education
education
George Herman Ruth, Jr. was born on February 6, 1895 in Baltimore, Maryland. His parents were Kate Schamberger-Ruth and George Herman Ruth, Sr., who tended bar and eventually owned his own tavern near the Baltimore waterfront. The Ruths had a total of eight children, but only two survived past infancy: a daughter named Mamie and a son named George, Jr.--the boy who would grow up to be an American hero.…
George Herman Ruth was born in Baltimore Maryland on February 6th 1895. His mother gave birth to him on the second floor of her father’s house. George is the oldest of 8 children. He was often missing from school. George was officially named a juvenile delinquent after his bouts skipping school. At a very young age George began drinking, chewing tobacco, and stealing (Berke 18).People around him were fed up with his behavior and he was sent to Catholic school. During his stint there, George made a positive out of it and made a 360 turn around. He was taken care of by Xaverian brothers from the School, St. Mary’s (Berke 19).…
Dr. George Washington Carver was born in 1860 in Diamond, Missouri. When he was 30 he was accepted to Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa. Carver was later transferred to Iowa Agricultural College which is now Iowa State University. There he got a Bachelor of Science degree and a Master of Science degree in bacterial botany and agriculture. Dr. Carver discovered a large amount of products. He discovered three hundred uses for a peanut. Carver died in 1943. He was buried next to Booker T. Washington. The George Washington Carver Monument was dedicated to him at his birth site. This monument was the first to be dedicated to an African American. I chose George Washington Carver because he did a great deal to help southern agriculture and helped chefs around the world dearly.…
During the time period of Robber Barons and monopolies, a brilliant inventor created many crucial inventions which most of us use every single day, including peanut butter, soap, and cosmetics as well as technological advances such as crop rotation used by farmers. George Washington Carver could have sought great fortune to his fame, but caring for neither, he found happiness, and honor in being helpful to the world. His numerous contributions to farming, education, and most famously his more than 300 peanut-based products he invented helped improve the quality of life for many people. Many Americans have not even noticed the incredible work of Carver, even though it deserved great attention. Carver’s importance impacted four major areas: being an environmental advocate, a focus on education, supporting the importance of farming,…
Minimalism is defined as a style or technique that is characterized by extreme spareness and simplicity. In “Everything Stuck to Him”, by Raymond Carver, the frame story and minimalistic writing helps to create a personal feeling which captivates the reader. Carver’s minimalist style, frame story structure, and use of symbols all enhance the quality of his frame story.…
George Washington Carver most important legacy is the art of agricultural. From the article “He loved art and was both an artist and a scientist.” Carver used his beauty of art and knowledge of science to help people better their ways in farming. He also wanted to share his skills he learned by teaching former slaves, such as carpentry and bricklaying skills. From knowledge learned from Carver , this helped the farmers know ways to better their land and to be self-sufficient. Carver accomplished over the a lot over the years and even not being here his legacy is still passed and carried on.…
In the story “Cathedral”. The narrator explains how the husband was not too happy about his wife’s blind friend coming to visit and spending the night at their house. He then goes on to talk about how this visitor and blindness bother him. Upon the visit the blind man whose name is Robert, it seems like it was awkward for the husband to see his wife childhood sweetheart face-to-face for the first time. As his wife and the blind man catch up on old times, the husband just sit in silence looking at the blind man, as his wife get him some food, and drinks knowing the blind knows how to put the food in the mouths and drink without any problems, and that he smokes on top of it.…
George Washington Carver, an African American, was born on a farm in Diamond Grove, Missouri around 1864; however, like many slaves his exact date of birth is unknown. At the age of 79, Carver died on January 5th, 1943 in Tuskegee, Alabama by falling down the stairs of his home. In Alabama, he decided to add a middle initial to his name, and a friend suggested Washington. His mother, Mary, was a slave who belonged to Susan and Moses Carver, who were the farm owners. Mary had two sons, Jim being the oldest and George the youngest. His father, Giles, was also a slave on a nearby farm, but died before George was born (MacLeod.)…
Booker T. Washington was born into slavery in Hales Ford, Virginia, around 1856, though there are no birth certificates of his actual birth. His mother was a cook and his father, a unknown white man. Washington worked during his childhood but valued family and education since a young boy. Though Washington never acknowledged his father, Booker learned a lot from his mother, lifelong lessons of…
