"Transcontinental railroad journal of an chinese man" Essays and Research Papers

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    Chinese Immigration

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    Michael Gillaspie American History Ms. Rankin 15 December 2003 Chinese Immigration In many aspects‚ the motivations for the Chinese to come to the United States are similar to those of most immigrants. Some came to "The Gold Mountain‚" and others came to the United States to seek better economic opportunity. Yet there were others that were compelled to leave China either as contract laborers or refugees. The Chinese brought with them their language‚ culture‚ social institutions‚ and customs

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    The underground railroad helped aid thousands of slaves to freedom but the common image‚ Harriet Tubman‚ checkpoint houses and tunnels from south to north‚ it is incorrect. Eric Foner shatters that image in Gateway to Freedom in which he illustrates the complex narrative of the underground railroad in New York. Foner portrays the railroad not of an organized system going from south to north but rather the combined efforts of groups and individuals that have gone untold with time. Foner writes of

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    Railroad Crossing Safety

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    I learned a lot about railroad crossing safety. At first I did not know that this topic was an issue. But through reading and watching the information given to me related to this issue‚ I learned that it is definitely a danger to drivers and passengers who are involved. From the Utah 2014 Driver’s Handbook it states‚ “As the number of driver’s increases‚ more and more people die at railroad crossings.” As seen in the statistics‚ the number of injuries caused by railroads is continuously growing

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    Did you know the underground railroad was not underground or a railroad?! It got its name by its activities to carry out secret‚ in darkness or disguise. Because the railway terms used those involved in the system to tell how it worked. Even before the 1800s‚ a system to abet runaways seems to have existed. George Washington complained in 1786 that one of his runaway slaves was aided by "a society of Quakers‚ formed for such purposes." Quakers‚ more correctly called the Religious Society of Friends

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    Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America looks at the way that railroad owners found a way to turn that business into a big business and earn millions upon millions for themselves. A majority of the book shows how the railroad owners received lots of money for the corruption and other behind the scenes deals that went on. The railroad for how corrupt it was‚ unfortunately shaped the way America was built and became the superior power that it is in the present day. During

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    also was significant in women rights because women stepped forward and fought against wrongdoing. B. The 1877 Railroad Strike was the first major railroad strike in American history. The strike occurred in Martinsburg‚ Virginia and was led by Monroe Heath. It began on July 14‚ 1877 and lasted 45 days until September 4‚ 1877. There was numerous causes that led to the Great Railroad Strike. After the Panic of 1873 a “bitterness” between workers and the masters evolved. In 1877‚ 10% wage cuts

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    running the Underground Railroad‚ many slaves might not have been able to gain their freedom. Many people didn’t help on the Underground Railroad. According to the Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History‚ “The secretive nature of the operation makes it difficult to ascertain how many fugitive slaves used the Underground Railroad; the most common estimate is 100‚000. Because of the great dangers faced in assisting slaves‚ no more than 3‚000 people actually ran the Railroad‚ but the knowledge of its

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    message. These songs functioned as explicit expressions of resistance‚ encoding messages about the secret gatherings or carrying directions for escaped slaves. “The Underground Railroad (UGRR) helped slaves to run to free a country. A fugitive could use several ways. First‚ they had to walk at night‚ using hand lights and moonlight. When needed‚ they walked (“waded”) in water‚ so that dogs could not smell their tracks. Second‚ they jumped into chariot‚ where they could hide and ride away. These

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    The Underground Railroad A lot of people in today’s modern world don’t know that the Underground Railroad wasn’t actually a railroad. It was actually a series of houses‚ shops‚ and hotels/motels that would provide blacks a way to escape slavery in the south by going north. These buildings were known as stations and the slaves were known as cargo. Between 1815 and 1860‚ it is estimated that 130‚000 refugees escaped the south via the Underground Railroad. The railroad had as many as 3‚200 active workers

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    West was due to the completion of the Trans-Adlantic Railroad‚ of which was completed in 1869. The railroad created a new leash of exsistance in American‚ how the once baron‚ urban land‚ now to be industrialized and inhabited by all those who seek a new life. The Railroad however spelt disaster for the Native American Indian Tribes‚ whose lives were to be devastated by the Railroad’s arrival‚ and pushed to the boundaries of extinction. The railroad provided a cheaper and faster mode of transportation

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