Medgar Evers Civil rights activist. Born July 2‚ 1925‚ in Decatur‚ Mississippi. After growing up in a Mississippi farming family‚ Evers enlisted in the United States Army in 1943. He fought in both France and Germany during World War II before receiving an honorable discharge in 1946. In 1948‚ he entered Alcorn Agricutural and Mechanical College (now Alcorn State University) in Lorman‚ Mississippi. During his senior year‚ Evers married a fellow student‚ Myrlie Beasley; they later had three children:
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and a deep interest in the natural sciences. As a young man he undertook a series of adventures through the Mississippi River valley. In 1855‚ he spent four months walking across Wisconsin. During 1856‚ he rowed the Mississippi from St. Anthony‚ Minnesota‚ to the sea. In 1857‚ he rowed down the Ohio River from Pittsburgh to St. Louis; and in 1858 down the Illinois River‚ then up the Mississippi and the Des Moines River to central Iowa. At age 25 he was elected to the Illinois Natural History Society
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In Mississippi Burning and Freedom Song shows two different perspective on the success of the civil rights movement. In the film Mississippi Burning the main focus is on the FBI helping African American achieve justice and prove to African American that they are willing to challenge the police department and clansmen for them. On the other hand freedom song portrays a combination effort of the old generation and the young generation trying to bring the community together to fight for their right
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Louisiana Coastal Wetlands: Restore or Retreat Imagine returning to your Hometown 30 to 40 years from now to find it completely replaced by wetlands. This is the reality that many Louisiana natives living along the coastline of the Gulf of Mexico will have to face if coastal erosion continues at the pace it is going. Costello proclaims‚ “Since 1932‚ when the Department of Natural Resources began keeping thorough‚ accurate records‚ Louisiana has lost over 1‚900 square miles or 1.2 million acres of
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Many opposed the growth of America and attempted to keep Americans boxed in east of the Mississippi River. Prior to becoming a part of America‚ the Louisiana Purchase was used as a tool to halt the expansion of the United States of America. Without the insight of Thomas Jefferson‚ the greed of Napoleon Bonaparte‚ and a Revolution in Sainte-Domingue the deal may never have happened. Thanks to these events America was able to almost double the amount of land that it owned and paved the way for expansion
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Steamboats--especially Huck Finn Famous for both nonfiction and fiction Tom Sawyer was a childrens book set out Huck finn as a childrens book but it became much more serious Other books between children/young adults Wrote nonfiction- Life on the Mississippi Famous as a humorist and he is outwardly a realist Realist-preceding this era was the Romantic era--we saw the individual as a God--that all the potential in the world is wrapped up in each one of us--very optimistic Romantic stories have heroes
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name Mark Twain‚ and much of the substance for his novels comes from real life experiences. After he was born in Florida‚ Missouri‚ on November 30‚ 1835‚ his family moved to Hannibal‚ Missouri. Only 80 miles from St. Louis‚ he grew up near the Mississippi river and large forests. His father
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heading up the parties to attack the enemies‚ which as well he became successful; these war parties would send out only a few men to attack many with suffering only little casualties. In 1804 the Sauk chiefs ceded all of their land east of the Mississippi river to the American government for an agreed upon $1‚000 annuity which Black Hawk and many others did not like very much. They tried to get their land back by making arguments that the chiefs were drunk at the time of the deal‚ this upset Black
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"Tourist ’s Impressions of St. Louis - 1766 -1859." Missouri Historical Review‚ Columbia‚ Mo.‚ July-October‚ 1958 "Missouri Historical Museum" Online. Internet WWW Page. http://www.mohistory.org/content/HomePage/HomePage.aspx "Mound City on the Mississippi" Online. Internet. WWW Page. http://stlouis.missouri.org/heritage/ Reavis‚ L. U. "St. Louis‚ The Future Great City of the World." Gray and Beyer Co.‚ 1875. Scharf‚ J. T. "History of St. Louis City and County‚" Louis H. Everts Co. Philadelphia‚ 1883
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“Two Ways of Viewing the River” by Mark Twain: Response Paper “Two Ways of Viewing the River” is a short excerpt from Mark Twain’s autobiography that compares and contrasts Twain’s point of view as a Mississippi River boat pilot. In my opinion these few paragraphs are pitch perfect as well as technically masterful. The descriptive details in paragraph 1 were especially impressive. However‚ I’m also struck by how universal this essay is a metaphor for everyday life. It is‚ in a sense‚ a comment
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