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Jean Jacque Piaget

... of the growing mind. One year later, in 1921, he became director of studies at the Rousseau Institute in Geneva. In 1923, he married Valentine Chatenay. The couple had three children, Jacqueline, Lucienne and Laurent. As assumed he studied their intellectual development from infancy to language. Piaget is most popular for his theory of four stages of a child’s mental growth. The first is the Sensorimotor Stage, which is from birth until age two. According to Piaget, this stage is the most interesting because it includes the most rap ...

Number of words: 624 | Number of pages: 3

Lincoln

... . In 1816, the ’s moved from Kentucky to across the Ohio River to Indiana. His father left Kentucky “partly on account of slavery; but chiefly on account of the difficulty in land titles in Ky.” Early on in life had religious reasons for disliking slavery. His family was Separate Baptists who adhered to a strict code of morality that condemned profanity, intoxication, gossip, horse racing, dancing, and slavery. October 5, a little over a year after living in Indiana, ’s mother died of a devastating outbreak of what was ...

Number of words: 1079 | Number of pages: 4

Henry David Thoreau

... A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers(1849). Here, he also filled his journals with materials for his most famous piece, Walden. After he left the hut, and after college, he became a literary apprentice by writing essays and poems and by helping edit the transcendentalist journal, The Dial. When success did not come, Thoreau remained dedicated to his program of "education" through intimacy with nature, and also through writing that would express this experience. It was his life in nature that was his great theme. In order for Thoreau ...

Number of words: 1028 | Number of pages: 4

Rembrandt

... his lifetime. In 1631, when Rembrandt's work had become well known and his studio in Leiden was flourishing, he moved to Amsterdam. He became the leading portrait painter in Holland and received money for portraits as well as for paintings of religious subjects. For the first time, he was a wealthy, respected citizen. He then met the beautiful Saskia van Uylenburgh, which he married in 1634. She modeled for many of his paintings and drawings. In addition to portraits, Rembrandt gained fame for his landscapes, while he is one of the most fam ...

Number of words: 457 | Number of pages: 2

J. Edgar Hoover

... Spence on October 30, 1954. At the time of his wedding, she was a full time librarian. Today, she is his full time research assistant. He attended the University of Colorado and graduated from San Francisco State College in 1957. He is associated with the Democratic party. He had a couple of jobs before he became a writer. He served in the United States Air Force for a few years. He spent one of those in Korea during the war as an editor for an Air Force newspaper. He has had numerous other works published. His most famous is Helt ...

Number of words: 1114 | Number of pages: 5

Walt Whitman And His Poetry

... he became a teacher in a small school. Five years later he took a job as a journalist and was the editor of many New York papers. He studied the French language, and many of his poems contain French words. When he traveled to the New Orleans, he witnessed slavery which in turn “helped him write his poems” according to Walt Whitman. Between 1848 and 1855 he developed the style of poetry he is known for. In 1891 he finished the 30 years of contant writing it took him to write the book Leaves of Grass. The Leaves of Grass basically w ...

Number of words: 695 | Number of pages: 3

Martin Luther The Great Reformer

... was not wealthy but they were a devoted and religious people. They taught Martin about the most important thing on Earth and that is to know God and to do His Will. That is exactly what Martin Luther did later on in his life. When Martin grew older, he became a monk in the Catholic Church and earned his way up in rank through devotions, prayer, and hard work. Martin soon became a priest within the Catholic Church. Martin was a firm believer in God's word and soon began teaching others in the classroom. As Martin continued to read and ...

Number of words: 585 | Number of pages: 3

Abigail Adams

... When Abigail was sixteen, her father added a wing that was bigger than the original building to make room for the children, servants, and visitors. When I say servants it means that they were probably slaves but were called servants to avoid the dehumanizing effect that the word 'slave' can mean. Their house was a sight of luxury in the eyes of the common folk in the parish. Though they lived well, the Smiths had no fortune. Abigail's father often worked with his own hands, planting corn and potatoes, gathering hay, sowing barley, or making su ...

Number of words: 761 | Number of pages: 3

Edgar Allan Poe 3

... praise and criticism by others, can not be compared to that of any other author. Poe was born on January 19, 1809, in Baltimore, Mass., to David and Elizabeth Poe. Poe's father David married an English woman, Elizabeth, who was in the same traveling company. Poe had a brother, Henry, and a sister, Rosaline. Poe's grandfather was referred to as "General Poe of Revolutionary fame," and his great-grandfather was an immigrant laborer who supplied the Revolutionary Army with clothing (Krutch 20). On December 8, 1811, Elizabeth Poe died of tube ...

Number of words: 2967 | Number of pages: 11

Adolf HItler

... Hitler's rambling, emotional autobiography 'Mein Kampf' (My Struggle) reveals his unstable early life. His father, a petty customs official, wanted the boy to study for a government position. But as young Hitler wrote later, "the thought of slaving in an office made me ill…not to be master of my own time." Defying his father, the self-willed boy filled most of his school hours with daydreams of becoming a painter. His one school interest was history, especially that of the Germans. When his teacher glorified Germany's role, "we would sit ...

Number of words: 928 | Number of pages: 4

Jackie Robinson 3

... who stands alone Jackie Robinson’s conquest to break through the color barrier with the help of Branch Rickey has set new standards for all black athlete’s to come. Jackie Robinson grew up in Cairo, Georgia. Jackie attended UCLA where he played baseball, basketball, football, and track. After collage Jackie enrolled in world war two. After the war Jackie got an honorable discharge. After the end of the war Jackie didn’t know what he wanted to do and he was very short on money. Finally Jackie decided he wanted to join ...

Number of words: 1169 | Number of pages: 5

Zora Neale Hurston

... town, which was not disputed, was Eatonville, Florida, which was founded by African Americans and was the first all-black town incorporated into the United States (Cheryl@geocities [online] ). Her father John Hurston was a tall, heavy muscled man who often seemed "invincible" to Zora (Lyons 2). John was a community leader and was influential member of society. His positions in Eatonville included: Baptist preacher, town mayor, and skilled carpenter (Lyons 2). Though John was a revered member of Eatonville he had is faults as well. His eye f ...

Number of words: 1895 | Number of pages: 7

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