Midwest Essays

  • German Immigration to the Midwest

    1214 Words  | 3 Pages

    German Immigration to the Midwest German Immigration: A story told by the ghosts of the past "The day I left home, my mother came with me to the railroad station.When we said goodbye, she said it was just like seeing me go into my casket, I never saw her again." So is the story of Julia B. from Germany and many others who left their life and love for a chance of happiness in a new country. This is the story of the German immigrants in 1880-1930 who risked everything on a dream of better things

  • Leading The Revolution Summary

    806 Words  | 2 Pages

    Leading The Revolution by Gary Hamel Leading the Revolution was written by Gary Hamel and published in September of 2000. Hamel writes a how to book on creating the new dynamic organization. His main theme is that old business strategies are not going to survive in what he calls the age of Revolution. In his premise to the book, he states that he will show the reader how to become a revolutionary in the business world. He completes his stated task by explaining the difference between contemporary

  • Essay On Noble Sissle

    1217 Words  | 3 Pages

    Indiana, on July 10, 1889. His early interest in music came from his father, a minister and organist. The Sissles moved to Cleveland when Noble was 17, and in 1908, before graduating from high school, he joined a male quartet for a four-week run of the Midwest vaudeville circuit. After graduating, he joined a gospel quartet for a tour on the same circuit. 1. Riding the wave of new interest in black entertainers brought on by the success of James Reese Europe, Sissle was asked to organize his own orchestra

  • The Midwest Region

    831 Words  | 2 Pages

    settlement follow certain rules. To exist humans need food, water, and a source of income. These must be found in their environments. The Midwest has attracted people for a long time. Where these people settled have been greatly determined by the physical geography of the region and the ability for the people to obtain food, water and wealth. The Midwest has seen four major, and different, phases of settlement throughout history. First the native peoples, second the French traders, third the

  • Unattainable Things in The Great Gatsby

    804 Words  | 2 Pages

    support one more single man. All my aunts and uncles talked it over as if they were choosing a prep school for me... Nick went to the east to make money.  He was from the midwest, and even though his family was doing pretty well in the money department, Nick wanted to make his own money. By going from the midwest to the east, Fitzgerald shows Nick's desire to have more money.  After spending the summer in the east and seeing how money affects people, he decides to go back west.

  • The Incredibly Usable Cattail

    1711 Words  | 4 Pages

    Africa, Europe, and Asia (Mohlenbrock 1970). In North America, it ranges from the Northeast to the Midwest and also California (Hotchkiss & Dozier 1949). In Illinois it occurs throughout most of the state (Mohlenbrock 1970). Besides North America, T. qlauca and T. domengensis are also found in Europe. These two however, do not occur in Illinois. In the U.S., T. glauca ranges from the upper Midwest and Northeast down the Altantic coast to Florida and into Alabama. It also occurs in California. T.

  • Allen Pinkerton

    958 Words  | 2 Pages

    moral man and despised slavery. The crisis over slavery brought the nation to the brink of the Civil War. The South demanded a guarantee that slavery would continue in the states where it was already established and permitted to spread to the Midwest and West. The South also wanted the North to return any slaves who fled there via the Underground Railroad. The North wanted to stop the spread of slavery. In 1850 the Fugitive Slave Act was passed, which made it a federal crime for slaves to run

  • Fossil Discoveries in Kansas

    1135 Words  | 3 Pages

    state of Oklahoma it is against the law to either hunt or catch whales? Sounds sort of ridiculous when you think logically about it, but according to paleontologists it isn’t that far fetched. Over 65 million years ago Kansas, including the whole Midwest Region of North America from the Arctic Circle to the Gulf of Mexico, was covered by the Sea. Due to the continental uplifts of the mountain ranges in North America during the Pangaea stage, the once shallow sea of Kansas became shut off from the

  • Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy

    790 Words  | 2 Pages

    Blood Meridian The ending of the Blood Meridian is both abstruse and compelling. The setting when the kid first walks into town (pp.324) seems almost too familiar. This town could be any number of different towns located throughout the Midwest, but it seems strangely related to the town of Nacogdoches. The Kid, once thought to be on some sort of migratory movement to the West, has now completed a full circle and has returned to the place of his birth. Birth not in the physical sense of being delivered

  • Robert Johnson Essay

    743 Words  | 2 Pages

    fifteen. Famous blues men; Charlie Patton and Willie Brown influenced Johnson when he was young. At age 17, Robert married Virginia Travis. She and their first baby died during childbirth. Johnson then went on the road. Robert traveled all over the Midwest and all the way down to Mississippi and Arkansas. He married Calletta Craft during his travels. She died only a few years later while Robert was on the road. On November 23, 1936, Johnson recorded his music for the first time. The first song he

