For my project so far I have printed out all of my postcards and have completed one of them. It was about the fleet stopping in Magdalena bay for gunnery practice. I am posing as a sailor named Tim on the uss Alabama. Each of my postcards are from a different location and I will be telling of every stop. The places include California Egypt Mexico Peru British Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and Japan. I will tell of the experiences the sailors had at each location.
Library of Congress - Found dates of when the fleet got to different ports
Post Cards - Found the different post cards I used
AVL - Information about hardships on the fleet
Navy History - Found information about what the sailors did a different ports
Newspapers - Found primary source from newspaper article about fleet going to Japan
Monday, January 14, 2013
Friday, December 7, 2012
The Five Points Gang
During the turn of the century with the influx of millions of immigrants, the amount of crime in the cities rose substantially. There were many street gangs in New York through the mid 1800s and early 1900s that made a significant impact on American history. One of these gangs was the Five Points Gang located at the five points near the bowery. This gang was led by an Italian immigrant named Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli, also know as Paul Kelly.
Paul Kelly was born in 1876 and died in 1936. He immigrated to America during an influx of Italian immigrants in the 1870s. When Paul Kelly arrived in America he became a professional boxer and was quite successful. He used his prize money to open up athletic clubs, saloons, and brothels in the Italian district. These businesses became fronts for his gang.
Along with the athletic clubs, saloons, and brothels, the Five Points Gang did some political work. During the late 1800s and early 1900s many politicians were very corrupt. Two of these politicians were Tammy Hall and "Big" Tim Sullivan. These supported the Five Points Gang in legal battles for cost of gang members getting them to vote for Hall and Sullivan. The gang members would stuff ballot boxes, falsify voter lists, and even threaten voters to win elections.
The Five Points Gang was not the only gang that Hall and Sullivan supported, Five Points biggest rival, Monk Eastman's Gang, was also backed by Hall and Sullivan. The Five Points Gang and Monk Eastman's Gang disputed over territory on the lower east side of Manhattan. There many small fights until 1903 when the fighting escalated into open warfare between the gangs. In on incident, it was recorded that about 50 men from both gangs were in battle for hours. Police were sent to get control of the situation but they had to retreat because of such harsh fighting. Three men were killed and many were wounded. Monk Eastman was arrested but was only in jail for a few hours. This is because a Tammy controlled judge let him out after he swore innocence. The public was very angry. One newspaper described how a man in the Monk Eastman gang was killed and an innocent man not in any gang was killed because he was thought to be in the Five Points gang. Tom Foley (a Deputy of Tammy Hall) to Kelly and Eastman that they were to stop fighting if they wanted support from Hall. Peace lasted for about two months until fighting broke out again. Then it proposed that Paul Kelly and Monk Eastman should box to end the fighting. So the two met and fought for hours until it was deemed a tie. The men were pretty equally matched, Kelly being a professional boxer and Eastman was quite large. But the fighting died off in the end from loss of power from both gangs. Eastman was arrested and spent a few years in jail and Paul Kelly died of natural causes in 1936 at the age of 60.
The Five Points Gang started out fairly small but it grew as it absorbed other gangs. The Five Points gang had members that became some of the most notorious men in America. Lucky Luciano joined the Five Points Gang in 1916 and was one of Paul Kelly's deputies. Al Capone also joined the Five Points Gang when his smaller gang, the James Street Boys, was absorbed. Capone got his nick name Scar Face when he got in youthful fight in a saloon. His opponent came up with a knife cut his cheek, hence the name "Scar Face".
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Paul Kelly: Leader of the Five Points Gang |
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Al Capon |
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Lucky Luciano |
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Italian Neighborhood New York 1910 |
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Monk Eastman: Paul Kelly's Biggest Rival |
Monday, October 29, 2012
From watching the movie Faces of America, I learned that many people and things effect your life. During the industrial age millions of people immigrated to America for work. It has been proved that every American can trace routes to back to the immigrants during to industrial age. If someone traces their lineage back to their great great grandparents, they will have 32 people that have effected your life. At least one of these 32 ascendents will have been an immigrant during the industrial age.
