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How Did Dorthea Dix Impact Society

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How Did Dorthea Dix Impact Society
All through history, many people have widely impacted all of mankind. Although there are many events and people that have changed the world, there are few that have stood for what they believe. These people have put themselves last, in which they have more concern for what is going on outside of their lives and in reality. In spite of all their problems, Dorothea Dix, Irena Sendler, and Thurgood Marshall always helped people no matter their age, race, or gender.
Dorthea Dix’s early life, humanitarian acts, and later life have contributed to the way mankind views the mentally ill today. To begin with, she was born on April 4, 1802 in Hampden, Maine. Dorothea was the first of three children; daughter of Joseph Dix and Mary Bigelow Dix (Bumb,
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He was born on July 2, 1908 in Baltimore, Maryland. His father, William Marshall, was a dilettante writer, and his mother, Norma Arica, was a kindergarten teacher. He went to an all black school, and Baltimore had twice the death rate of blacks than whites. By the time he was almost to high school, his parents had earned enough money to live in a nice area and for him to go to a top quality school. Once he graduated in 1925, he knew the entire constitution backwards and forwards. He got accepted to into Lincoln University in Oxford, Pennsylvania. He joined the college debate club, which led his desire to become a lawyer. Since he got rejected to law school of Maryland due to racial segregation, he went to the University of Howard. He and his wife moved in with his parents, and his mom sold her wedding ring to pay for law school (Oyez.com, 1-3). Charles Hamilton Houston guided and helped Marshall with practicing laws (History.com Staff, 2). Before he moved up to the supreme court, he won fourteen of nineteen cases (Housel, 79). Thurgood traveled the US because his name got widely known, and he earned the nickname “Mr. Civil Rights”. In the supreme court, he impressively won 29 of 32 cases. A few of the cases were ‘Smith v. Allwright’ in 1944, ‘Shelley v. Kraemer’ in 1948, and ‘Brown v. Board of education of of Topeka’. As he grew older, his power debilitated, but people still listened to him until he retired. Thurgood Marshall died on January 24, 1993 because of heart failure in Bethesda, Maryland (History.com Staff, 2). Thurgood Marshall has left an immense effect on most people in the world, making them view racism deeper and more

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