There were many stories told about outlaws and lawmen during the 1800s in America, and many of them originated from the “Wild West.” There have been stories and legends about people who robbed banks, committed homicide, or threw wanted criminals in jail. Often, people would stretch the truth of what westerners actually did, to make their tale more compelling. The same goes for a popular stagecoach driver of the mid 1800s, a man named Charley Parkhurst, who is best known for being a woman disguised as a man. It is believed that Charlotte “Charley” Parkhurst was born in New Hampshire around 1812. There are stories that say she was put in a Massachusetts orphanage at an early age and hated living there, so when she turned fifteen she dressed up as a boy and escaped from her old home to find labor, for girls …show more content…
, Realizing that he had potential, Parkhurst’s manager started to teach him to drive stagecoaches, starting with one horse. Charley was soon able to drive six horses at a time. It is unclear where Parkhurst lived at this time, but his fame began when he moved to California in the early 1850s and drove stagecoaches. Charley was best known for being a valiant and skilled stagecoach driver all across the Sierras, for there were the factors of stormy weather and “runaway teams,” or bandits, who would steal from stagecoaches. , Parkhurst was known for his traits of being tough, skillful, and brave. There was one story where Charley was robbed by the same bandit twice. The second time, he was prepared and shot the wanted criminal, Sugarfoot, dead. Nobody messed with Charley Parkhurst’s stagecoach again. There was another story where he was kicked in the face by a horse when he was trying to shoe it. He was then called “One-Eyed Charley” because he had to wear an eye patch over the injured
American businessmen, of the 1800’s, built America to be one of the greatest superpowers in the world. To start, businessmen of the 1800s consisted of men like John D. Rockefeller, Cornelius Vanderbilt and Andrew Carnegie. Some of these men were split by how they got their money; Captains of Industry and Robber Barons. Captains of Industry were business leaders that helped the nation in a positive way. On the other hand, Robber Barons were men that shrewd capitalists, swindled the poor and benefitted for themselves.
This one page explanatory essay citing evidence is about Charley Goddard. Charley was born May 14, 1845 in Lewisburg union county Pennsylvania. Charley fought in the civil war. When charley went to war he was actually only 15 years old and the minimum age was 18 but with your parents permission you could be 17. Charleys mom did not want charley to go to war but he did anyway.
The Shelton gang terrorized the area of Fairfield Il., in Wayne County, during the prohibition era. During the prohibition the Shelton’s got into bootlegging, gambling, prostitution, facts about the organization, and how it all ended in 1945. During the prohibition, they bootlegged their own moonshine and others all over Wayne County. While they were bootlegging and making alcohol, they made a lot of rivals with other bootleggers in the area. Beside just bootlegging they also had casinos for people to gamble at all over southern IL.
The rebel horses reminded him of his home. Charley grew up with workhorses and had come to love them. This would be a happy, emotional moment for Charley and possibly give him a chance to jump back into reality if it wasn’t for the fact that he had to kill the horses himself and feed them to the sick soldiers. Charley was miserable going into a huge battle shortly after that. After killing the horses, Charley doesn’t seem to put any thought into what he does and usually finds himself places he doesn’t know in his mind.
This frightened him very much because he didn’t know where exactly he was supposed to shoot at. Also he didn't know where the people shooting at him were at. At one point Charley had to serve horse meat to his fellow soldiers because there were no cattle to slaughter for beef. Charley had to kill several horses that were meant to be used for war so the other soldiers could have some meat. Charley did not think that killing horses was something he would have to do when he joined the war.
