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American Biographies - Glencoe, People |
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[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ] American Biographies TO THE TEACHER American Biographies are 74 biographical sketches that provide insight into the contributions to America made by people from every era.These sketches are representative of the great diversity of Americans in all walks of life: government, business, and labor leaders; religious, military, and minority leaders; sports, entertainment, and media figures. Each biography includes two types of questions designed to provide students with a basic review of the biography and a critical thinking challenge. Answers to these questions are provided in the back of this booklet. Cover: (flag) PhotoDisc; (Adams) SuperStock; (Hemingway) Topham/The Image Wo rks; (Rice) AFP/Emilie SOMMER/CORBIS; (Bader Ginsburg) AP/Wide World Photos; (King, Chief Joseph) Hulton Archive/Getty Images; (Gonzalez) AP/Wide World Photos; (Wheatley) Bettmann/CORBIS. Copyright © by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to reproduce the material contained herein on the condition that such material be reproduced only for classroom use; and be provided to students, teachers, and families without charge. Any other reproduction, for use or sale, is prohibited without prior written permission of the publisher. Send all inquiries to: Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 8787 Orion Place Columbus, Ohio 43240 ISBN-13: 978-0-07-874949-0 ISBN-10: 0-07-874949-2 Printed in the United States of America. 1 2 3 4 5 6 024 09 08 07 06 CONTENTS American Biographies Dekanawida 1 Amerigo Vespucci 2 Bartholomé de las Casas 3 Anne Hutchinson 4 Nathaniel Bacon 5 Samuel Adams 6 Thomas Paine 7 Phillis Wheatley 8 George Rogers Clark 9 James Madison 10 Patrick Henry 11 Abigail Adams 12 Eli Whitney 13 Sacajawea 14 Robert Fulton 15 Paul Cuffe 16 Prudence Crandall 17 James Fenimore Cooper 18 Osceola 19 John C. Calhoun 20 William Lloyd Garrison 21 Sojourner Truth 22 Sarah Hale 23 Brigham Young 24 Harriet Beecher Stowe 25 Julia Ward Howe 26 Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson 27 Thaddeus Stevens 28 Hiram Revels 29 Chief Joseph 30 Helen Hunt Jackson 31 Frederick W.Taylor 32 Leonora Marie Kearney Barry 33 Samuel Gompers 34 Susan B.Anthony 35 Thomas Nast 36 W. E . B. Du Bois 37 AMERICAN BIOGRAPHIES iii Mary Elizabeth Lease 38 Miguel Antonio Otero 39 Jane Addams 40 William Jennings Bryan 41 Gifford Pinchot 42 Ida B.Wells-Barnett 43 Jim Thorpe 44 Louis Brandeis 45 Alvin York 46 Jeanette Rankin 47 Carrie Chapman Catt 48 Clarence Darrow 49 Marian Anderson 50 Ernest Hemingway 51 Frances Perkins 52 Langston Hughes 53 Benjamin Oliver Davis, Jr. 54 Luis Muñoz Marín 55 Ralph Ellison 56 Margaret Bourke-White 57 Vladimir Zworykin 58 Rosa Parks 59 Flannery O’Connor 60 Walt Disney 61 Martin Luther King, Jr. 62 Robert F. Kennedy 63 Henry B. Gonzalez 64 Gloria Steinem 65 Ralph Nader 66 Norman Mineta 67 Ruth Bader Ginsburg 68 Toni Morrison 69 Steven Jobs 70 Janet Reno 71 Amy Tan 72 Condoleezza Rice 73 Hillary Clinton 74 Answer Key 75–82 iv AMERICAN BIOGRAPHIES NAME _________________________________DATE ______________________CLASS _______________________ AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY 1 “I have established your commonwealth, and none has done what I have done.” At a Glance Together with Hiawatha, Dekanawida framed the constitutional principles for an alliance among the Native Americans of the Northeast, known as the Iroquois Confederacy. Dekanawida is revered as a great political leader and lawmaker among many Native American peoples. the gods had decreed her son should live, she made up her mind to care for the child. As Dekanawida grew up, he saw all about him strife, murder, and war among the various Native American nations, and he resolved to find a way to bring about universal peace.When he reached early manhood, he left his own people to preach his message of brotherhood to the Native American people living in what is now southeastern Canada and the northeastern United States. At some point he allied himself with the Mohawk Hiawatha, and together these two men formulated basic laws designed to end rivalries and bloodshed among their people.Their ultimate aim was to bring together all the peoples of the area into a confederation based on the principles of peace and justice. After long and arduous negotiations, Dekanawida and Hiawatha finally convinced the Mohawk, Cayuga, and Oneida nations to join the confederation. Later the Onondaga and Seneca agreed to join as well, thereby uniting five major Native American nations into what came to be called the Iroquois Confederacy. Long after Dekanawida’s death, the Tuscarora tribe joined the Iroquois Confederacy, making it the League of Six Nations. By that time, however, Dekanawida’s major goals of peace and justice through a union of people had been largely forgotten.The confederation that he had worked so tirelessly to create had evolved into a militaristic power in the Northeast, subduing neighboring Native American nations.The legend of the earlier omen proved true, for among the League’s victims were the Huron, the very people to whom his mother had shown loyalty when she tried to destroy her son. T he Iroquois Confederacy was one of the strongest alliances formed by Native Americans. When Benjamin Franklin sought the help of this Confederacy in the war against the British, few people realized that it had been organized more than 300 years earlier. According to Native American legend, Hiawatha and his partner Dekanawida, who lived from about 1425 to 1475, established the Iroquois Confederacy. Dekanawida was born along what is now the southeastern edge of Ontario, Canada.This was Huron territory, so Dekanawida was most likely of Huron ancestry. Legend says that his mother saw omens at his birth that this one of her seven sons would bring great harm to the Huron people. Placing loyalty to her people over love for her newborn child, according to the legend, she cut a hole in the ice covering a nearby river and dropped the baby into the freezing water.When Dekanawida’s mother awoke the following morning, she found her young son nestled safely in her arms. Still fearing the omen, twice more she attempted to drown Dekanawida, and twice more she awakened to find herself holding the unharmed infant. Convinced that Reviewing the Biography Answer the following questions on a separate sheet of paper. 1. Remembering the Details Where were the Iroquois nations located? 2. Understanding Information What were Dekanawida’s goals? How did he work to achieve them? Thinking Critically 3. Analyzing Information An omen is an occurrence believed to foretell an event. What do you think was the significance of omens to early Native Americans? How does Dekanawida’s mother’s omen help to explain the failure of the confederacy to produce lasting peace? AMERICAN BIOGRAPHIES 1 DEKANAWIDA 1425?–1475?
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