This paragraph is about Margaret Cochran Corbins early life. Margaret was born in Chambersburg, Philadelphia on November 12, 1751 to Sarah and Robert Cochran. Her parents were born in Ireland and traveled to America. When she was 5 her dad was killed and her mom was kidnapped by Indians. And her and her brother went to live with her uncle. Then when she was older she was in the war. She was in the war with her husband.…
Only being thirteen years old in 1806 she was sold into slavery. She was bought by Zephaniah Kingsley and brought back to his 3000-acre plantation near the St. johns river. Not long after,…
During the Civil War Clara help wounded soldier on the battlefield. At first she wasn’t allowed to bring supplies to the battlefield. She had ask every politician she knew to allow her to help on the battlefields. Finally in 1862 she was allowed to bring supplies to the battles. She started bring clothing and…
On two occasions during the war, Clara Barton almost lost her life. After she delivered the supplies at the Battle of Antietam, she quietly nursed soldiers on the battlefield. As she knelt down to give one soldier a drink, she felt her sleeve quiver. She looked down, noticed a bullet hole in her sleeve, and then discovered that the bullet had killed the man whose head she was cradling. Undaunted, the unlikely figure in her bonnet, red bow, and dark skirt moved on and on, and on, and on.…
Harriet tubman was born in 1820 she was born into slavery she was born in Bucktown Dorchester County, Maryland. She was the daughter of two slaves named Benjamin Ross and Harriet Green. At the age of 5 she was already an baby-sitter and maid. At a young age she saw her sisters get…
For decades she and her daughters sewed American flags. Some people believe that Betsy Ross convinced George Washington that the American flag’s stars should have five points instead of six, which George Washington finally accepted. After the Revolutionary War was over Betsy Ross never stopped loving her country. She sewed large American flags that were hung in New Orleans. She also sewed twenty-seven flags for the Indian department with her grandchildren. She supported both of her husbands as they fought for the Revolutionary cause which ultimately turned her into a widow. According to many she was “red, white, and blue to the bone.”…
Mary Boykin Chesnut was born on her grandparents' estate at Mount Pleasant, South Carolina on March 31, 1823. She learned early about the workings of a plantation by observing her grandmother. Her grandmother worked with the servants and sewing crew so easily and effectively that Mary was nearly nine years old before she became aware that her grandmother's coworkers were slaves. Having learned to respect these workers, she thought of them as near equals.…
In 1951, she invented a self feeding device that a person with an amputation could use independently. The feeding device was designed to deliver one mouthful of food at a time, controlled by biting down on the tube. She then created a disposable emesis basin. Her invention were rejected by the American Veteran's Administration. After this rejection she donated her inventions to the French Government, where her inventions were accepted and are still currently being used.…
During her time as a slave, she was against slavery. She defended a fellow field hand from getting hit with a two pound weight. Even when she was hit in the head with this weight, she never quit being against slavery. She helped over 300 slaves escape to freedom and she never lost a single one. Two things kept her going, her belief in God and the pistol on her side. She also used it as a symbol to instruct slaves…
I personally connect to “The Book of Martha” because I took a yearlong theology course in eighth grade where I analyzed biblical scriptures. Therefore, revolving around a conversation with God make for a story that is both interesting for the reader but also shares similarities with the biblical stories. The two worked as partners and developed a bond with teamwork similar to our many experiences in the human world. God almighty, offered Martha an opportunity to strengthen her belief and faith by giving her a problem to solve as well as the responsibility of human beings. Therefore, I believe that the significance of the story was not the problems and solutions, but rather the process of solving it and how readers were shown has more significance to the…
She also cared for the 6th Massachusetts after being injured in the Baltimore Riot, and organized relief for the soldiers. Hearing of the wounded from First Bull Run, she poured herself into aiding the soldiers and arranged a donation fund to acquire medical supplies. During the Civil War, she sought out how she could best help the war effort and filled the need for organization as well as the administration of medicine, food and supplies to the army. She independently orchestrated assistance on the war front, using supplies she bought herself. Her work with caring for the wounded was tedious and incessant, and recounted, “I cannot tell you how many times I have moved with my whole family [the Army] of a thousand or fifteen hundred and with a half hour’s notice in the night.” She traveled to many camps and outposts throughout the war, witnessing some of the most gruesome battles in the Civil War. Throughout her efforts, she was present for Cedar Mountain, Virginia. Second Manassas, Virginia. Antietam, Maryland. and Fredericksburg,…
When Barton learned that many of the wounded from First Bull Run had suffered, not from want of attention but from need of medical supplies, she advertised for donations in the Worcester, Mass., Spy and began an independent organization to distribute goods. The relief operation was successful, and the following year U.S. Surgeon granted her a general pass to travel with army ambulances .…
Emeline Pigott began to host social gatherings in her home for local Union soldiers. This is how she gathered information about their plans. She would hide important papers and other contraband in her skirt. Later she would pass on the information she obtained to the Rebel soldiers (civilwarwomenblog.com).…
Originally named Araminta, or "Minty," Harriet Tubman was born in early 1819 or 1820 on the plantation of Anthony Thompson, south of Madison in Dorchester County, Maryland. Tubman was the fifth of nine children of Harriet "Rit" Green and Benjamin Ross, both slaves. Edward Brodas, the stepson of Anthony Thompson, claimed ownership of Rit and her children through his mother Mary Pattison Brodas Thompson. Ben Ross, the slave of Anthony Thompson, was a timber inspector who supervised and managed a vast timbering operation on Thompson's land. The Ross's relatively stable family life on Thompson's plantation came to abrupt end sometime in late 1823 or early 1824 when Edward Brodas took Rit and her then five children, including Tubman, to his own farm in Bucktown, a small agricultural village ten miles to the east. Brodas often hired Tubman out to temporary masters, some who were cruel and negligent, while selling other members of her family illegally to out of state buyers, permanently fracturing her family (http://www.math.buffalo.edu/~sww/0history/hwny-tubman.html).…
Rachel Carson got two tumors on one of her right side of her chest and the other tumor was on her left side of her chest. She said that she was like the sickest she had ever been in her life. She built two houses one house was built in Maryland and the other house was built in Maine. She was also never married in her life. So they sprayed this like pesticide stuff to cure their bug disease.…