I believe America is most definitely a "Nation of Immigrants". The millions of people that immigrated to America during the industrial age left many things behind. They left behind most if not all their belongings, friends, and family. The immigrants also left behind their cultures. When they came to America they were embraced by a completely different culture. This attitude that the people had to pick and go to a different country looking for a better life shaped America very much. These people are why the work ethic in America is so good. The immigrants also
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Cornelius
Vanderbilt was born May 27, 1794 to of Dutch descendants who immigrated in the
1600s. He was raised in Staten Island, New York by farming parents. When
Vanderbilt was in his teens, he went to work for a cargo
transporter. Later he married one of his cousins and they had thirteen
children together. After his first wife died, Cornelius married another one of
his cousins.
Vanderbilt
bought a sailing ship and started a business transporting goods across the
Hudson. He made up a large fleet and destroyed the competition. Then when
steamboats came around, Vanderbilt realized that he could not compete with the
speed and reliability of the steamboat, he sold his sailing ships and business.
In 1817 Vanderbilt became a ferry captain for a commercial steamboat service.
During this time Vanderbilt learned the steamboat industry. By the late 1820s
Vanderbilt started his own business build steamboats and operating ferry lines.
He became so dominant in the industry that his competitors started to pay to
not compete with them. Being so dominant, Vanderbilt made many enemies in the
industry. In the 1840s Vanderbilt built a large brick home at 10 Washington
Place. He was not easily accepted into the elite residents because people
thought that he was to rough and uncultured. I think that the other resident
were jealous of Vanderbilt because he came from and rural back ground and is
now a multi millionaire, they just used his rural background as a reason not to
like him. In the 1850s Vanderbilt launched a steamship that transported people
to and from New York and San Francisco. This was because many people were
trying to get to California for the Gold Rush. Vanderbilt used a different
route than most people and went through Nicaragua. Most routes were taken
through the Panama Canal and around the Cape Horn of South America. This
venture made Vanderbilt $1,000,000, which in today’s money is $26,000,000.
After the
Gold Rush in the 1860s Vanderbilt switched to railroads. He gained control of
most the railroads in between Chicago and New York. His railroad company did
many things to help the industry. It lowered costs, increased efficiency, and
sped up the travel and shipment times. Vanderbilt really pushed the
construction of Manhattan’s Grand Central Depot in 1871. This later became the
Grand Central Terminal in 1913.
Unlike
other industrial giants like John D. Rockefeller, Vanderbilt was not very
philanthropic. One of his only donations was $1,000,000 to start Vanderbilt
University in Nashville, Tennessee. When he died at the age of 82, Vanderbilt
left $100 million to his son William. His descendants also built the Biltmore
estate in Ashville.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Oregon Native American Mascot Ban
The Oregon school board made eight
high schools, this past summer, retire their Native American mascots, symbols,
and names. Since 1970, 600 hundred schools have changed their Native American
names and symbols, and 20 of them being from Oregon. Theses schools have five
years to comply with the school board’s demands. There is a large controversy
over the banning of Native American names and logos. Some people believe that
these names show pride, while other people believe that it is racist and
stereotypical.
The reason for changing these
school’s names is that people believe that the names and symbols are racist and
stereotypical to Native Americans. Se-ah-don Edmo, the Vice President of the
Oregon Indian Education Association told the school board, “It is racist. It is
harmful. It is shaming. It is dehumanizing.” (referring to Native American
names and symbols) The Superintendent of the Oregon school board also had a
remark on the subject. “I do not believe any of our schools with Native
American mascots intended to be disrespectful… Our role as educators needs to
be to create a safe, supportive, and welcoming environment for all of our
students. An environment which honors them for who they are as individuals with
a rich and varied cultural history. We can no longer accept these stereotypical
images for the sake of tradition. Not when they are hurting our kids.” People
claim that these use of Native American names and symbols is no different then
having a mascot be the “Blacks” or the “Asians”.
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Which One is Worse? |
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The Banks High School mascot is shown on the wall of their gym Thursday in Banks, Ore. |
"The Native American Mascot: Tribute or Stereotype?" by Sam Sommers
"Oregon bans Native American school mascots, images" by CNN wore staff
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