Virginia: Birthplace of America

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Virginia: Birthplace of America VIRGINIA: BIRTHPLACE OF AMERICA Over the past 400 years AMERICAN EVOLUTION™ has been rooted in Virginia. From the first permanent American settlement to its cultural diversity, and its commerce and industry, Virginia has long been recognized as the birthplace of our nation and has been influential in shaping our ideals of democracy, diversity and opportunity. • Virginia is home to numerous national historic sites including Jamestown, Mount Vernon, Monticello, Montpelier, Colonial Williamsburg, Arlington National Cemetery, Appomattox Court House, and Fort Monroe. • Some of America’s most prominent patriots, and eight U.S. Presidents, were Virginians – George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler, Zachary Taylor, and Woodrow Wilson. • Virginia produced explorers and innovators such as Lewis & Clark, pioneering physician Walter Reed, North Pole discoverer Richard Byrd, and Tuskegee Institute founder Booker T. Washington, all whose genius and dedication transformed America. • Bristol, Virginia is recognized as the birthplace of country music. • Virginia musicians Maybelle Carter, June Carter Cash, Ella Fitzgerald, Patsy Cline, and the Statler Brothers helped write the American songbook, which today is interpreted by the current generation of Virginian musicians such as Bruce Hornsby, Pharrell Williams, and Missy Elliot. • Virginia is home to authors such as Willa Cather, Anne Spencer, Russell Baker, and Tom Wolfe, who captured distinctly American stories on paper. • Influential women who hail from the Commonwealth include Katie Couric, Sandra Bullock, Wanda Sykes, and Shirley MacLaine. • Athletes from Virginia – each who elevated the standards of their sport – include Pernell Whitaker, Moses Malone, Fran Tarkenton, Sam Snead, Wendell Scott, Arthur Ashe, Gabrielle Douglas, and Francena McCorory. .
Recommended publications
  • This Spreadsheet
    2014 Location Association Street Number Address Unit City State Zip Associated Dates Associated Police Agency Campus Abertay University Study Abroad Bell Street Dundee Scotland DD1 1HG Scotland Police-Dundee Area Command NO Action in Comm Through Service WorkForce 3900 ACTS Lane Dumfries VA 22026 Dumfries PD Action Martial Arts 21690 Redrum Dr. #187 Ashburn VA 20147 Loudoun County Sheriff's Office Affinia 50 Hotel NSMH 155 E 50th Street 513,703,121 New York NY 10022 AN 11/07-11/09 New York Police Department Affinia 50 Hotel NSMH 155 E 50th Street 513,703,121 New York NY 10022 AN 11/14-11/16 New York Police Department Alexandria City Public Schools 1340 Braddock Place 7th Floor Alexandria VA 22314 Alexandria City PD Adult Learning Center Alexandria Detention Center CBO 2003 Mill Rd. Alexandria VA 22314 Alexandria City PD Alexandria Renew WorkForce 1500 Eisenhower Ave Alexandria VA 22314 11/20-12/18 Alexandria City PD American Iron Works WorkForce 13930 Willard Rd. Chantilly VA 20151 Fairfax County PD Americana Park Gerry Connelly Jaye 4130 Accotink Parkway Annandale VA 22003 4/3/2014 Fairfax County PD Cross Country Trail 6-18-2014 Annandale High School 4700 Medord Drive Annandale VA 22003 Fairfax County PD NO Annenberg Learner WorkForce 1301 Pennsylvania Ave NW #302 Washington DC 20004 Washington DC PD Arlington Career Center 816 South Walter Reed Dr. Arlington VA 22204 Arlington County PD Arlington County Fire Training 2800 South Tayler Street Arlington VA 22206 Arlington County PD Academy Arlington Dream Project Pathway 1325 S. Dinwiddie Street Arlington VA 22206 Arlington County PD Arlington Employment Center WorkKeys 2100 2014 Arlington County PD (WIB) Washington Blvd 1st Floor Arlington VA 22204 Arlington Mill Alternative High 816 S.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction Writer Biographies for B&N Classics A. Michael Matin Is a Professor in the English Department of Warren Wilson
    Introduction Writer Biographies for B&N Classics A. Michael Matin is a professor in the English Department of Warren Wilson College, where he teaches late-nineteenth-century and twentieth-century British and Anglophone postcolonial literature. His essays have appeared in Studies in the Novel, The Journal of Modern Literature, Scribners’ British Writers, Scribners’ World Poets, and the Norton Critical Edition of Kipling’s Kim. Matin wrote Introductions and Notes for Conrad’s Lord Jim and Heart of Darkness and Selected Short Fiction. Alfred Mac Adam, Professor at Barnard College–Columbia University, teaches Latin American and comparative literature. He is a translator of Latin American fiction and writes extensively on art. He has written an Introductions and Notes for H. G. Wells’s The Time Machine and The Invisible Man and The War of the Worlds, Pierre Choderlos de Laclos’ Les Liasons Dangereuses, and Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey. Amanda Claybaugh is Associate Professor of English and comparative literature at Columbia University. She is currently at work on a project that considers the relation between social reform and the literary marketplace in the nineteenth-century British and American novel. She has written an Introductions and Notes for Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park. Amy Billone is Assistant Professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville where her specialty is 19th Century British literature. She is the author of Little Songs: Women, Silence and the Nineteenth-Century Sonnet and has published articles on both children’s literature and poetry in numerous places. She wrote the Introduction and Notes for Peter Pan by J.