In the short story “Cathedral,” by Raymond Carver, the narrator draws a cathedral with his blind guest and transforms from a narrow-minded, materialistic, and superficial individual to an individual who acknowledges the spiritual aspects of life and the lives of those around him. Before the egoist narrator meets the blind man, Bub is so closed-minded, jealous, and materialistic that he does not want to help someone in need and he does not empathize with the hardships others endure. However, after Bub communicates with Robert and engineers an emotional connection, he is no longer limited by his former characteristics. Through this emotional link, Robert assists Bub in opening his mind to the spiritual world and feeling empathy for others.…
Some people say that George Washington was the best President of the United States of America. Some people say he was the worst. Regardless of opinion, it is very evident that what he did as the very first President has become a legacy that continues to influence the United States of America today. He set the tone of what it meant to be President by being selfless, being a people’s president, and knowing when to ask for help.…
He may have started out as a frail boy who didn’t have a family of his own, but through hard work and a spirit of a lion he kept striving to achieve great things. His name was George Washington Carver, a slave, a boy, and most notably an agricultural chemist. Life in 1864 didn’t start out all that well for little George. George’s momma, Mary was a slave owned by Moses Carver. In 1861 George became an orphan after his momma Mary and he were taken from their owners by a group of rogue bushwhackers. A sick frail George was returned to the family, and Mary was never found. There was not any hope of his father raising him or even getting to know him because he died in a farm accident on a nearby farm where he lived before George was even born. The only thing that made sense at that time was for the Carvers to adopt him into their family. The Carver’s saw something promising and hopeful in a frail boy, a mighty survivor, who would turn out…
George Washington Carver was born on a farm near Diamond, Missouri, in Newton County about 1865. Moses and Susan Carver owned his mother, Mary. His father, a slave on a neighboring farm, died before George was born. When George was just a few months old, a band of men who roamed Missouri during the Civil War era, kidnapped him and his mother from the Carver farm. These outlaws hoped to sell George and his mother elsewhere. Luckily, young George was recovered by a neighbor and returned to the Carvers, but his mother was not. Moses and Susan Carver raised George and his older brother, Jim as family. Jim helped Moses with farm work. George, who was frail and sickly, did not get to join them. He spent much of his time helping Susan with chores around the cabin. He learned how to perform many domestic tasks such as cooking, mending old clothes, and doing laundry. He also tended the garden and became fascinated with plants.…
George Washington Carver was born in January 1864 into slavery in Diamond, Missouri. His master Moses Carver was a German American immigrant who brought George’s parents Mary and Giles. George had 10 brothers and sisters who all died prematurely. When George was only a week old, he was kidnapped along with his mother and sister, George’s older brother James got to safety though. The raiders sold the stolen slaves in Kentucky. Moses Carver hired a man named John Bentley to find them, sadly he only found young George and Moses talked to the raiders to get George to return home safely. When slavery was abolished Moses and Susan Carver raised George and James as their own sons. George grew up with them they taught him to chase his dreams. Since African Americans weren’t allowed to go to public school in Diamond Grove, George had to go to school 10 miles away south in Neosho. When he arrived at Neosho he found the school but it was closed for the night so he spelt in a nearby barn. When he got up in the morning he went to look for a place to rent where he met Mariah Watkins. Mariah asked George was asked his name his said “Carver’s George” she told him from now on you will be called “George Carver”. She also told him “You must learn all you can, then go back out into the world and give your learning back to the people” which really impressed him. George wanted to attend an academy when he was 13 so he moved to another foster family in Fort, Kansas. After getting there he saw a group of white people kill a black and after witnessing, that he moved out the city. He attended many different schools he obtained his high school diploma from Minneapolis High School in Minneapolis, Kansas. George applied to many different colleges until he was accepted the Highland College in Highland, Kansas. However when he arrived they rejected him because he was African American. After leaving Highland College he travelled with J.F. Beeler to Ness…
The Westinghausen family tree stretches back to that of the ninth century in Westphalia, Germany. Some of the family decided to emigrate to Europe and later settle in the United States. In the nineteenth century, George Westinghouse decided to move all over the former United States and settled in Central Bridge, New York where he had George Westinghouse II. Born into a family of ten (which would become twelve later on) on October 16, 1846, George Westinghouse Jr. (son of George Westinghouse and Emmeline Vedder) was born into an agricultural family. George Jr.’s father moved the family to Schenectady to sell farming tools. After serving the Union Army for three years at the age of fifteen, George II (later to be referred to as just George) attended college for three months (dropping out because he believed that he could learn much more about machinery on his own). During his three-month stay however, George had obtained a patent for a rotary steam engine (which he received in 1865).…