Sally is a Caucasian female with a polish cultural background, who grew up as an only child in Livonia, MI. Sally comes from a highly educated Mother and string work ethic father. Sally has been married for four years and has two daughers name Evelyn and Emma. I chose to interview Sally because I wanted to know how her environment contributed to her as an adult today. Seeing as I grew up in a predominantly African American community and did not begin to fully learn about other races until I began the workforce, I knew that Sally could educate me on her up bring, cultural and parenting style and how her parents were impavted her as a parent today while acknowledging stereotypes within her cultural. I’ve always admired Sally tenacity, work ethic …show more content…
Although Sally works a fulltime job she makes time to involve her children in extracurricular actives such as danceHer children are in dance school Growing up her mother was always at work and completed 3 degrees while raising Sally. She believes that this is where she gets her strong work ethic. She is considered middle class who lives in a suburban area Sally grew up in a very close knit neighborhood where everyone knew everybody and some of the neighbors also babysat her when she was a child.. Sally is also Polish. She shares a story of how the birthday son was sun in her family growing up. They would start singing Happy Birthday in English and then right after sing in Polish. Since this was something she always did at home, she shared a story of hpw she sung Happy Birthday at school in polish. At this moment, Sally remembers telling herself that she has two options, she can eithet own it and realize other people may not sing the way she do or just own it. Sally chose to own it and says “although I’ve been told that I’m such a sweet person, I ‘ve also been told that I come of a little weird which
year. The girl celebrating has to do many things during the year to prepare for
many Negros who lived during Moody's early childhood. The home she lived with her mother
...les she had set for herself but she feels that she did a good job at her project. She was alarmed by the way that some of her co-workers lived and felt that she learned a lot from her experiences.
While Bessie was young, and her older brothers and sisters started to work in the fields, Bessie took on some new responsibilities. She would now look after her sisters, and sometimes even help her mother in the garden. Bessie started school when she was six years old and walked four miles to school everyday. In school, she was very intelligent and excelled at math. Then, in 1901, when Bessie was nine, her life changed dramatically, her father George Coleman left his family. It was said that he was tired of the racial barriers that existed, and so he returned to Oklahoma (Indian Territory as it was called then) to search for better opportunities. When he was unable to convince his family to come with him, he left Susan and his family. Shortly thereafter, her older brothers also moved out, leaving Susan with four girls under the age of nine. This caused Susan to have to get a job, which she found very soon. She became a housekeeper for Mr. and Mrs. Jones, who allowed Susan to still live at home, and they would also give her food and other handed-down clothing. Since her mother was now at work, Bessie took on the responsibility of acting as a mother and a housekeeper. Every year at the cotton harvest, Bessie’s routine was changed because she now had to go out into the field and pick cotton for her family to be able to survive. This continued on until Bessie was twelve, and this was when she was accepted into the Missionary Baptist Church, where she completed all of her eight grades.
There was belief that she may have had a white father who lived in Louisiana. Assumed to be an only child in the Smith house, she formed relationships with adopted cousins that sought to bring closure to her identity. Growing up in the Smith household, she grew close to her adopted father Orlee Smith, a World War I veteran.
After beginning her teaching job there, she was shocked by the ignorance of the locals. As a young lady, she was not supposed to be intelligent, but her father had taught her well. She was utterly appalled at the lack of educational exposure in Kentucky. She wrote in a letter to her sister, Emily, that:
In contrast to Joy, the other Wes’ mom Mary played a much weaker parent’s role. This is primarily due to the fact that Mary did not finish college and became pregnant at a very young age. She was her children's sole provider but was not ma...
In the 1840’s, the Perkins’ family worked in the brick-making factory, and they were wealthy for a short period of time. Many businesses collapsed and were bought out, so the wealth didn’t last long. In 1870, the Perkins’ turned to dairy farming to get their money. Shortly after, Frances’ father, Frederick married a woman by the name of Susan Bean. On April 10th, 1880 in Boston, Massachusetts Fannie Coralie Perkins was born. In 1884, when Fannie was four years old, Frederick and Susan had a second child, Ethel (Downey 7). Fannie was very close to her family her entire life. She often spoke of ancestors, she adored and their ways of thinking helped her when she had to make big decisions later on in her life.
Janie was raised by her grandmother whom she called Nanny; she never meets her mother or father. Janie and Nanny lived in the back of the Washburn’s house, which was a white...
Additionally, she stresses that the values of her childhood helped her to develop respect for different people. Her father influenced her a lot to feel comfortable just the way she is around her hometown; ...
lived in the time of the American civil war and her mother was a slave
During her early years, according to Dyer, (1983) Anna worked at the Cottage Lyceum with third, fourth and fifth graders. Anna was asked to sign a contr...
that she knew a song that Sethe made up to sing to her children to
Marjane’s mother was one of the most influential people in her life, her mother taught her to be strong and independent. By introducing her mother through the story of her
While in school, Mom didn’t have it to easy. Not only did she raise a daughter and take care of a husband, she had to deal with numerous setbacks. These included such things as my father suffering a heart attack and going on to have a triple by-pass, she herself went through an emergency surgery, which sat her a semester behind, and her father also suffered a heart attack. Mom not only dealt with these setbacks but she had the everyday task of things like cooking dinner, cleaning the house and raising a family. I don’t know how she managed it all, but somehow she did.