Robert E. Lee instructed Stuart’s troops to protect Rappahannock river and make sure it was clear of spies. Gen. Stuart decided to organize a distraction on the other side of the river because that’s where the Union troops where. Pleasanton added many men and had to have two attacks. The Union ended up killing Col. Benjamin Davis. Buford charged the arsenal but they took the guns before they could get to them. The troops at Kelly’s Ford where told to march around the opponent but Stuart’s office was there. Both sides added more troops and fought for 5 hours. Learning another Confederate militia was coming Pleasanton withdrew.…
The first day took place on May 26th, 1637 in a Pequot village at Missituck (located near the Mystic River in Connecticut). What happened was the English and Indian allies had attacked the Pequot village. Within that group, there were 70 English, 70 Mohegans, and 500 Narragansetts. The Mohegans and the Narragan were the allies of the English. The English were Puritans from the Massachusetts Bay Colony, led by Major John Mason and Captain John Underhill. The massacre was the first time the English had been involved in the killings of Native Americans. The purpose of the Puritans migrating to America was to start a new life and for religious freedom from England. The Pequot village was the wealthiest, largest, and…
The Last Colonial Massacre by Greg Grandin is about the Panzós massacre of the Q’eqchi Mayans in 1978. This was unfortunately a violent precursor the Scorched-Earth campaign of the 80’s that would kill many more Q’eqchi. This book, while examining an individual event on a personalized level through the life of Adelina Caal, a focus of the last chapter, this book shows the effects of Neoliberalism, the US’s involvement in Latin America in the Cold War, and ethnic tension stemming from cultural differences and the racial caste system of Spanish rule.…
C. Children were taken from their mothers and thrown by their arms and legs into rivers and off the sides of…
Mark Danner, an editor for the New York Times magazine, and author of The Massacre at El Mozote narrates a horrifying crime against civilization committed by a branch of the Salvadorian army. Danner gives numerous points of views and names numerous eyewitnesses to piece together something that has been hidden by the government at the time. In December, of 1981, news reports were leaked to major newspapers in the United States about an atrocity committed and a total massacre of a village in El Salvador, known as El Mozote. A total of 75,000 civilian lives were taken by the governmental forces of El Salvador, Where state agents, including the military and paramilitary organizations, were responsible for 85% of the killings, and FMLN responsible…
The tensions between the classes, the halves and the halve-nots are therefore represented by the two warring factions. The harrowing events in Mark Danner’s Massacre at El Mozote investigates and questions three central issues; the Massacre, the role of American Policies in the region during the Cold War and the executive cover-up of the events as Propaganda. One of the concerns is what responsibility (if any) did the U.S. government have for the massacre at El Mozote?El Mozote was “uniquely” different from most villages because it had resisted the Liberation Theology taught by left-leaning Catholic Priests and according to the author was “as as stronghold of the Protestant evangelical movement” (pg 19) . The villagers of El Mozote had their own chapel and referred themselves as born-again Christians and as Danner states were known for “their anti-communism” (pg 19). The villagers of El Mozote did not support the guerillas. According to Danner the Massacre at El Mozote takes place when American trained Salvadoran Armed forces called the Atlacatl Batallion arrived at the village and began systematically killing men, women and children by various means such as torturing, hangings, decapitation, and shooting. The U.S government was responsible for the massacre at El Mozote for a plethora of reasons. First, The Reagan…
Lemann begins his historical narrative with a depiction of the Colfax Massacre on Easter Sunday in 1873 to emphasize the significance that violence and terror had on blacks and the Reconstruction effort. “Colfax was part of an experiment, a new Louisiana that would resemble the abolitionists’ prewar dream of how the South should be after its defeat in the Civil War” states Lemann in the prologue where he explains that Colfax was a settlement where hundreds of blacks had fled to because they were afraid of the white terrorist groups that were beginning to spread throughout the south. On Easter Sunday of the year 1873, Colfax was attacked by Columbus Nash, a Democratic sheriff, and his company of some two or three hundred volunteers in response…
The event of the Massacre at Mystic on 1637 is a big date to remember, because it changed the history of America. Not only did it altered it, but also changed the Pequot’s entire nation, economics and political views in New England. It also changed relationship between colonist and the Indians forever. This was a war of the England and the Indians which attacked a fort at Mystic Connecticut. This was the first time that the English had ever attacked to slaughter.…
“It is a very tragic day for us in virginia. My reaction was just shock. My first thought was just how tragic this was for the university” - Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine. It was tragic day for the friends and families of the victims. Virginia tech massacre is a tragic event that in history and has impacted many people.…
media, organized resistance by Guatemalan peasants is only described as guerrilla warfare, a revolutionary military resistance negatively known for harassment of their political enemies. However, this understanding simplifies the nature and objectives of the Guatemalan Indians’ organized resistance. Their fight manifested itself in many different ways: community groups, religious groups, and labor strikes, in addition to military groups. They were most commonly depicted in the U.S. as armed resistors, but according to Menchú, they didn’t have arms and instead used household items as weapons, such as hot water, stones, chile, salt, and lime (Menchú, ch. 17). Menchú most emphasizes their religion as their form of resistance, with “the Bible as [their] main weapon” (Menchú, p. 158).…
On November 29th 1847, at the Waiilatpu mission near Walla Walla, Washington a group of Cayuse Indians stormed through the Whitman’s home and killed both Marcus and Narcissa along with twelve others. They burned down buildings and destroyed the settler’s precious orchards. Forty-seven people of the mission were than captured and later ransomed by the Hudson Bay Company.…
I am going to be looking at how My Lai Massacre impacted on the war in Vietnam. There were many factors that affected the war, but the My Lai Massacre was quite an important one. The My Lai Massacre took place on the 16th of March 1968. Charlie Company was the company that went to attack the village of My Lai. They had been told that there were Viet Cong hiding in the village, but the rumours were false, so the company decided to attack the innocent villagers, as they probably supported the Viet Cong anyway.…
The Westward expansion exaggerated the Native Americans in a number of ways; consequential in the Native Americans dropping their native land, required to transform their beliefs and values to billet learning from flannel pioneers. The Indians were treated unlawfully because of their beliefs; that was the purpose numerous battles broke out. The Native Americans involuntarily contributed allocation approach concerning their life. They were well- known to be pleasant and supportive towards others; but was betrayed by the white fellows. The whites vowed on taming the Native Americans attacks. Numerous Native Americans families existed were spread out or distant far away from their native land; aquatic frequently affected ill health and death.…
The My Lai massacre was a mass murder of innocent Vietnamese civilians. It is known as the worst atrocity of the Vietnam War. Lieutenant William Calley led the first platoon of Charlie Company during its service in the Quang Ngai province in Vietnam. The massacre took place in the hamlets of My Lai and My Khe of Son My village in South Vietnam (e.g. ‘Pinkville’).…
The My Lai massacre was the mass murder of up to 500 innocent Vietnamese civilians on the 16th of March 1968 during the American-Vietnam war. This incident is one of the most infamous events of the War, and prompted global outrage when it became public knowledge in November 1969. The cover up and injustice following the event has gone down in history as one of the most infamous events of that War and prompted global outrage when it became public knowledge in November 1969. It was definitely a contributory factor to the growing domestic opposition to the war in the United States at that time.…