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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 2.5-page paper discusses the book, Go Sound the Trumpet and the essays that are depicted in the work. This particular essay focuses on four women during World Wars I and II who helped found schools and hospitals and how their work was similar to the work conducted by the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement. There is 1 source cited.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: PG56_GPAtrumpet.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. Go Sound the Trumpet Research Compiled for
, Inc. by P. Giltman 4/2010 Please Edited by David H. Jackson, Jr. and Canter Brown, Jr., Go
Sound the Trumpet! Selections in Floridas African American History, is a selection of various essays depicting the African American history in Florida dating back to the slave trade of the
16th and 17th centuries all the up through the protests of the 2000 United States presidential election. Critically acclaimed, the book draws from many different writers who each put their
own perspective on how African Americans helped shape the history and heritage of Florida. The book is broken down chronologically with the
first essay discussing the history of African Americans in Florida from 1513 to 1821 called Spanish Florida. This chapter deals mostly with slavery and how blacks were treated when they
were stolen from their African homeland. The next chapter is called Antebellum Era, 1821-1861. This essay chronicles the complicated and changing nature for African Americans as cotton emerged in the
south. Furthermore, the dynamic between slave and master is further dissected in this chapter as well. The next section deals with the Civil War and Reconstruction from 1861-1877. Here, the
obstacles African Americans faced after the Emancipation Proclamation are revealed as well as the racial violence that escalated because of their newfound freedom. The next section, which is called, Gilded
Age through Progressive Age, 1877-1914, shows the rise of African Americans who made lasting contributions in various professions despite social oppression and bigoted Jim Crow laws. The next essay focuses
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