What did Caroline Chisholm do that made her stand out amongst others?
Caroline Chisholm was a kind and intelligent woman who gave dignity to women and immigrant family's who moved from England. Caroline always helped and put others before herself and worked for free. She helped immigrant women and family's find new homes and jobs for each of them. Caroline Chisholm held a strong tradition of Evangelical philanthropy and put all her energy and time into helping support and care for immigrant Australians. 71
Discuss Caroline Chisholm's upbringing and if this impacted on the way she lived her life.
Caroline Chisholm was born in Northampton in 1808, to William Jones, a well to do farmer and his wife. Her parents always encouraged her to care for others, Caroline's parents always offered free accommodation and food for nearby travellers or people in need. Caroline's father died when she was very young and when she was 22 she accepted the marriage proposal from Captain Archibald Chisholm, but only if he agreed to support her in her philanthropy work. 77
Did Caroline Chisholm contribute in anyway to the growth of Australia as a nation? How?
Caroline Chisholm contributed to the growth of Australia by sheltering and finding employment for immigrants from England. Caroline sheltered up to 96 female immigrants and she tried to find homes for 23 immigrant families, but the idea was rejected by the Governor. She helped the homeless girls by opening the 'Female Immigrants Home' and spread out the unemployed around Australia. In the 6 years of her work, she helped 11,000 immigrants find homes in jobs around the New South Wales area. 81
Did Caroline. Chisholm go beyond 'human limits' to achieve her goals?- Did she do more than the averag...
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...olm was inspiration for on of Charles Dickens character Mrs Jellyby in Bleak House. 86
Additional facts about Caroline Chisholm.
Some interesting facts about Caroline Chisholm is that she first met her husband, a Captain Archibald Chisholm at a Ball near her home and he was thirteen years older than she was. Caroline felt that all the work she did for the immigrants in Australia and Madras was in Gods will and some of Caroline's writing was published in the Sydney Morning Herald. Caroline and her husband Archibald would have had nine children together, but tragically 3 of the children were stillborn. Caroline and a Archibald Chisholm were nicknamed the Emigrants' Friend, which was also written on their grave stone. 100
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Quote by Caroline Chisholm
"I promise to know neither country nor creed, but to serve all justly and impartially."
Mary Eugenia Surratt, née Jenkins, was born to Samuel Isaac Jenkins and his wife near Waterloo, Maryland. After her father died when she was young, her mother and older siblings kept the family and the farm together. After attending a Catholic girls’ school for a few years, she met and married John Surratt at age fifteen. They had three children: Isaac, John, and Anna. After a fire at their first farm, John Surratt Sr. began jumping from occupation to occupation.
The history of The Black Civil Rights Movement in the United States is a fascinating account of a group of human beings, forcibly taken from their homeland, brought to a strange new continent, and forced to endure countless inhuman atrocities. Forced into a life of involuntary servitude to white slave owners, African Americans were to face an uphill battle for many years to come. Who would face that battle? To say the fight for black civil rights "was a grassroots movement of ordinary people who accomplished extraordinary things" would be an understatement. Countless people made it their life's work to see the progression of civil rights in America. People like W.E.B. DuBois, Marcus Garvey, A Phillip Randolph, Eleanor Roosevelt, and many others contributed to the fight although it would take ordinary people as well to lead the way in the fight for civil rights. This paper will focus on two people whose intelligence and bravery influenced future generations of civil rights organizers and crusaders. Ida B.Wells and Mary Mcleod Bethune were two African American women whose tenacity and influence would define the term "ordinary to extraordinary".
Clara Barton was born during 1821 in Massachusetts. As a young child, Barton learned a great deal of schooling from her older siblings; she learned a wide variety of different subjects. She seized every educational opportunity that she was given and she worked hard to receive a well rounded-education. Clara Barton would later use her education to create her own school and eventually help start an organization that is still used today. As a young child, Clara was extremely shy; nevertheless, after many years she was able to overcome this. Even as a young child Clara thrived helping others. She tended to her sick brother who was severely injured by a roofing accident on a regular basis. The skills she learned from helping her brother proved to be used again when she was on the front-line of the Civil War helping wounded soldiers.
One of the leading black female activists of the 20th century, during her life, Mary Church Terrell worked as a writer, lecturer and educator. She is remembered best for her contribution to the struggle for the rights of women of African descent. Mary Terrell was born in Memphis, Tennessee at the close of the Civil War. Her parents, former slaves who later became millionaires, tried to shelter her from the harsh reality of racism. However, as her awareness of the problem developed, she became an ardent supporter of civil rights. Her life was one of privilege but the wealth of her family did not prevent her from experiencing segregation and the humiliation of Jim Crow laws. While traveling on a train her family was sent to the Jim Crow car. This experience, along with others led her to realize that racial injustice was evil. She saw that racial injustice and all other forms of injustice must be fought.
