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Recommended: Espionage In Ww2
I can’t imagine what life would be like to be a spy in World War II. What would I have to do to hide my secret life from the German Nazis? Could I be sneaky enough, or strong enough, or brave enough? Odette Hallowes was all these things! Odette Marie Celiné Brailly was born in France, in 1912. She was the oldest of three children. She had two younger brothers. Her father was a soldier in the French army, but he died when Odette was six years old. Her grandfather often took her to visit his son’s grave and would tell Odette, “In twenty years there will be another war...and you will have to do your duty as your father did.” These words made a difference in her adult life. She attended a private school at a convent, and eventually married three times. In 1931, Odette married Roy Sansom, an Englishman engaged in the hotel trade. Together they had their first daughter, Françoise, in 1932. One year later, the three moved to Britain. There they had Lili, in 1934, and Marianne, in 1936. Roy Sansom was soon called to war, and Odette moved to Somerset with her three daughters. Around 1940,...
1. What is the spy's usual occupation before the war? The spy was an actor.
Rita Crundwell was the trusted comptroller and treasurer of Dixon, Illinois with a passion for horses. She took advantage of her trust and responsibility to commit the largest known municipal fraud in the history of the United States. This fraudster has surprised and astounded people around the world by the amount of the fraud and for how long it went. Rita served the small town of Dixon from 1983 to 2012 until sentenced to nearly twenty years in federal prison for embezzling an astonishing $53.7 million. The story of this Dixon Commissioner shocked her small town and is studied by auditors all over.
Female spies were a great help in the war. Men did not expect innocent women to be involved in such dangerous activities so they often were not found out at first. Men easily trusted the women spies and told them important military secrets. The spies would get information then write it on paper or material and sew it into their clothes or put it in their hair. With bigger stuff they would attach it to the hoops on their skirts and hide the stuff in dolls. People started to suspicious when the women spies started to do “inappropriate” actions “such as allowing men into their homes at all hours of the night, arranging meetings with men in various locations and riding on horses and in buggies unaccompanied.”
childhood until she was strategically married and sent to France when she was fourteen years
Simone de Beauvoir was born January 9, 1908. She was the first child of a white middle class Catholic family living in Paris; and her birth order was one of the key facilitator s of her early intellectual growth. She was followed by one sister; and given this position in the family, de Beauvoir was treated as a honorary son. Thus, during her early childhood she received much of the privileged attention normally reserved for males, which led to the keen development of de Beauvoir's intellectual capabilities. She once wrote, "Papa used to say with pride: Simone has a man's brain; she thinks like a man: she is man" (Okely 23). Hence, the absence of a brother in her life provided the foundation for the nourishing of he...
Harriet Tubman was born a slave in Maryland in 1820. She was a house servant at ages five through six and became a field worker at age seven. She received an injury while protecting another slave from an angry overseer and was hit on the head. She would fall into deep sleeps randomly for the rest of her life. She married John Tubman in 1844 who was also a free black man.
Harriet Tubman preserved over many struggles. She overcame, having blackout, sleeping spells and seizure. She overcame also overcame being born a slave. She overcame problems with her large family. Araminta Harriet Ross or Harriet Tubman was born in the year 1820 in Dorchester County, Maryland. She was like many slaves including Frederick Douglas who didn't know their pacific birthday. At five years old, Armament was rented to neighbors to do housework. She was never very good at household chores, and was beaten regularly by her owners and those who rented her. She was, of course, not educated to read or write. She eventually was assigned work as a field hand, which she preferred to household work. Although she was a small woman, she was strong, and her time working in the fields probably contributed to her strength.by her fellow slaves. Her parents were Harriet Greene and ben Ross. She had eight siblings Rachel Ross, Lihah Ross, Mariah Ritty Ross, mosses Ross, Herny Ross, Soph Ross, and Robert Ross. She was born a slave her master was Edward Brodas. She married john Tubman at age 25...
Harriet Tubman Lilee Bieker 1st Period Harriet Tubman was an African-American, abolitionist, and former slave. Harriet took a major part in the abolitionist movement during the eightieth and nineteenth century. She escaped slavery to become a brave leader to any runaway slaves she could help. She led hundreds of slaves to the north for freedom by guiding them through routes and hideouts, known as "underground railroads". She was known as the "conductor" for leading slaves to the north.
