, she even said: “Any mind that is capable of real sorrow is capable of good.” She later moved to Brunswick, Maine when her husband got a job at Bowdoin College. When her husband became a theology professor at Andover Theological Seminary the family moved to Andover, Massachusetts. When her husband retired they moved again to Hartford, Connecticut. Here Stowe built a dream house with friends and…