Have the students create a time line of when Columbus was born, until he died. Include important dates in Columbus' life like the following: the day he set sail for his first voyage, the day he landed, the day he returned to Spain, dates of other voyages, etc.…
Columbus Day is a federal holiday but many Americans continue to believe is a celebration to be ashamed…
I believe Columbus should be respected as the man who did have the first effective encounter in the Americas, though not honored. He had committed great sins against the Native Americans, and should not be considered a hero. Heroes have ethic morals they follow before and after they had made their accomplishments. Columbus did not show this. Columbus was a navigator who had happened to, instead of…
“In the Year fourteen hundred ninety two, Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue,” ask any child above grade level 5 and they’ll be able to recite these exact words. Growing up as a child in America one is ‘taught’ this over and over until those words are drilled into their head like nothing else. America has been founded on arguably one of the most bloodiest histories starting even before Christopher Columbus ‘found’ America. Christopher Columbus is known to be the one who founded America, as stated in the previous statement, but people (historians, ect) like to erase or omit other key details about his journey and who he was. We know Christopher Columbus as the great man who opened the door for European people to expand and grow. He was a kind person who was graced by Isabella and Ferdinand themselves. He’s essentially a hero and should be remembered as one. In reality,…
“Columbus Day Controversy”, written by Nanette Croce, is a non-aboriginal perspective on the controversy concerning whether or not Columbus Day should be celebrated. The articles states that many Native American decedents and their supporters believe that by celebrating Columbus Day, the entire country is joining in celebrating the genocide of millions of native people in North and South America. An annual Columbus Day celebrations started in Colorado as a period of hope for Italian-Americans. The author argues that while she sees how the Native Americans could be offended, the celebrations aren’t about Columbus. He is merely a symbol to the Italian-American community showing Italy’s past accomplishments.…
On August 3, 1492, Columbus and his crew of ninety men along with two other ships set sail from Spain out across the ocean in search of a spice trail to the East. On the morning of October 12, 1492 they landed on the shore of what is now Cuba. It wasn't until 300 years later in 1792 that Columbus was actually honored in America. But every second Monday in October is met with a series of celebrations and protests regarding this man who is said to have discovered America…
Who was Christopher Columbus? Every educated person knows, he discovered America. Well according to history textbooks distributed at schools at least. Actually, America had been discovered by Native Americans thousands of years before. As a result of European colonization in the Americas after Columbus supposedly “founded America,” we lost the incredible variety of cultures and the impressive achievements Native Americans had developed throughout the millennia.…
In fact Christopher Columbus didn’t discover anything, because there were many people already living in America, prior to his arrival. There is also evidence that Vikings from Europe had landed in America 500 years before Columbus did. On the bright side, the news Christopher Columbus brought back to Europe letting them know there was land to the west inspired many explorers and settlers who came after. Which is one of his only major accomplishment because without him in a way, none of us would be here today.…
According to the history books Christopher Columbus was the Italian explorer who discovered America. However, the truth is he did not discover America, when he traveled to North America there were already millions of people living here. The fact is Christopher Columbus never set foot on our shores. On October 12, 1492 Christopher Columbus arrived in the Bahamas, he also reached the coasts of what is now Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic he also travelled to Central and South America. Christopher Columbus also never flew a Spanish flag in North America. Now the first European settler believed to have sailed to North America is a man named Leif Eriksson and seemed to have sailed west 500 years prior Christopher Columbus.…
Christopher Columbus did not actually discover America in 1492. Who actually did depends on the view of the question. To some, Leif Erikson was the founder, since many say he was the first European to travel to and to see Americ. He settled in ‘Vinland’ about five-hundred years prior to Christopher Columbus. However, in Erikson’s Voyages to Vinland, he tells of a man named Bjarni Herjólfsson, who supposed saw America after being blown off course near Greenland. There is also a rumor of an Irish monk sailing to North America in the sixth century, but there is no actual evidence of this.…
Columbus did “discover” America, but the holiday should have a different name like something that involves the day of discovering America. American Indians already had lived there and Columbus treated them as slaves. But in their times slavery was okay and that’s what people don’t understand. It wasn’t until later we learned that it wasn’t right. We have a day off school for Martin Luther King Jr Day, yet there are plenty of other people who said great speeches who aren’t idolized. We should at least get school off for Columbus Day and think of it more of two different kinds of people coming together…
When one thinks about Christopher Columbus or the famous Columbus’ Day, there are a few pleasant facts we run across. First of all, we “celebrate” Columbus’ Day the second Monday of the month of October. As kids, it is always exciting to have a day off from school and since it is a federal holiday, kids get to stay home. For some adults, it also means a day off from work to take time and celebrate this role-model that discovered America. Columbus’ Day was invented in the United States by the Knights of Columbus. This is a Catholic fraternal service organization. In the 1930s, this fraternal organization was looking for a Catholic hero that kids could look up to and admire. In 1934, after many days on behalf of the Knights of Columbus lobbying, congress and President Franklin Roosevelt signed Columbus Day into a law and made it a federal holiday to honor what everyone thought was a courageous explorer.…
What do you think of when you hear the name Columbus? Everyone knows Columbus sailed off on the Nina, Pinta and the Santa Maria. But what did he exactly do when he got off the ships and went onto the new land? People say he set down his flag and explored the land himself, where as others say he went evil on the natives, making them become slaves and made them do as he said. Well, there's a whole other story waiting to be told.…
Over the past year, American and other nations that recognize the achievement of Christopher Columbus have been celebrating Columbus Day on the second Monday of every October. Specifically, this year’s Columbus Day was celebrated on 9th October. However, the recent article published in New York Times conveys Americans’ losing interest in considering Columbus Day as a certified holiday. According to the author, who asks her audience whether the United States should continue celebrating Columbus Day, people should clearly understand Columbus’s achievement. With it, people will be able to determine a necessity to proceed with this day’s celebration.…
After some researching, It has become clear that Columbus Day is actually quite controversial in regards to whether or not he should be celebrated. Firstly, one of the main points I noticed was his instigation and condoning of slave trade. While I certainly agree that this was terrible, it is also true that it was a cultural norm at this time. Additionally, even though Columbus wasn’ the first to discover America, he did help bridge the gap between the old and new world which led to the exchange of cultures, products, etc. This was important for the development and spread of the western civilizations. It is likely that without his brave efforts, the world would not be the place it is today. Overall, while it may not be necessary to deem an…