Lalor married Alicia Dunne on 10 July 1855 in Geelong. Their daughter, Anne, was born in Prahran in 1856; their son Joseph was born at Sandridge (now called Port Melbourne) on the 18 of may 1857. Anne Lalor married Thomas Lempriere in 1882, but died three years later of lung phthisis. Joseph Lalor became a medical doctor, marrying Agnes McCormick of Dublin, Ireland and leaving young.…
The social disorganization theory can be used to explain looting in New Orleans because all of the details of the theory play a part in some communities in New Orleans. A lot of those communities are near the central business district. Just like in Chicago, this zone was not a desirable location for residents and homes, but was close to work so the less fortunate lived their because of lack of transportation and jobs where easier to get being so close. As Shaw and Mckay stated in chapter 4, this was a zone of transition. The community changed a lot because people moved in and out constantly. When they were fortunate to be able to move to better areas, more of the less fortunate moved in. This began to trigger social conflict between the residences. With social conflict came a lot of other behaviors and with this process happening over and over a pattern starts. Cultural transmission theory comes in to play here. Adolescents grow up in and environment where drugs, violence, poverty, and broken homes are all they see. They are more likely to fall victim to the environment they live in because that is all they know. After this happens for decades and decades, perception sets in and we don’t view them as individuals but as a certain type of person. During hurricane Katrina all the people that lived in those areas of poverty had no means of transportation to leave. They stayed hoping and praying they could survive the storm. When it came they were flooded, trapped on the roofs of houses and buildings for days with no water or shelter and no signs that help was coming soon. They soon started to do what was already happening in their community. It was almost like instinct set in. For years and years they saw their peers commit crimes to survive. So they started to loot, taking the things they need to survive. They were also taking things they didn’t need like weapons. These weapons were used to protect themselves from each other and corrupt police officers. It…
Hurricane Katrina reached land from the gulf of Mexico on August 29th, 2005, just 10…
Between August 23rd and August 31st, 2005 the most destructive storm, Hurricane Katrina hit the United States. About 200 miles southeast of the Bahamas is where Katrina initially started and it was classified as a tropical depression by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) on August 23rd 2005. By August 25th the storm had traveled to Florida and became a moderate Category 1 hurricane.("Hurricane Katrina" 2). Katrina seemed to be just another hurricane in an active hurricane season. Katrina weakened and was reclassified as a tropical storm. Katrina began to rapidly gain strength, and re-intensified into a hurricane on August 26th,and became a Category five storm on August 28th, with winds blowing at about 175 mph (3). As Katrina hit land it slammed into Gulfport and Biloxi, Mississippi, causing destruction to both cities. A large storm surge ranging from 10 to 28 feet devastating costal areas across southeastern Louisiana and Mississippi. The surge exposed engineering mistakes in the floodwalls and levees that were built by the U.S. Army Corps…
The intended audience for my informative paper will be teens and young adults, these seem to be the people who were involved and knew the most about Hurricane…
Hurricane Katrina started a tropical depression on August 23rd, 2005. On August 27th, President George W. Bush declared a state of emergency for the states of Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi. By August 28th, Katrina become a Category 5 hurricane. However, when Katrina made landfall in Louisiana on August 29th, 2005, it was a weakened Category 3 hurricane. As Katrina made landfall, the levees in the greater New Orleans area began to fail causing large amounts of water to begin flooding the city. With the flooding of the city, came the communication failures causing a lack of communication throughout the city. As Katrina passed, the failure of the levees, caused many residents who did not evacuate to become strand waiting for help.. Many…
Hurricane Katrina swept away the gulf coast on August 25, 2009. Katrina was the most monstrous storm that has ever visited the coast and was considered an amalgam of tropical waters and dusty winds. It was the deadliest hurricane of category five causing horrendous damage and traumatizing scenes. Many lives were taken away and many lives have changed.…
In 2005 the ARC faced its biggest challenge to date; Hurricane Katrina. On August 29 the storm made landfall. Among the cites hit, New Orleans saw the most destruction. Due to levee failures the city became flooded. With 80% of the city under water, the loss of life was staggering.…
Hurricane Katrina of the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season was the costliest hurricane, as well as one of the five deadliest in the history of the United States. The record of Atlantic hurricanes said it was the sixth strongest overall. Prior to Katrina, the most deadliest hurricane was the 1928 Okeechobee Hurricane. Hurricane Katrina was formed on August 23, 2005 over the Bahamas as a moderate Category 1 hurricane. The storm weakened before making its second landfall as a Category 3 storm on August 29 in southeast Louisiana. The majority of lives lost and property damage happened in New Orleans, Louisiana. The storm was estimated to be responsible for $ 81.2 billion in damage due to its destructive…
Hurricane Katrina is a disastrous event that took place in United States history. It is a very important and monumental catastrophe. Though Katrina had a lasting impact on society it was a life changing experience for the people who lived through it. Many lives were lost, billions of dollars were spent for repair and construction, it was one of the most powerful storms in U.S history, and it had an effect on the economy. Katrina was a powerful natural disaster that devastated the coasts of Louisiana, Cuba, New Orleans, Florida, and the Bahamas.…
But these people were more fortunate than some, failure of prevent Katrina lead to at least 986 Louisiana resident’s deaths. 40% of the deaths were caused by drowning, 25% of the deaths were from injury and trauma, and 11% of the deaths were caused by other health conditions, with nearly half victims over 74 years of age (Allison). 80%of the flooding was in areas where mostly poor people were living under sea level and with over 240,000 resident’s houses suffer toxic floodwater over four feet of sustained (Verderber). That make New Orleans’ community struggle against the disaster literature and restore of neighborhood settlement. After the Katrina the negative effects was not over, From 2000 to 2010, New Orleans East citywide vacancy was doubled to 25%, many neighborhoods experienced abandoned. People are complaining of areas that houses are abandoned, many parents were worry it is not good for children to hanging around and place for dealing drug, gun, and other illegal activity and make it harder to recover. By a few assessments, about 44,000 New Orleans houses were viewed as cursed starting 2010, however, the city had issues…
Hurricane Katrina was formed as a tropical storm off the coast of the Bahamas. In only seven days the storm grew into a catastrophic hurricane, it made landfall in Mississippi, Florida, Louisiana, and Alabama. Hurricane Katrina left a trail of devastation. Hurricane Katrina flooded the historic city of New Orleans making it the worst incident in that region.…
Early Morning on August 29th 2005 the United States was hit by Hurricane Katrina along the Gulf Coast. Hundreds to thousands of people in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama were affected. Making Hurricane Katrina one of the deadliest hurricanes to hit the United States. Hurricane Katrina was rated a category 5, the highest rated category. Killing an estimate of 1,833 people. After the hurricane Millions of people were left homeless along the Gulf Coast.…
New Orleans Louisiana was a flourishing city in 2004. After Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, the impact of the storm diminished the people's faith in government, but people's faith in their religion strengthened. Despite their religion, the city itself was still diminished culturally and historically.…
Hurricane Katrina formed over the Bahamas on August 23, 2005 and crossed southern Florida, causing some deaths and flooding there before moving rapidly in the Gulf of Mexico even stronger. The storm weakened before making its second landfall on the morning of Monday, August 29 in southeast Louisiana. It caused severe destruction along the Gulf coast from central Florida to Texas, much of it due to the storm surge. The most significant number of deaths occurred in New Orleans, Louisiana, which flooded completely due to surge protection failures. Eventually 80% of the city and large tracts of neighboring parishes became flooded, and the floodwaters lingered for weeks.…