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life hardships
life hardships
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The Life and Hard Times of Grantly Marshall
Could anyone imagine having no money, few friends, and no chance to succeed in life? Well, for one individual this situation is all too real.
Grantly Reed Marshall, a 18-year-old high school student from Franklin Square,
Ohio, had big dreams but little money. Grantly had reached a crucial time in his life. He desperately wanted to attend college. Grantly's siblings were much smarter than he was, as were his parents. None of his classmates expected
Grantly to amount to anything, but this made him more determined.
Grantly's family was very different. They had one light bulb in their entire house. Grantly got his name when his mother read the book Childbirth Without
Pain, by Dr. Grantly Reed.
His father ran for president in 1928 under the Communist Party.
During this period in his life when they usually excluded him from the other kids, and was the poorest he would ever be, Grantly wanted most of all to go to college. The best things Grantly knew how to do was act and recite poetry. He would memorize poetry with more than twenty stanzas in a week and recite them to anyone who would listen to him speak.
Finally, with scholarships, student aid and multiple jobs Grantly fulfilled his dream of attending college. Majoring in theater Grantly graduated Kent State
University in 1972 with honors.
After he graduated, Grantly did act in local theaters for a few weeks and then decided to do to the Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany. Just weeks before he was to leave Grantly's father fell ill and died shortly there after. Grantly knew his father would want him to go to the Olympics anyway so off he went to
Germany. Because he was such a passionate speaker Grantly could speak many languages and had no problems in Europe.
A few people Grantly did know and was friends with began to wonder about him after the Summer Games ended and he did not return. Then, one day Gary Johnson, one of Grantly's only friend's received a phone call. It was none other than
Grantly. It ended up that Grantly loved Germany and he got a job as a German
Postal Worker. Gary had many more long talks with Grantly. These talks did not cost either of them a cent because Grantly always called from the post office.
This did make Gary cautious but, they were never caught.
Grantly, once again started acting and reciting poetry. People began to notice how good he was and Grantly began to make friends with more important people in Munich.
State he got drafted to the Kansas City Royals for Major League Baseball, but instead of going to
a race with his friend Breeca. He knew that he would win with no effort at all,
little money. One job he had would change the course of his life. While a store clerk
saw himself as a "catcher in the rye", trying to save children from his fate.
At the start of World War II, his father was sent away, captured by Germans, and didn’t return until the war’s end.
young and he was living with only his mother and his brother. Therefore, poverty defined him as a
John Marshall was born on September 24, 1755 in prince William County, Virginia. His father moved the family from there before john was ten to a valley in the Blue Ridge Mountains, about 30 miles away. Unlike most frontier dwellings, the home Thomas Marshall built was of frame construction rather than log and was one and a half story. Both parents, while not formally educated, were considered adequately educated for the ties and could read and write. They held a significant social, religious, and political status in the newly formed Fauquir County area. Books were difficult to obtain on the frontier and quite expensive. But it is known that the Marshall home had a bible, almost for certain Shakespeare and Dryden, and definitely Pope who John Marshall said he had copied every word of the "Essay on Man" and other Moral essays and had memorized many of the more interesting passages by the time he was twelve. It is likely that Thomas Marshall was allowed access to Lord Fairfax's library just as his good friend, George Washington, was. And, of course, Washington had a library. Books, while relatively scarce, were available to John. His very evident love of poetry and literature was seen in his later life.
value his wife, Portia. He was never home for her and, eventually, part of her suicide
He helped raise his family and had an effect on sibling and how they were brought up. His two
money and a life full of luxuries. He fell deeply in love with the young
work on his family farm. His mother then sent him back to school so that he could
coupled with the fact that he did not allow very many people to see him,
arms and food he needed money, so he decided to rob a bank. He chose a