Anne Moody had thought about joining the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), but she never did until she found out one of her roommates at Tougaloo college was the secretary. Her roommate asked, “why don’t you become a member” (248), so Anne did. Once she went to a meeting, she became actively involved. She was always participating in various freedom marches, would go out into the community to get black people to register to vote. She always seemed to be working on getting support from the black community, sometimes to the point of exhaustion. Son after she joined the NAACP, she met a girl that was the secretary to the ...
...nspired to make a change that she knew that nothing could stop her, not even her family. In a way, she seemed to want to prove that she could rise above the rest. She refused to let fear eat at her and inflict in her the weakness that poisoned her family. As a child she was a witness to too much violence and pain and much too often she could feel the hopelessness that many African Americans felt. She was set in her beliefs to make choices freely and help others like herself do so as well.
The Political, Feminist, and Religious view of Frances E.W. Harper, Phllis Wheatley, and Alice Dunbar-Nelson
Caroline was born into a wealthy family in Massachusetts, the daughter of a psychoanalyst and his self-contained painter-wife. She reflects in her memoir that being in her friends’ houses during her school years, she noted that her family was different from the others: they never hug each other,
Shirley Chisholm was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Barbadian parents. When she was three years old, Shirley was sent to live with her grandmother on a farm in Barbados, a former British colony in the West Indies. She received much of her primary education in the Barbadian school
Lucy Stone is known today for many things, among them being the first woman to graduate from college in Massachusetts, one of the first women not to change their name after marriage, the first woman to appeal before a body of lawmakers and forming The Woman’s Journal and The NWSA. Women all over the United States owe much to the work of Lucy Stone. In the history of Woman’s Rights, few can activists can compare with the determination and success of Lucy Stone. While many remember Susan B. Anthony for being the most active fighter for Woman’s Rights, perhaps Lucy is even more important. With out her it would have taken much longer to achieve Woman's Votes.
Angela Davis grew up surrounded by politically opinionated, educated, and successful family members who influenced her ideals and encouraged her development and ambition. Her father attended St Augustine’s College, a historically black school in North Carolina (Davis 20). Her brother, Ben Davis, was a successful football player who was a member of teams such as the Cleveland Browns and the Detroit Lions (Davis 23). Her mother, Sallye Davis, was substantially involved in the civil rights movement and was a member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (Davis 42). In addition, her mother joined the Southern Negro Youth Congress which had strong ties to the Communist Party. This involvement greatly influenced Davis as she had many associations with members of the party which later shaped her political views (“Complexity, Activism, Optimism: An Interview with Angela Y. Davis”).
Although there is little information on Nelly Butler during her life, the evidence gathered from the time Nelly was alive suggests she was a kind woman. One interesting piece of information about Nelly when she was alive was given by her spirit when she explained that she had received an experience of spiritual salvation on her deathbed, possibly the reason she came back to Sullivan (“Testimony” 101). Nelly was legally named Eleanor Hooper, and born on 25 April 1776 (“Genealogical” 115). Her parents were David and Joanna Hooper, and she had eight siblings (115). Some time during 1795, Nelly married George Butler at the age of nineteen and lived on Butler’s Point in Franklin, Maine (115). While giving birth to their first child, Nelly tragically passed away on 13 June 1797, only to be followed shortly after by her baby (115). Although there are no headstones to confirm this, it is said that Nelly’s grave is located on Butler’s Point in Franklin, next to her child and husband (LiBrizzi 8).
“Throughout her professional life, [Anna Julia Cooper] advocated equal rights for women of color...and was particularly concerned with the civil, educational, and economic rights of Black women” (Thomas & Jackson, 2007, p. 363).
Marshall, Heather. “ A Woman With a Cause: An Overview of Judy Brady’s Influential Essay ‘I
Judy Tallwing McCarthy is a woman who has blazed trails all her life. Coming from a beginning that some may have seen as a hindrance, she used the stories and examples of resilience she learned from her elders to build a life of her own choosing that could assist and inspire others in doing so as well. Wearing many hats and titles over the decades, Ms Tallwing has built a lasting legacy in the Leather, Arts, Social Activist communities and still has not stopped. She is an example of what one can do when led by their core and by Spirit.