The hurricane version of D-day has come. Days before Hurricane Katrina hit Bridget Denise Bailey(29) remembers leaving her home on the lower East side of New Orleans with her husband ,Aaron Robinson(34), and her four children, Brittany Bailey(14) ,Lanisha bailey(13), Linda Bailey(10), and Erin Robinson(5). they chose not to evacuated and instead relocated to Bridget's job at the Metropolitan Rehabilitation Center near their home. On August 269, 2005 as the eater came in Bridget and her family were eventually stranded on the third floor of the rehabilitation center along with multiple other families. While remembering what she and her family went through the first words that came out of her mouth were sad, dejected, shocked, and worried. The…
The United States Marine Corps War Memorial is a national monument, which is located in Arlington Ridge Park, at the back entrance to Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia. Also, it is important to realize, this monument depicts one of the most famous incidents of World War II, and is dedicated to all Marines who have given their lives…
“Ulysses S. Grant’s mausoleum is the largest tomb on the continent of North America.” (Aronson, p.78). Now formally known as General Grant National Memorial it is located in New York, NY. The architectural design on the tomb is very eye catching with many of Ulysses’ moments in history engraved on the rock itself or on mosaic glass panels. The panels show events like when he was a graduate of West Point , and the wars he served in which include the Mexican War, Civil War, Battle of Vicksburg and Chattanooga. One of the other panels show General…
Standing at the edge of the eminence of Catfish Creek,Julien Dubuque Monument is in the Mines of Spain Recreation Area. It was built in 1897. The place is historically significant and synonymous with the Indian-French fur trading culture and lead mining industry during the 18th century. This monument showcases Julien Dubuque—one of the first European men to settle in the area and trade with the native people. Aside from learning a some history about the monument, visitors can also enjoy the scenic view of the river while they have a picnic or take a short stroll along the trail. Surprisingly, the place itself is also a good opportunity for bird watching! Aside from that, the monument is neighboring excellent restaurants such as L.May Eatery,…
There is too much incomplete data to say for certain, although numerous sources suggest roughly ten thousand men from both sides died on D-Day June 6. Other sources suggest far less, with the casualty numbers amounting to roughly five thousand. Eisenhower referenced sixty thousand casualties within the first three weeks of the Invasion of Normandy, but D-Day, the single day of June 6, 1944, was far from the entire invasion.…
D-Day Death. Blood. Fear. Every soldier fighting on the Normandy beaches on June 6th, 1944 experienced these three words. D-Day was a gruesome series of battles fought by the Americans and Canadians against the Nazi Germans in WWII.…
Five Days at Memorial by Sheri Fink was a very compelling overview of the tragedy that took place at Memorial Hospital during the five days after Hurricane Katrina ravished New Orleans in September 2005. The book approached the ethical dilemmas faced by those physicians and staff involved in the key roles of the rescue effort at Memorial Medical Center, one of the many medical facilities that were devastated by this category 5 hurricane. The physicians who remained to care for the patients were put in the difficult position of deciding who was most appropriate for rescue, and what to do with those left behind. Staff members, nurses in particular, were put in the position of whether or not to obey seemingly unjustified orders. The catastrophe was worsened by the backlash from the patients’ families, the community, and the nation regarding their decisions, including arrests and wrongful…
Hoyt, Edwin Palmer. Yamamoto: the Man Who Planned the Attack on Pearl Harbor. Guilford, CT: Lyons Press, 2001.…
Federal Hall National Memorial lies in between Wall and Nassau Streets in Lower Manhattan, paying homage to some of the most memorable political events in our nation’s history. It is of extreme political significance since it serves as the first US Capital Building, the site where the freedom of the press was first challenged, the Stamp Act Congress was held, the place where George Washington was first inaugurated as president, and the site where the Bill of Rights was ratified. The original structure was demolished in 1812, and the structure in its place today, Federal Hall National Memorial, was created in 1842, on the site of the old Federal Hall on Wall Street. It first served as the United States Custom House, and then as a sub-Treasury…
Invasion of Normandy started on June 6, 1944. It was the largest scale of amphibious warfare ever in history. D-Day is the started day of the invasion. Many soldiers became victims of this battle. Many soldiers including Jay S. Adams and Claud Woodring served for the Invasion of Normandy. Interviews done by them show the meaning and significance of D-Day from soldiers’ perspectives.…
Among the objectives on D-Day, the beach code-named Omaha was the best fortified. Allied commanders felt it had to be taken nonetheless, to dislodge the Germans dug in between Utah Beach to the west, also assigned to the Americans, and the British-targeted beaches code-named Gold, Juno, and Sword to the east. “At Omaha Beach, the Americans came ashore under intense fire and took the heaviest casualties in the battle, landing about 40,000 men, with 2,200 killed or wounded” ("Photos: The 65th Anniversary Of D-Day On The Normandy Beaches", 2009).…
America’s second world war is conserved by the memorial in Washington D.C. It contains the memories and facts about this event in history, that honors the sixteen million who died in the armed forces, 400,000 who died in the war, and millions of Americans who supported the American war effort at home (National WWII Memorial).…
Thomas Jefferson was known as a renaissance man; his knowledge was broad and diverse and he accomplished a great many things in his lifetime. He owned a plantation which he named Monticello, spoke six languages, was an inventor and holder of over 10,000 patents. He was one of America’s founding fathers, the first Secretary of State and the 3rd president of the United States which is the greatest accomplishment an American can achieve. However, it was his wish that his tombstone reflect some of the things that “he had given the people, not the things that the people had given to him.” . The epitaph reads: “Here was buried Thomas Jefferson, Author of the Declaration of the Independence and of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom and…
Memorial Day and Veterans Day are two holidays about men and women who fought in the war for the United States of America. The between these holidays is the Memorial Day celebrates the fallen soldiers in the military forces and who survived through the many wars defending the United States. The first Memorial Day was on May 30, 1868 it was three years after the civil war .civil war commander chief John A. Logan declared the first official Memorial Day 1868. He declared it to be the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died who died in defense of their country during the late and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village and hamlet church yard in the land. The first observance was held…
El Paso Texas has many tourism places for its society. Many of these historical places are more than 100 years old. And learn about their society as well. As an illustration the San Jacinto Plaza has been their for many years, but it's famous for its alligators, and also known as "Plaza de Los Lagartos". Plaza de Los Lagartos is use for touristic attraction amusements, and parades.…