In 1889, Cattle Kate and Jim Averell were lynched and hanged based on the accusations of the two being cattle rustlers. Cattle Kate was claimed to be a prostitute who resided with Averell by the Cheyenne Daily Sun and by the cattleman John Clay, who further stated that Cattle Kate was “common property of the cowboys for miles around.” These accusations against her character made it hard for others to feel sympathy for her, and easier to believe that she was in fact a cattle rustler. What set Cattle Kate apart is that she took up a profession that had been dominated by men, that is, men were the ones in power, men got to decide the rules of the game. Men, in this instance, got to decide that a woman is not capable of becoming an honest cattle “man” and therefore, must have come into the profession in an illegal
All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy, takes place during the late 1940s. It is a story about a young man named John Grady Cole, a sixteen year old who is the last of a generation of the West Texas ranchers in his family. John Grady Cole takes a journey across the border to Mexico, after his grandfather's death, to retain his dream of living the cowboy life that he grew up with. As the story unfolds, John Gady Cole encounters a variety of obstacles that determines if his dreams are meant to be or if his fate will overpower his desires. McCarthy incorporates a variety of literary devices, internal conflict, and tone to achieve his theme of romanticism and reality.
During the Gilded Age, the police was an entity highly corrupt. Also, police officer positions were political appointments. In general, a police officer did not earn too much money for salary, they got it from the extortion, conning and some numerous other illegal practices. Persistently, the police enforcement were extremely ruthless, and they also took the law in their own hands. For instance, they beating and punished people before arrested them.
California was born in the middle of many issues of conflict. Crisis over slavery, political legitimacy, and conflict over land, labor, race and ethnicity ( Competing Vision 132 ).During the mid 1800’s California saw many transformations, some positive some negative. There was a slow reservations development for Indians, but a better established land ownership. With certain political figures, who rallied to remove laws, which discriminated against African Americans and rather high religious tolerance, California was taking a distinct shape.
Margaret Catherine Moore Barry: An American Scout Margaret Catherine “Kate” Moore was born in South Carolina in 1752 to parents Charles and Mary Moore. She was the eldest out of ten children. At the young age of fifteen, in 1767, she married Andrew Barry, captain and commanding officer in the Continental Army. The couple lived approximately two miles from Catherine’s childhood home. They settled on Walnut Grove Plantation in Roebuck, South Carolina.
The soldiers the books talk about are both from the north, so we never truly understand what the southern soldiers are thinking or going through. Henry and Charley were both volunteers for the union. The soldiers, both had injuries, even though they got them in different ways they still had injuries while being it the union army. Where there are so many resemblances that this is what it is like for most of the soldiers.
In All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy, the main protagonist, John Grady Cole, exiles himself to Mexico when his known and beloved way of life is threatened. This experience to him was both alienating and enriching. He gets to where he is going only to have everything he has worked for taken from his hands. He is left alone and sad, but full of new insights about the world around him. John’s relationship with and the death of Jimmy Blevins, his love for Alejandra and her abandoning him, and his lost position at the hacienda ranch are three main events that leave John alienated, but enriched with worldly ideas and understandings he would take to the grave.
He cannot get over what had happened. The only way for it to be cured is for him to think about the pretty things about what happened before he left. He can think about the girls, and the Southern summer mornings and the cheering children. As Charley lives out his life he will never forget what happened to him. He will never forget what he saw, what he did, etc.
Throughout “All the Pretty Horses” by Cormac McCarthy, the main character John Grady Cole is submitted to many evils as he tries to find his own place in the world. In his own personal quest for a happy ending, John represents the idealized cowboy of the Old Wild West uncovering the truth of the violent and deadly landscape he encounters. John Grady attempts to mesh together his romanticised cowboy honor code into a land that concedes nothing to nobility and the only winner is the one who survives. Only through his many trials and beatings does John Grady begin to accept the world for what it is, a place that does not contain only pretty horses; however, he still manages to remain true to himself and what he believes in. From the beginning of “All the Pretty Horses,” John Grady Cole faces threats from the modern world towards the cowboy life he admires so much.
Throughout the 19th century Native Americans were treated far less than respectful by the United States’ government. This was the time when the United States wanted to expand and grow rapidly as a land, and to achieve this goal, the Native Americans were “pushed” westward. It was a memorable and tricky time in the Natives’ history, and the US government made many treatments with the Native Americans, making big changes on the Indian nation. Native Americans wanted to live peacefully with the white men, but the result of treatments and agreements was not quite peaceful. This precedent of mistreatment of minorities began with Andrew Jackson’s indian removal policies to the tribes of Oklahoma (specifically the Cherokee indians) in 1829 because of the lack of respect given to the indians during the removal laws.