Martha Washington Essays

  • Martha Washington

    1565 Words  | 4 Pages

    Martha Washington Martha Washington lived a life full of love and sacrifice. She was born as a simple little girl Martha Dandridge to her plantation home in New Kent; she was married at 18 to become Martha Dandridge Custis. Still yet she was widowed at the age of twenty-six with two children and a land of over 17,000 acres to run on her own. Then she met a gentleman by the name of George Washington and Martha became the figure we know today as Martha Dandridge Custis Washington or Martha Washington

  • Martha Washington Influence On Women

    1167 Words  | 3 Pages

    Martha Washington was the first, first lady of The United States of America and she disliked many parts of this job. But because of her courage, loyalty, and bravery, she got through life. Not only was Martha the first, first lady but she played other roles including being a mother of four, a spouse, a great cook, a leader, and many others. Today Martha Washington inspires so many women to do and accomplish what they want in life. Martha Washington was born on June 2,1731. She grew up in New Kent

  • Biography of Martha Dandridge Custis Washington: The First First Lady

    844 Words  | 2 Pages

    Martha Washington was an amazing woman. She grew up in a slightly better than average lifestyle. Then she became a wife, mother, and then a widow. Martha also became one of the richest women in Virginia. Then she became George Washington’s wife and went on to become the first first lady. She lived to the age of seventy and managed to outlive her husband and many others. Martha Washington also was a part of the American Revolution and helped her husband throughout the war. She did all this and much

  • A Woman's Role In The First Lady By Martha Washington

    962 Words  | 2 Pages

    determined not by our circumstance but by our disposition.” This quote by Martha Washington helps explain that she had a life that may have been full of disappointment and may have been insane at time time yet she would always find a positive way to look at the situation because she knew that she was also a role model like her husband before her. The country we know today is partly responsible because of the role Martha Washington played in her husband’s life. She had courage in the face of fear and

  • First Ladies: The Role Of Martha Washington As First Lady

    538 Words  | 2 Pages

    As the original First Lady, Martha Washington set an example for those who followed after her. Mrs. Washington was the leading woman of the country, and in being so took responsibility of most social events. Though most political deals and decisions were managed by Mr. Washington, Martha sometimes got involved. Martha's personality usually didn't effect her work, but it did set a precedent for other First Ladies. All of Martha Washington's actions as First Lady effected the way other head women such

  • Research Paper On Martha Washington

    1195 Words  | 3 Pages

    Martha Washington Throughout the past, there have been many heroes and heroines. Although they don’t all wear a cape, mask, and have superpowers; they all did something and they all have a story. Martha Washington is one of the many that stood out to me, and her story started June 22, 1731. Frances and John Dandridge were thrilled to welcome their first born child that summer day in New Kent County, Virginia. Martha was a very intelligent young lady, and one of the few women in her time who learned

  • Martha Washington First Lady Essay

    1425 Words  | 3 Pages

    the first lady which also had a lot of struggle and accomplishment. As the wife of George Washington, the first President of the United States (1789-1797), Martha Washington who also known as Martha Dandridge Custis Washington is considered to be the first First Lady of the United States, and often referred to as Lady Washington. She was born on June 2, 1731 on a plantation near Williamsburg. Even

  • Martha and Mary Magdalene by Caravaggio

    892 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Painting Martha and Mary Magdalene is one of the many masterpieces in the DIA’s collection in Detroit. Although there is much more to understanding a work of art then just looking at it. In order to understand a piece, you have to understand the Artist, the time period, and the symbols in that painting that may have very different meaning today. Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio better known as simply Caravaggio was an Italian Baroque master painter born in Italy around 1571. After he apprenticed

  • Released From The Grip Of What He Carried: Freedom Birds

    1162 Words  | 3 Pages

    the work, Jimmy Cross carries letters and two pictures from a friend named Martha. The story tells how "he would dig his foxhole, wash his hands under a canteen, unwrap the letters and photos, hold them with the tips of his fingers, and spend the last hour of light pretending, he would imagine romantic camping trips…" (275). One picture is a black and white picture of Martha standing against a brick wall. It is told how Martha has an apparent neutral look to her, and Cross can't help but notice the

  • Maud Martha, by Gwendolyn Brooks

    2920 Words  | 6 Pages

    constructs of work and families themselves. ("Native") Maud Martha Brown had strong ideas regarding marriage.   She set out to conquer the role as wife, in spite of and because of her insecurities and personal hardships.  Unlike the rose-colored images that enveloped the minds of many traditional (white) women during that period of the 1940s and 50s, Maud Martha set her sights on being a bride under the simplest conditions.  Maud Martha was prepared to settle for being good enough to marry, rather

  • Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf

    665 Words  | 2 Pages

    when George, who is an associate professor of a New England college, and Martha, who is the daughter of the college professor comes home after a faculty party. Although it is well after midnight and they are heavily drunk, Martha invites another couple, Nick who is a new and young professor in the college, and his wife Honey. The two couples continue drinking at the living room of George and Martha's house, and Martha starts complaining about George. She reveals George's failure to advance

  • Pagan Elements in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf

    1119 Words  | 3 Pages

    Pagan Elements in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf "I am preoccupied with history" George observes in Act I (p. 50) of Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. But his relationship with his wife, Martha, seems to lean almost towards anthropology. Pagan social and religious elements in Albee's work seem to clarify and enhance the basic themes of the play. Pagan trappings adorn the whole structure of the play: the prevalence of alcohol, the "goddamn Saturday night orgies" (p. 7) Martha's

  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Letters to Martha

    6058 Words  | 13 Pages

    Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Letters to Martha In January 1890, after two and a half years of depression and mental illness, Charlotte Perkins Stetson began to keep her journal again. Basking in the "steady windless weather" of Pasadena and the support of her friend Grace Channing, Charlotte slowly regained her strength, ambition, and ability to write. Concentrating on a new life on a new coast, her first brief entries express each day's essential details. On January 20, she says only "Began writing

  • The Things They Carried

    913 Words  | 2 Pages

    woman that Cross is in love with is named Martha. She's barely a junior from Mount Sebastian College in New Jersey. Although he is madly in love with her, Martha doesn't return the feelings back for him. This one-sided love causes him to ponder and lose focus of what is really important, keeping himself and his troops alive and well. As he is lying in his foxhole, he looks at pictures of Martha; he can't help to feel, "More than anything, he wanted Martha to love him as he loved her…" As shown, he

  • Can Fiction be Philosophy?

    3901 Words  | 8 Pages

    This paper examines the relation between philosophy and literature through an analysis of claims made by Martha Nussbaum regarding the contribution novels can make to moral philosophy. Perhaps her most controversial assertion is that some novels are themselves works of moral philosophy. I contrast Nussbaum’s view with that of Iris Murdoch. I discuss three claims which are fundamental to Nussbaum’s position: the relation between writing style and content; philosophy’s inadequacy in preparing agents

  • Things They Carried Essay: Strength in The Things They Carried

    973 Words  | 2 Pages

    a stronger person at the beginning of the story or at the end of the story. One opinion is that First Lieutenant Jimmy Cross is stronger before he burns the pictures of Martha. His strength comes from his connections to the outside world. Martha is his link to life away from the war. This is why it is important that "Martha never mentioned the war, except to say, Jimmy, take care of yourself. She wasn't involved" (O'Brien 403-404). She symbolizes all that he left behind, and all that he hopes

  • Edward Albee’s play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

    514 Words  | 2 Pages

    the major thematic concerns are those involving perception versus reality. In the beginning of the play, both couples seem to be average, loving couples of the nineteen-fifties. Even George and Martha seem to be playful in their insults toward each other. Things do not start to turn until George warns Martha not to “start in about the bit with the kid”, after which both of them begin to get more hostile toward each other. Even then, their antagonism of each other did not reach the feverish pitch that

  • Maud Martha

    1104 Words  | 3 Pages

    Maud Martha Gwendolyn Brooks was a black poet from Kansas who wrote in the early twentieth century. She was the first black woman to receive the Pulitzer Prize. Her writings deal mostly with the black experience growing up in inner Chicago. This is the case with one of her more famous works, Maud Martha. Maud Martha is a story that illustrates the many issues that a young black girl faces while growing up in a ‘white, male driven’ society. One aspect of Martha that is strongly emphasized

  • Martha Graham

    642 Words  | 2 Pages

    figure in creating Contemporary dance form was Martha Graham. As of today contemporary still remains one famous dance form as it defines an, different type of dance as it, helps people embrace freedom, help people speak their emotions and also relive their stress. As previously mentioned, Contemporary dance is one of the new dance forms which still continues to be used today. According to marthagraham.org, a person who introduced contemporary dance was Martha Graham who lived between 1894-1891. She helped

  • Gyrating Hips

    680 Words  | 2 Pages

    belong to the great African-American dancers of history’s past. Famu’s Black Archives Museum has a vast collection of African-American artifacts including a variety of pictures of dazzling African-American dancers. These dancers Katherine Dunham, Martha Graham, and Bill “Bo jangles” Robinson exemplify black beauty, style, and grace. Katherine Dunham was born in Glen Ellyn, Illinois on June 22, 1909, to Albert and Fanny Dunham. Katherine was a great dance teacher. Later in her career she was