Lee was an aristocratic family man that believed that landowners were part of the leisure class. So Lee embraced the inequality of the system. And Grant was coming from new technology familiar to a frontier man and a value that hard work determined one's outcome in life. Grant believed that individual merit was something each human should earn. Catton also looks at the similarities between the men in that they…
Both Tom walker and daniel webster had devil type figures in there stories Guarded the treasure of the pirate named kid and the other one was a devil named scratched Jabez stone was just the same as tom walker they both sold there soul to the devil also known as scratch they both hated there life so they decided to change it for the better…
In this Paper I will compare and contrast the political career of Richard B. Russell and Carl Vinson. Richard B. Russell was the youngest member elected to the Georgia House of Representatives. He was elected speaker pro tempore in 1923 and 1925. Later he was elected speaker of the house until 1931. Richard B. Russell was in the United States senate and appointed by Franklin D. Roosevelt. While he was in Congress he focused on the Farm Security Administration, the Farmers Home Administration, and many others. ” was born in Baldwin County, Georgia. After graduating from Mercer University School of Law and serving a lawyer, he was elected to the Georgia General Assembly in 1908. .Carl Vinson was elected into congress at…
General Robert E. Lee gained stoic and legendary status as the heart and soul of the South in the Civil War, but many did not know his reasons and feelings for fighting the war. War and the slaughter of others did not interest Lee and he felt compassion for the Union. Lee had contradictory feelings towards war and says, "He was not only to serve in it but he was to lead…
In 1673, Father Jacques Marquette, a Jesuit missionary, and Louis Joliet, a fur trader, undertook an expedition to explore the unsettled territory in North America from the Great Lakes region to the Gulf of Mexico for the colonial power of France. Leaving with several men in two bark canoes, Marquette and Joliet entered the Mississippi River and arrived in present-day Arkansas in June 1673. They were considered the first Europeans to come into contact with the Indians of east Arkansas since Hernando de Soto’s expedition in the 1540s. The goal given Marquette, Joliet, and their men was to document, for French and Canadian officials, an area that had been largely unknown until the late seventeenth century.…
Although Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee were born in the same time period Catton showed how they had very different views from one another. To start of with Catton explained how Lee was an "old age" and did not like change. He wanted the old aristocrat concept to stay in the American culture. He was also born into a wealthy family so he believed it was okay for the upper-class to be more privileged and thought inequality among men made society more advanced. In contrast, Grant was born poor and "came up the hard way" as Catton said, because of this Grant believed every man should be equal. He also believed in change and wanted the future of society to be different than how it was at that current time.…
It was the late 1600’s and people of strong religion in Salem, Massachusetts were becoming oddly stricken by recent events regarding the practice of witchcraft. Through this period of time twenty people were executed due to mere assumption to have been involved in witchcraft or Devil worship. Living through these events and making accounts of them were two men by the names, Cotton Mather and John Hale. Both Cotton Mather and John Hale, influential Puritan Ministers, were supporters of the Salem Witch Trials which took place for two years between 1692 and 1693 and, had both written two very influential pieces detailing them, Mather's "Wonders of the Invisible World" and, Hale's "A Modest Inquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft". Through similar and contrasting rhetorical style and device the two proved their separate messages of the trials, Mather's being that the…
Nelle Harper Lee was born on April 28, 1926 to Frances Finch and A.C. Lee. Nelle had three older siblings, Alice, who was in her twenties, Louise, who was in high school, and Edwin, who was the only boy at age ten. Growing up there was no other girls close to her age in her neighborhood, and the only child close to her age was a neighborhood boy, Truman Capote. Their common bond was the fact that they didn’t meet their parent’s mold of what they considered a perfect child. They would play games together and, after Lee’s father gave them an old typewriter, would write stories together. When Nelle began school she made sure that everyone knew that she was not like most girls her age. As she got older, her mother’s mental health deteriorated greatly. Her mother had what is now known to be bipolar disorder. She would experience massive mood swings, calm one moment and aggressive the next. Lee’s father tried to keep an eye on her at all times, but he would often send her away for ‘trips’ with his secretary when he needed a break. Despite this, A.C. tried his hardest to offer his youngest daughter support and to help her out however possible. After graduating from high school Lee considered her options for college. Her two role…