In 1843, an ex-slave named Isabella Baumfree, heard the voice of the Holy Spirit speaking to her. He instructed her to take on a new mission of preaching the people to abstain from sin and to change her name to Sojourner Truth (Sojourner Truth PBS). Sojourner left New York City where she had lived working as a housekeeper and going to spiritual gatherings for the past 15 or so years of her life. Traveling up the Connecticut River Valley, Truth gave speeches on rights for women and slaves as an itinerant preacher (Voices of the Civil War). Her work as an abolitionist and women’s rights activist made a difference for African-Americans, women, and the Union during and around the time of the Civil War.
Harriet Tubman (known as Araminta at the time) was born into slavery in Dorchester County, Maryland in 1819. Like many other slaves she was raised in extremely poor and harsh conditions. She was whipped and beaten from very early on in her childhood. Before she was considered old enough to work she spent her childhood with her grandmother who was too old for slave labour since her parents were always put to work and couldn’t take care of her. When she was put to work at age six she did not tend to the fields like the majority of slaves commonly did, her master lent her to neighbouring families to work doing chores like basket weaving. She was moved around a bit for work due to her being disobedient or stealing al resulting in beating or whippings. At age 11 she was considered to no longer be a child and she lost her “basket name” and was then named Harriet after her mother. Not long after she suffered severe head trauma inflicted from a white overseer after assisting a runaway slave. She suffered black outs and migraines for the rest of her life due to this incident....
Legendary jazz songstress Billie Holiday once said in response to the exclusion of African Americans from jazz clubs on the notorious 52nd Street, “You can be up to your boobies in white satin, with gardenias in your hair and no sugar cane for miles, but you can still be working on a plantation.” The comparison between the jazz world, or more specifically 52nd Street, and a plantation show the immense racial tension between blacks and whites in the early to mid part of the twentieth century. In the height of the time leading up to the Civil Rights Movement, Billie Holiday was a prominent African American singer who was one of the most well known amongst white Americans. Holiday was tough enough to survive in a racist, phallocentric world where she was frequently objectified and trivialized. However, she was not strong enough to resist the allure of alcohol and narcotics, which ultimately led to her death in 1959. In addition to her usage of drugs and alcohol, Holiday faced many other challenges in her life, which inspired the beautiful music that she left as her legacy. Despite her heavy abuse of drugs and alcohol, Billie Holiday redefined jazz for the world and instated new sense of equality in with it.
Harriet Tubman had many struggles that she overcame such as, escaping slavery and encouraging others to change their lives around after the escape of slavery. Harriet Tubman birth is said to be between the years of 1820 and 1821 but there is no actual record of her birthday was born Araminta Ross to her slave parents Ben and Harriet Green. The specific dates of her. She became a slave at the age six after leaving her grandmother's home on the plantation. She has been planning her escape for many years now. Harriet Tubman was a wise young girl she knew many things about god, at least she thought she did. Slaves such as Harriet didn't have an education on many things. Believe it or not but some of them we're pretty clever with their reputation in educational categories.
another woman. Harriet also earned the name of conductor of the great Underground Railroad. There were many achievements she had like getting married, escaping slavery, helping others through the Underground Railroad and teaching children. She made a huge mark in the history
Destiny McMahon Theatre Pickett, A 10 October 2017 Sarah Bernhardt Sarah Bernhardt was a French actress during the late 1800’s. She was an international star at her time, and made way for many modern-day actresses. She was revolutionary and progressive, hidden behind a well-controlled façade that deceived her critics. Much like her upbringing and lineage, she was controversial and unconventional. Bernhardt proved to be one of the most influential actresses of her time.
A lady of courage and strength, often described as shy in her earlier life, she was the one to raise her voice against racial discrimination. The hero of our lives, Rosa Parks. Rosa Louise McCauley Parks was born in Tuskegee, Alabama in 1913. She was a daughter to a carpenter James McCauley and a teacher Leona McCauley and also a granddaughter to an enslaved person (Rosa Parks Biography). “Rosa McCauley learned this "rectitude and race pride" from her grandfather, a supporter of Marcus Garvey” (Dunlap). She was two years old when she moved to her grandparent’s farm. Rosa attended “the Montgomery Industrial School for Girl” which was a private school “founded by a liberal minded women from the northern United States (Biography Rosa parks). She later grew up as an African American civil rights activists and a seamstress (Rosa Parks Biography).