RR5 In the journal diary of Elizabeth Trist, she is a Quaker who is married at the age of twenty-three to a British officer, Nicholas Trist. Nicholas being the fifth son of his family couldn’t inherit his family’s estate, leaving him to join the military and leave Elizabeth and his child. The timing during this era was a bit hard for Trist, her child, and her husband since the start of the revolutionary war started in 1775. This news doesn’t sit well for Trist and her husband since he is British. Later Trist’s husband traveled to secure some land, and Trist stayed behind with her son since it was too dangerous to travel due to the Revolutionary War. Once the war was over, it was safe enough for her to travel. The reason why she traveled …show more content…
is to reunite with her husband since she hasn’t seen him in eight years. Another part in Trist’s diary is that is important to note is that she recorded some observations while she traveled. These are important to document because she is close to Thomas Jefferson, who was America’s Founding Fathers and a naturalist. The notes that Trist writes in her journal would also later influenced Jefferson’s notes as well. Unfortunately, when Trist was about to arrive to her destination, there was news that her husband had died. What I find interesting throughout reading Trist’s journal is the detail she puts in about the lands she’s traveling to.
Since this journal is important for Trist to document her travels, it’s also important for her to document the lands that she has visited. Since she is close to Thomas Jefferson who is interested with what is here in colonial America, it makes sense for her to add what kind of land and life is there to the places she travels to. One part that I read that interested me is, “The vegetation, being much quicker on that side of the river, presented a beautifull verder,” which Trist is explaining about the greenery she is seeing and continues, “a sight that we had been a stranger for some time,” meaning that she and the people she was with haven’t seen that view for a while (212). I can actually picture the land that she is describing, which does fit the kind of documentation Jefferson wanted. What I am curious about is how did she and Jefferson know each other? Was Trist part of an upper class family in order for her or her family to know Thomas Jefferson? Another question that I am curious about is did Elizabeth Trist remarry anyone else after the death of her husband? Also did the other people within the Naturalist community find her documentation about the lands to be good since she is a female writing about land and
life?
about a way that she could go to Eretz Island, Israel where she could be safe. She left her
Racism through the years has provided places around the world with a shameful past that even today, racial reconciliation is still only in its beginning phase. Legends such as Rosa Park, Martin Luther king, and Malcolm X sacrificed their own life daily to pave a brighter future for America. However there is only so much people can do to change the ways of the world, the rest is up to the moral ethics of everyday citizens. The novel, Elizabeth and Hazel: Two Women of Little Rock, makes me question society in the past and present. If today; years after racism was said to be over, two people can not move on from their horrid past, how is the rest of the world supposed to? Recent events have proven that racism still exists and will always exist
What her reasons for it were I don’t know. But she did a good job. She raised twelve children. She led a good life.”
“Deborah Sampson, the daughter of a poor Massachusetts farmer, disguised herself as a man and in 1782, at age twenty-one, enlisted in the Continental army. Ultimately, her commanding officer discovered her secret but kept it to himself, and she was honorably discharged at the end of the war.” She was one of the few women who fought in the Revolution. This example pictured the figure of women fighting alongside men. This encouraged the expansion of wife’s opportunities. Deborah, after the Revolution along with other known female figures, reinforced the ideology of Republican Motherhood which saw the marriage as a “voluntary union held together by affection and mutual dependency rather than male authority.” (Foner, p. 190). This ideal of “companionate” marriage changed the structure of the whole family itself, the now called Modern Family in which workers, laborers and domestic servants are now not considered member of the family anymore. However even if women thought that after the war they would have been seen from the society in a different way it never happened. The revolution haven’t changed the perception of the woman and the emancipated ideal
In reading William Thackeray's novel, Vanity Fair, it was very surprising to learn that it was customary for soldiers' wives to follow and accompany their husbands' regiments when they went off to engage in combat. It seems rather odd when Amelia, on her honeymoon, boarded the ship (provided by His Majesty's government) that would take the troop on to Brussels. There is quite a big production as crowds gathered and cheered as the bands played “God Save the King”, while officers waved their hats and the crew rushed about. It did not seem possible that a major battle was going to take place in which many of the men would never again return to London. According to Andrew Uffindell's Women of Waterloo, “… many soldiers were married, but only six or sometimes four in each company were permitted to take their wives with them on active service”. After the men had marched off to fight, the ladies who stayed behind in Brussels “suffered appalling mental tortures as they awaited news of the fate of their loved ones” (Uffindell). After the Battle of Waterloo, many distraught British wives roamed the bloody battlefield in a state that sometimes bordered on madness.
