Anastasia Hayes by Sensen Yes, I was there at the making of the flag. I was believed to be one of the first people on the goldfields. I was born on the 1818 at Castle, country Kilkenny, Ireland, I Anastasia Hayes (my maiden surname was Butler), was a handy sewer and a true rebel. I helped sew the Eureka flag.
In the Dominican Republic, women were expected to go by what their husbands and fathers said. Women portrayed to have less power and authority than men. In “In the Time of the Butterflies”, the Mirabal sisters showed something very differently, instead they demonstrated the equal authority they have with their husbands. Their power challenged gender limitations that were forced on them by their patriarchal Dominican culture. Minerva, Patria, and Maria Teresa all were sisters who became involved in political movements against President Trujillo.
The Mirabal sisters, also known as La Mariposas, have been known throughout the Dominican Republic for participating in a major revolution against their unjust ruler, Rafael Trujillo. After years of the sisters’ hard-work, along with the others who were involved in the revolution, their work paid off when Trujillo's regime ended with his assassination. However, in order for them to have taken part in this act against Trujillo, the Mirabal sisters had to sacrifice several things from their lives, most importantly, their freedom and their relationship with their family. Many people believe that these sacrifices were not necessary because the sisters didn’t need to go to the extent where the end result would be them orphaning their children. Nonetheless,
Ida Tarbell became one of the most influential muckrakers of the Gilded age. Ida Tarbell was born in 1857 in western Pennsylvania 's oil region. Her town of Titusville and encompassing territories in the oil river valley had been created into a prosperous industry. Then suddenly this town received a detrimental blow. That blow originated from the South Improvement Company, an enterprise established in 1871 and generally viewed as an exertion by Rockefeller and Standard Oil in Ohio to control the oil and gas ventures in that district.
Throughout Arizona’s history many remarkable women have made an impact on Arizona, such as Placida Smith, who taught and helped non-citizens of the United States to become legal; Veora Johnson, who was the first African American woman to have obtain administrative credentials in Arizona and Sister Kathleen Clark, who was nun who created a shelter for children who were abused and neglected called Casa de los Ninos. These are just some of the few important women in Arizona’s history. But one of the most influence and important women of Arizona history by far would have to be Sandra Day O’Connor. Sandra Day O’Connor was born in El Paso, Texas on March 26th 1930 to the parents of Harry Day and Ada Mae Wilkey. She was the oldest of three children;
“And that's how I got free. I don't mean just going to sleepaway school on a train with a trunkful of new things. I mean in my head after I got to Inmaculada and met Sinita and saw what happened to Lina and realized that I'd just left a small cage to go into a bigger one, the size of our whole country’(). This reveal Minerva’s awareness for her surroundings. As she grew older, she wanted to attend university at the capital to gain her law degree.
Imagine you and your family living under a gruesome dictator and having no freedom . Julia alvarez “ a genetics of justice “ is a novel about a young girl and her family living under a dictator with a totalitarian government in the dominican government. In this novel you learn about her journey and how she becomes to be the women she is today . “No flies fly into a closed mouth “is a quote used by her mother through the text. In the novel it also talks about the dictator and is unusual daily life .
Even though Minerva is a rebel she bases her rebellion on her principles. She 's actually really idealistic, always looking for justice in every little thing. For example, when she first meets Sinita she asks if they can sleep next to each other instead of getting assigned beds alphabetically, “Sor Milagros hesitated, but then a sweet look came on her face. Sure, she said. But when some other girls asked, she said no.
When you think of September you think of back to school. Right? We all remember the smell of a new box of crayons. Well in the 1900s that was not the case for many children in America. Labor laws were not fair, but there was one American woman in that era that said enough is enough.
Minerva’s enlightenment was the start of her own internal rebellion. She has unearthed the truth about Trujillo and his ways and now she is okay with
Every historian writing upon a particular topic produces a unique history, distinct from all others, each bringing their own societal and personal contexts and values. This is especially true when the topic being researched is an historical figure – for a person’s true character is many-layered and oft unfathomable – and even more so when that historical figure is Maria Eva Duarte de Perón, former First Lady of the Argentine, and her nation’s eternal Spiritual Leader. Throughout her husband’s presidency and up until her death in 1952, Eva was one of the world’s most controversial political personalities – and remains so. From vitriolic biographies to blockbuster musicals, myriad sources over the years have represented Eva Perón, each doing
Her conviction to the just and fair alone made her career possible, for if she had not been so concerned with morality she would have given up far sooner. What made her so headstrong? Her past, like everyone’s, shaped her significantly.
Lola takes advantage of her deteriorating mother whose illness represents the declining hold of the norms over Lola. Since her mom “will have trouble lifting her arms over her head for the rest of her life,” Lola is no longer afraid of the “hitting” and grabbing “by the throat” (415,419). As a child of a “Old World Dominican Mother” Lola must be surrounded by traditional values and beliefs that she does not want to claim, so “as soon as she became sick” Lola says, “I saw my chance and I’m not going to pretend or apologize; I saw my chance and I eventually took it” (416). When taking the opportunity to distinguish herself from the typical “Dominican daughter” or ‘Dominican slave,” she takes a cultural norm like long hair and decides to impulsively change it (416). Lola enjoyed the “feeling in [her] blood, the rattle” that she got when she told Karen to “cut my hair” (418).
After marriage came a forced and dangerous (due to her age) pregnancy for this pre-teen. After going through this situation seen as normal in her culture, she fought vigorously for the rights of education for young women like
Once she decides to join the revolution, she is fearless in her efforts to end Trujillo’s regime, regardless of her personal outcome. Minerva fought until the day she died, and with her death, a better future for her country was