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Search results 3971 - 3980 of 7138 matching essays
- 3971: Robert E. Lee
- ... was at her bed when she died. Then on June 30, 1831 Lee married Mary Curtis. On September 16, 1832, Mary gave birth to George Washington Curtis Lee. Then in 1835 they had their second child, Mary Curtis. Mrs. Lee was put on bed-rest for many months due to illness. They had five more children: William Henry Fitzgerald, Annie, Agnes, Robert and last Mildred. When he was home, they all ...
- 3972: Robert E. Lee
- ... on a hill overlooking Washington D. C.. They had seven children, three sons and four daughters. On September 16, 1832, Mary gave birth to George Washington Custis Lee. Later in 1835 they had their second child, Mary Curtis. They had five more children, William Henry Fitzgerald, Annie, Agnes, Robert and Mildred. Lee served as an assistant in the chief engineer's office in Washington from 1834 to 1837 and spent the ...
- 3973: Princess Diana
- By: Lizzy E-mail: L1zzy14@aol.com Diana Frances Spencer was born July 1, 1961 at Park House, the home her parents rented on the the English royal family's estate at Sandringham. As a child she occasionally played with Prince Andrew and Prince Edward, who were near her in age. Diana had two older sisters, Sarah and Jane, and a younger brother, Charles. When Diana was six, her mother left ...
- 3974: Prince William
- ... to as they watched their parents' marriage fall apart increasingly each day. Both were there to comfort their mother during the divorce and both were there to protect public attacks on their father. As a child, Prince William was (and still is) very protective of his younger brother. Prince William would threaten anyone that would pick on younger Prince Henry and would often teach the young boy from right and wrong ...
- 3975: Poul Voulkos Ceramist
- ... you've got to move with it. It's like a ritual. I always work standing up, so I can move my body around. I don't sit and make dainty little things.” As a child, Voulkos did not imagine a future as an internationally influential artist. The third of five children born to Greek immigrant parents in Bozeman, Mont., he could not afford a college education and anticipated a career ...
- 3976: Mark Twain
- ... trying to repay his dept and mourning over his lost family members, whom he was very close too. He died on April 21, 1910 in Redding, Conn. During his lifetime, Mark Twain went from a child of poverty to one of the most famous and unique writers of his time to a legendary American hero. Due to classics such as Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, he has established himself as not ...
- 3977: Malcolm X
- By: Lester E-mail: allman4real The year was 1925, and someone special was born. His birth name was Malcolm Little, however there were big things in store for this child. Born in Omaha, Nebraska. The seventh of eleven children born to Earl Little, an organizer for Marcus Garvey’s “back-to-Africa” movement (Compton’s encyclopedia online). At age six Malcolm’s father was murdered ...
- 3978: Malcolm X
- ... and value system had an important influence on black nationalist and black separatist movements of the 1950s and 1960s. At the beginning of the movie, Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little. He was a young child trying to adapt to society's changes. He was looking so hard that he fell into the wrong crowd. Malcolm bumped into a man named Archie who was a big time thief. Archie ran a ...
- 3979: Lucretia Rudolph Garfield
- ... courtship, and they did not marry until November 1858, when he was well launched on his career as a teacher. His service in the Union Army from 1861 to 1863 kept them apart; their first child, a daughter, died in 1863. But after his first lonely winter in Washington as a freshman Representative, the family remained together. With a home in the capital as well as one in Ohio they enjoyed ...
- 3980: Fredrerick Douglass
- ... government offices. Frederick Douglass has woven many themes into his narrative, all being tied with a common thread of man’s inhumanity towards man. Children were uprooted from the arms of their mothers, "before the child has reached it’s twelfth month, it’s mother is taken from it" (48) and sold to other slave holders. Brutal whippings occurred for even the smallest imagined offense, "a mere look, word, or motion ...
Search results 3971 - 3980 of 7138 matching essays
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