In Document 3 the rebels of the south were at least trying to fight back but Lee is just giving up and resigning while the confederates need him it is a rather selfish act..…
William Bradford and John Smith are very similar people with two very different perspectives. Bradford, originally from England, led his colonists to America where they landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts. He became the governor of the colony for 30 years. Smith, who is also from England, led colonist to Virginia where they founded Jamestown. He then became the president of the Virginia. Both of their narratives were written in the seventeenth century and paint a vivid picture about what their lifestyles were like. Although they have the same heritage and similar leadership, Bradford and Smith prove that they lived and had very different perspectives about the new world, which is expressed in their…
In 1917, Carrie Chapman Catt addressed the United States Congress regarding women right to vote. She relied on ethos and logos to make her argument rather than emotional appeal. In 1776, Thomas Paine addressed the whole population of the thirteen colonies regarding the independence of the colonies from Britain. He also mainly relied on ethos and pathos to make his argument.…
The Fifties in America was a decade of change and movement. For some, the 1950’s was centered around wars and conflicts, recovering from World War II and entering the Cold War. For others, that decade was full of adventure, trying out new things and doing stuff mother would not be so proud of. Richard Crandell and Roberta Beerhorst are two proud Americans whom were both growing in their late teens and 20’s during the 1950’s. Richard, mostly known as “Dick”, who now resides in Kentwood, Michigan, was born in the year 1933 in Owosso, Michigan. Roberta, also known as “Bobbie”, was born in 1983 in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania and grew up in Maryland. Both Dick and Bobbie are now two loving, white-haired Grandparents with lots of stories to share about their youth age.…
Grant is in a position where every day is filled with anxiety and fear that it may be his last, but this is not easily recognized in his writing. In his letters he speaks in such a way that he seems calm and is taking everything confidently. For instance, in a letter to his friend John W. Lowe, on May 3rd, 1847, he writes, “You say you would like to hear more about the war. If you had seen as much of it as I have you would be tired of the subject. I am heartily tired of the wars. If you were to see me now you would never recognize me in the world.” He provides a dignified and somewhat casual response to his friends request, as if to say, I have gone through hell, but there is no good in revealing all that I have suffered. In my eyes this shows how he is a principled man and there is a lot to be learned…
Lee was growing up in the Great Depression and was affected by it like most of the people in the United States(“Harper”). In the story the time frame is the Great Depression and most families are , an example would be the Cunninghams and how they had to pay Atticus in walnuts for his services (Lee 20-21). Farmers were the most affected because the price of their crops went way down and they still had to get by (Lee 21). While in real life white people still practiced servitude and treated the colored people unfairly. The black community had to worry about being careful with language and actions because of the lynchings and other bad things that were happening to these people that did things they were not supposed to. In the real world there was a lot of things to worry about like taking care of a family and “making ends meet”. In the novel the protagonist family is not impoverished, but other families like the Ewells have to live by the dump and their yard is starting to blend in with the dump. In the fact, Lee lived through the Great Depression, which shows that as a writer it is much stronger and connects with the reader a lot more. In the story there were things that went wrong and the fact that it was during the Great Depression made things even worse. An example of this would be when Atticus and Calpurnia have to go to tell Helen that Tom is dead, not only does she have to live without Tom, she has to…
Simon Lee was praised by Wordsworth for being a man of substance, strength and character. He worked as a huntsman for 25 years, a job that left him blinded in one eye. He was considered the poorest of the poor, with a small house and little land. In spite of his circumstances, he still had cheeks like cherries (p.197), which I envision as a happy, jolly countenance. Wordsworth speaks of Simon Lee as a man to be admired when commenting that “no man like him the horn could sound….and He all the country could out run, could leave both man and horse behind”(p. 198). If you ever take the time out to talk to the elderly, you’ll likely hear stories of great accomplishments and victories that they once relished in, that now seem to be of less relevance to anyone.…