"What were womens prisons like before the 1800 s" Essays and Research Papers

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    In the 1800s‚ African-Americans were highly discriminated against. There were still many blacks that worked for their white masters as slaves. Most women did not receive education. African-Americans were given a free education until they finished elementary school. Prudence Crandall’s greatest accomplishment was founding the first school for African-American girls. By doing this‚ she impacted the lives of the African-American girls who attended her school‚ the people of Canterbury‚ Connecticut‚

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    The articles that were assigned were accounts from Spanish men who actually lived during the 1700’s to the mid 1800s‚ and their impact on the Indians. They were able to document different situations in which the Natives were exploited or abused‚ although some portions of the readings like the one by Father Junipero of the San Diego Mission‚ or that of Captain Alejandro Malaspina are completely one sided. Both make it seem to the reader like the Natives were uncivilized and didn’t have a fear of

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    Inventions of the 1800's

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    One day Edison’s boss called him to his office. He asked him how much it would cost to buy his improvements. He wanted $6‚000 but his boss offered $40‚000! Edison bought a factory and started inventing. In 1871‚ Edison married Mary Stiltwell and had three children. In 1876‚ Edison moved out of Newark and into Meleno Park. In 1876 Alexander Bell invented the telephone and Edison improved it by making it battery powered. He then invented a lampback out of graphite and it made the signal clearer

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    the world women have often been subjected to fewer rights and to a lower social class than that of men. In most societies the traditional role of the woman was the role of wife‚ mother‚ and caretaker. Women endured this type of prejudiced behavior since the dawn of time until the first women’s movements began to develop during the 1800s in the United States and Europe. These women’s movements are often referred to as feminist movements or feminism. The development of feminism in the 1800s was a very

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    Women Coping In Prison

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    Women Coping in Prison: How Mothers in Prison can Stay Connected to Their Children Columbia Southern University Over the past thirty years‚ throughout every state there has been a drastic increase in the number of women in prison. There are only nine states which have a prison nursery in operation or currently under development. According to the “Bureau of Justice Statistics in 2004 four percent of women in state prisons and three percent of women in federal prisons were pregnant at

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    Slavery in the mid 1800's

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    of shackled and separated families‚ up until the early 1800s as the idea of slavery became a topic to be repeatedly examined. Slavery was not only a practice of owning a person‚ but controlling and ruling over every action that they take in order to benefit at their expense. These black men‚ women‚ and children did not have the same rights as white Americans living among them. In fact‚ they had no rights at all and no freedoms. They were not their own and always had to seek their master’s permission

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    Factory conditions were harsh in the 1800s because they had to worked a lot‚ factories had no heating or cooling systems‚ and there were a lot of rapidly movings machines which workers‚ especially children‚ were often hurt by the machines. There were a lot of other things that were bad about this and these are just a few. Factory conditions were harsh in the 1800s. One reason was that they had to work a lot. Back then the average workday was 11.4 hours and this caused the workers to get tired

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    Essay On Women In Prison

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    that prison life is hard for the males in America and abroad‚ but the women have it a lot harder. Women are soft subtle and gentle creatures that God have engendered and to visually perceive them locked up is a tragedy. All prisoners have a struggle but we will visually examine the role of the female in confinement and how hard it is to get back on your feet after being confined. Even though‚ the struggle for women emerging from prison is a lot arduous for them

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    For much of history women have been considered inferior to men‚ and were treated accordingly. Their role was defined in‚ and around‚ the home; as domestic carer and dutiful housewife. This changed with the Industrial Revolution. As cottage industries ceased to be feasible‚ and were replaced with factories‚ some lower class women began to enter the workforce. The social stigma of working‚ however‚ remained until the early 1900’s‚ when the labour shortage‚ caused by World War I‚ forced employers to

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    Medical Advancements of the late 1700’s to the early 1800s In early medicine‚ the sounds of the heart‚ lungs‚ and organs were few of the only sources to determine if an individual was ill. The act of listening to these sounds‚ known as auscultation‚ was dramatically refined by the invention of the stethoscope. The word stethoscope originated from two Greek words for “I see” and “the chest”’. In the early 1800s‚ medicine had been immensely improved. Scientists and doctors made advancements that

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