In the first selection Ida M Tarbell focused on the ruthlessness that John D. Rockefeller turned his oil business into. She despised the fact that he was taking over smaller Oil Refinery companies and gaining a monopoly over the industry. Her passage was convincing because she makes the reader feel bad for the Hanna Oil Company. Ms. Tarbell proceeds in doing this by stating all of the hardships that they faced and she even states in her article that Rockefeller truly was ruthless. He purposely wanted the Hanna Oil Company to fail and then he proceeded to bring the company down by making sure that they could not ship their oil anywhere throughout the country.…
Tarbell, Ida M. The History of the Standard Oil Company. New York, 1904, 262 pp.…
On September 25, Penn IUR, The Fels Policy Research Initiative, and PennPraxis hosted a lunchtime conversation with Harriet Tregoning, the immediate past Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Office of Community Planning and Development at the U.S Department of Housing and Urban Development. Moderated by Penn Fels Policy Research Initiative Managing Director Diana Lind, the discussion cogitated around experiences learned through Tregoning’s comprehensive career working at local, state and federal government.…
Throughout history, it has been made clear that women did not always have the same rights as men. Yet during the 1800s and early 1900s, or around the time of the Civil War, some women began to do something about this. During this time period began the women’s suffrage movement, in which women tried to gain voting rights for women in the United States. An article from History.com says that, “In 1848, a group of abolitionist activists–mostly women, but some men–gathered in Seneca Falls, New York to discuss the problem of women’s rights. (They were invited there by the reformers Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott.) Most of the delegates agreed: American women were autonomous individuals who deserved their own political identities” One of these women that participated in the women’s suffrage movement includes Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Stanton was born into a wealthy family in New York, Women like her contributed greatly to the women’s rights movement, and many of her actions could be traced to the creation of the Nineteenth Amendment, the amendment that finally gave women the right to vote. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a successful suffragette despite not living to see the creation the Nineteenth Amendment. She founded the National Women's Loyal League, helped organized the first women's rights…
Born on 15 January in what at the time was the NewTon colony of New South Wales - Australia. Known as “Mary” She was later baptised and received the names Maria Ellen. Prior to emigrating to Australia Mary's parents lived in Roybridge, Inverness-shire Scotland. During the years of 1870’s MacKillop visited her parents home village where they had erected a shrine in the local church. MacKillop started work as a clerk at an stationery store at the age of 14 in Melbourne. During 1860 she took a job as governess at her aunt and uncle's estate.Where she took care of young children and taught them. After two years of being with the camerons before teaching the children of Portland, Victoria in 1862.…
Professor Jenny Jochens is a medievalist from Baltimore, Maryland that devoted her career specifically to the study of medieval women. She graduated from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, where she was born. Professor Jochens considers her field of study to be Old Norse Society, but she didn’t always have this specialization. She helped create the first Women’s Studies Program in the country. Her and other founders wanted the program to be interdisciplinary and intended to be influenced by the way she taught, by getting involved with biologists, psychologists, and other members of departments in order to cover the whole subject of women in society.…
Mary Wollstonecraft was a very complex person and to try to completely describe who she was would be impossible. However it’s not impossible to share her life and what she accomplished.…
Lizzie Borden was just a very misunderstood young gal, she only wanted to ax her parents a question. But really though Lizzie Borden is famously known for the accusations of the murders of Andrew and Abby Borden, her father and stepmother. Although Lizzie was acquitted of the crimes of the murders of her father and stepmother, she is doubtlessly guilty; she just can 't be found guilty with a lack of evidence to prove means, motive, and opportunity to find her guilty of her crimes in the american justice system. With the law team of the century by her side, they were able to convey that there was no confirmed murder weapon, so no means to commit the…
“Oppressed slaves should flee and take Liberty Line to freedom.” The Underground Railroad began in the 1780s while Harriet Tubman was born six decades later in antebellum America. The Underground Railroad was successful in its quest to free slaves; it even made the South pass two acts in a vain attempt to stop its tracks. Then, Harriet Tubman, an African-American with an incredulous conviction to lead her people to the light, joins the Underground Railroad’s cause becoming one of the leading conductors in the railroad. The Underground Railroad and Harriet Tubman aided in bringing down slavery and together, they put the wood in the fires leading up to the Civil War. The greatest causes of the Civil War were the Underground Railroad Harriet Tubman due conflict and mistrust over slavery they created between the North and South.…
When America was first founded, like any new invention, had its own set of flaws that needed to be sorted out in order to produce the fully functioning final product that in existance today. In its early stages, America struggled with issues surrounding the equality of its citizens. Ida Bell Wells-Barnett, also known as Ida B. Wells, worked tirelessly throughout her entire life fighting for civil rights as well as suffrage for women. Ida B. Wells expressed her opinion countess times though powerful powerful articles that were read across the country, effectively spreading the ideas about social and political issues that she felt most strongly about. Each of Ida B. Wells’s movements contributed to the extreme impact she left on American History,…
The United States of America became a union through sacrifice and freedom. Prior to the Civil War, most slaves in the South risked their lives for freedom. Harriet Tubman, along with Thomas Garrett and Frederick Douglass, were all important figures in the Underground Railroad. Their heroic deeds illustrated the themes that made their country unite. As a conductor, Tubman led more runaways to the promised land. Her motto was, “We got to go free or die. And freedom's not bought with dust.” She lived by this phrase and gave up everything to follow it. Garrett’s generosity towards the fugitives and the story of Douglass’ fight for freedom also contributed to the theme. They changed the lives of numerous African Americans and helped to reshape…
Why was Anne Hutchinson kicked out of Massachusetts? Anne was very assertive about things she believed. She stuck with her thoughts and did not let anyone change her mind. Her family had a large amount to do with what she thinks but she is a strong and capable woman standing up for everyone. Anne Hutchinson is a very wonderful leader and she was the start of something that still today is a very important.…
“Miss Brill,” by Katherine Mansfield is about and elderly spinster woman who, every Sunday goes to the public gardens, or park, and sits and listens to the conversations of all the people around her. At the beginning of the story, she is overjoyed with her life, perfectly content. She has been alone for a while, and she contents herself by ‘inserting’ herself into other people’s lives by listening in on their conversations. She loves just sitting and listening to people, watching them interact with each other. She thought her life was perfectly fine, and she scoffed at the people she saw at the park every Sunday, “They were odd, silent, nearly all old,” (138). But she doesn’t realize that she is just the same as they are. As she’s watching…
Every author is blessed with a writing prowess and enigmatic writing styles that differentiates the author from the rest of the lot. Renowned author, Katherine Mansfield has made a name for herself amongst the literary crowd and this literary work, "Miss Brill”, is one of the finest works of the author. Talking about her early age, she was born and brought in the lush greenery of Wellington, New Zealand, to humble parents. The upbringing was very modest and close to nature and that is clearly evident in her works. Especially, in this work, she highlights the relationship of a lady who is not so young anymore with the “fur” and how their happiness and sorrows are weaved into each other’s emotions. This is very beautifully portrayed by the author…
Music played a large role in the Dahomey women’s lives. They had several instruments at their disposal from drums, bells, horns, tambourines, and flutes. The flutes were rare and not used often because the majority of the Dahomian music was bass centric. They were played during competitions, celebrations, during marches, and when the king would have mock battles. The music the Amazons made were remarked by several foreign visitors various versions of terrible. They woman appeared to them to be more concerned with volume rather than setting a specific melody. However the drums were used to keep pace during marches to attacks. This would mean the women were able to keep a steady likeable beat but instead played music that appealed to their own…