Thomas was raised in one of the greatest conspicuous families of Virginia’s planter elite .His mother known as Jane Randolph Jefferson was associated to proud Randolph fraternity, a family appealing background from Scottish and English royalty. His father, Peter Jefferson engaged in farming which he was observed to be successful an expert surveyor and Cartography who provided the major precise map for the province of Virginia. Thomas Jefferson was the third child amongst ten
Mary Rowlandson was a pretentious, bold and pious character. Her narrative did not make me feel sorry for her at all, which is strange since she really did go through a lot. During the war, the Narragansett Indians attacked Lancaster Massachusetts, and burned and pillaged the whole village. During the siege Mary and her six year old child were shot, she watched her sister and most of her village either burn or get shot. She was kept as a captive, along with her three children and taken with the Narragansett’s on their long retreat. The exposition of the story is set immediately. The reader is perfectly aware of Missus Rowlandson’s status and religious beliefs. She constantly refers to the Narragansetts in an incredibly condescending way, to the point that you know that she does not even consider them human. She paints them as purely evil pe...
The story Diary of Anne Frank was a very interesting book which showed the ways a group of Jewish people during the 1940's went about trying to conceal their identity and themselves. This story was a true story taken from a diary of a young girl during the incident. This was made into a play during 1955. This was praised as Frances Goodrich's and her husband Albert Hackett's most famous work as it was performed.The play was started in November of 1945. As Mr.
subject and told me of how we came to the island. My father has tried
Then the three men stay with the party and aide them in their journey to the British Fort. Once there, the two women’s father whom is the man in charge of the huge battle going on at that time. The French and English are at war. Colonists are urged to fight for Britain, and once they become part of the battle, they were not allowed to leave to defend their own homes.
Henry VIII wanted a male to take the throne when he passed away. He paved the way for his son Edward. After Edward died in 1553 Elizabeth found herself once again in political intrigue. [Elizabeth’s older sister, M...
Sarah Benjamin went before the deposition on the twentieth day of November, 1837 in the Court of Common Pleas of Wayne County, Pennsylvania. This deposition intended to validate claims for receiving pension benefits owed to Mrs. Benjamin from a previous marriage; an Aaron Osborn, veteran of the Revolutionary War. Her case founded itself on the numerous acts of Congress over the previous decade--in particular the Comprehensive Pension Act of 1832 and subsequent acts of Congress from July 4, 1836 and March 3, 1837--allowing for the first time yearly grants to all who served in the Continental Army for a period of six months or more. These acts supplanted Sarah Benjamin's case because applicants no longer required disability or monetary status for approval, as well as allowing widows married at the time of the war to be eligible for full payments1. While the history of Revolutionary War pensions is quite rich and intriguing, what is most enriching over the course of the study of this document is the incredibly vivid and accurate account of life in Continental Army camps Mrs. Benjamin–known as Sarah Osborn during this period of time and henceforth in this study-deposes. Through the study of this document, with the aid of works giving accounts and the significance of other women involved in the Revolution, this work will attempt to present a well-rounded and complete picture of life during wartime can be achieved. Not only is Sarah Osborn's deposition a wonderfully personal and astoundingly accurate story, it remains as one of the best known accounts of a woman living with soldiers in the camps. The efforts she underwent to help keep them fed, clean, organized, and together alone astound as feats of remarkable courage and devotion. Sa...
Each spring she hoped that her people would return and take her to the far off land which they had left for.
Resentment against Elizabeth and her Woodville family steadily grew during the course of her nineteen-year marriage to Edward IV. All in the House of York distrusted her for her previous Lancaster connections. Her father has risen through Lancaster ranks; she had been a maid-of-honor for Lancaster Queen Margaret of Anjou; her first husband, Sir John Grey, died in cavalry service for Henry VI. All
A link is also created between Elizabeth and Tipper as Faulks describes that Robert could see Elizabeth’s eyes ‘fill with a determination he had never seen’ which contrasts with the dehumanisation of Tipper as light was lost from his eyes. In this case, Elizabeth is having new life brought to her. The new life of the character baby John indicates that the effects of the War will always remain and that within ‘those still living’ its memory will always live on. In summary, Faulks indicates to us that we should have a strong interest in the War because of the sacrifices that the men made for us.