  • Spiritual Shallowness in The Great Gatsby

    705 Words  | 2 Pages

    lives the dream purely, and Tom, Daisy, and Jordan, the "foul dust" who are the prime examples of the corruption of the dream. The primary images and symbols used are, the green light, the eyes of Dr. T. J. Eckleburg, the image of the East and Midwest, Owl Eyes, Dan Cody's yacht; and religious terms such as grail and incarnation. Both the character groupings and the images and symbols suggest a second major theme that may be referred to as "sight and insight." The novel contains many images

  • Essay About Family: The Family Road Trip

    645 Words  | 2 Pages

    brother-in-law Al - we live in a world united not by love of justice beauty or freedom, but by variations of the doughnut. If the motor tour is not uniquely American it does unite many different types of American. Trail-blazing drummers thrashing across the Midwest and west outward from the rail lines in model-T's full of brushes and cheap vacuums in search of the previous generations of wanderer/homesteader now in need of household accessories. The airstream contingent twentieth century sun gleaming off their

  • Flagstaff, Arizona

    705 Words  | 2 Pages

    Flagstaff, Arizona Could a town really change me as much as I think? Flagstaff, Arizona is one of the coolest towns that I have ever been, but at the same time; one of the quirkiest. Is Flagstaff a small mountain town, a big city, a hip university town, or a large industrial center? The environment and culture of Flagstaff is extremely diverse, making it difficult for outsiders to find their place in Flagstaff. I often wonder how I ended up in this little town in the mountains. I came

  • Grapes of Wrath Essay: Steinbeck's Powerful Style

    981 Words  | 2 Pages

    They don't give specifics-they give generalities.  The first chapter gives the background to all of the following events. Every-other chapter gives more background to the story.  Whether a massive draught causes this migration of people from the Midwest, or all the families get told to get off of the land, or all the migrants are starving; the chapters tell how all of this happened. Not only does Steinbeck tell his story and put it in perspective, he also gives social commentary.  One might

  • Scott Joplin

    1042 Words  | 3 Pages

    while under the teachings of a German music teacher named Juliuss Weiss, Joplin was learning the finer points of harmony and style. As a teenager, he played well enough to be employed as a dance musician. In 1884, Joplin left home and traveled the Midwest for some time as an intinerant pianist playing in saloons and brothels. He settled in St. Louis a few years later and continued his studies. He found employment there in the city's prostitution district playing as a cafe pianist. Joplin left St.

  • Grapes Of Wrath: How It Relates To The Romance Archetype

    1610 Words  | 4 Pages

    How does California seem to modern America? Violent. Crowded. Filled with bad people. People who live in cities and have lost touch with the earth. These people are portrayed in John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath as Californians. Yet, people from the Midwest flocked to California seeking prosperity and opportunity. Their land had been taken by the banks and turned into cotton fields. They were left homeless and desperate. These people sought to work in the fields where they could eat a peach or sit under

  • The Grapes of Wrath: No One Man, But One Common Soul

    2393 Words  | 5 Pages

    from neither the state of California nor the federal government.  The rage he experienced from seeing such treatment fueled his novel The Grapes of Wrath.  Steinbeck sought to change the suffering plight of these farmers who had migrated from the midwest to California.  Also, and more importantly, he wanted to suggest a philosophy into the reader, and insure that this suffering would never occur again (Critical 1).  Steinbeck shows in The Grapes of Wrath that there is no one man, but one common

  • eugene v. Debs

    2046 Words  | 5 Pages

    throughout Terre Haute. Salvatore writes that, “In newspaper editorials, political speeches, civic dedications and Sunday sermons they assured the kingdom of God had already arrived and that their town was destined to become the center of the Kingdoms Midwest development.” It is striking how the ideals of the Terre Haute community based in religious fundamentalism and a strong industrial economy provided a seemingly Marxist critique of a capitalist system in the 1860’s well before Marxist ideas had widely

  • A Child Between Two Borders

    1621 Words  | 4 Pages

    every race and ethnicity. Hispanics from all across Latin America reside there along with a hodgepodge of peoples from the Lesser Antilles. The mixed Anglo-Americans of Naples are also unique in their own right. They originate from the Northeast and Midwest, bringing with them regional customs and habits that blend together. I have met people who grew up in Chicago but speak with a southern accent due... ... middle of paper ... ...re I'm a part of? The man I am is a testament to my own personal identity

  • Temperature Changes In The Midwest

    713 Words  | 2 Pages

    Task 4 “Midwest” Population – Home to 61 Million States – They include; Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin, Missouri, and Minnesota Temperature Expatiations Between 1900 and 2010, the average air temperature increased by more than 1.5°F. Temperatures are going to keep increasing across the Midwest, with the highest increases in average temperature expected in northern areas. Southern states will definitely experience more hot days, with a lot of days over 95°F and a couple days below 65°F