    [Show full text]
  • Women's History Is Everywhere: 10 Ideas for Celebrating in Communities
    Women’s History is Everywhere: 10 Ideas for Celebrating In Communities A How-To Community Handbook Prepared by The President’s Commission on the Celebration of Women in American History “Just think of the ideas, the inventions, the social movements that have so dramatically altered our society. Now, many of those movements and ideas we can trace to our own founding, our founding documents: the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. And we can then follow those ideas as they move toward Seneca Falls, where 150 years ago, women struggled to articulate what their rights should be. From women’s struggle to gain the right to vote to gaining the access that we needed in the halls of academia, to pursuing the jobs and business opportunities we were qualified for, to competing on the field of sports, we have seen many breathtaking changes. Whether we know the names of the women who have done these acts because they stand in history, or we see them in the television or the newspaper coverage, we know that for everyone whose name we know there are countless women who are engaged every day in the ordinary, but remarkable, acts of citizenship.” —- Hillary Rodham Clinton, March 15, 1999 Women’s History is Everywhere: 10 Ideas for Celebrating In Communities A How-To Community Handbook prepared by the President’s Commission on the Celebration of Women in American History Commission Co-Chairs: Ann Lewis and Beth Newburger Commission Members: Dr. Johnnetta B. Cole, J. Michael Cook, Dr. Barbara Goldsmith, LaDonna Harris, Gloria Johnson, Dr. Elaine Kim, Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • To Loinplain Ale Facts
    music the country of america record club an ALL 'OU Sez to haveCountry President a dream MULL Honorary cindY Friends of yours, and to PEARL - Nashville made a reality MINNIE to some was stick. Thanks Re cord Club end of the featur- MUSIC of the long Albums, got hold top Country club members enjoy these COUNTRYsichave your favorite reasonable enjoy all to goodness other great and other great stars own andi s at honeststores and you caneow their hit songs, record at savin's- singing regular big-big the top stars in ing can't get I just ingustyou j here,,nI that Roy Acuff prices being around you fun excitement I m Gene Autry so in on it . so MUSIC RECORD been having. let you Johnny Bond I'vrece been chancechanhce in THE COUNTRY pass up a Johnny Cash couldn'tou Charter Member meand be a facts: Mother Maybelle Carter to the ale high give you You'll get Patsy Cline CLUB.loinplain so, I'll just Music albums. them. speeches,thee, Country paying for Cowboy Copas one for fancy favorite body else is I ain't all your everybody way to get half what Jimmy Dean the BEST is just of CMRC is the price the price of "gimmee, Pete Drake 1. The even though albums for that sort quality albums price - 2 fees all them. Roy Drusky Members membership want order Flan Scruggs (Special2.NCONTRACTSRb when you album and SIGN . you want, CLASSICS Homer and Jethro TO order theerrecords GOLDEN they'rem You onto the Special artists and Johnny Horton salesm talk.
    [Show full text]
  • KEVIN MAILLARD SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE of LAW SYRACUSE, NY 13244 [email protected]
    KEVIN MAILLARD SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW SYRACUSE, NY 13244 [email protected] EMPLOYMENT Syracuse University College of Law Professor, 2012-Present; Assoc. Professor, 2010-2012; Asst. Professor, 2005-2010 Committees: Native American Law Student Association Faculty Advisor 2017- present; Black Law Student Association Faculty Advisor 2016-2017; Admissions and Diversity Committee 2010-Present: Faculty Appointments 2005-2006 Visiting Professorships Columbia Law School, Spring 2018 Hofstra Law School, 2009-2010 New York Law School, Spring 2009 Fordham Law School, Fall 2008 Hughes Hubbard & Reed, LLP, New York, NY Summer Associate, 2004-2005 EDUCATION University of Michigan, M.A., Ph.D. Political Theory, (2004) Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowship, 2003-2004 Rackham Merit Fellowship, 1996-2002 University of Pennsylvania Law School, J.D, 2002 Symposium Editor, Journal of Constitutional Law, 2001-2002 Seminole Nation of Oklahoma Higher Education Award, 1999-2000 Equal Justice Foundation Award, Penn Law, 2002, 2001 Duke University, B.A., Public Policy, 1994 Seminole Nation of Oklahoma College Award, 1993 Jack Neely Scholarship, 1991 PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES The New York Times, Contributing Editor, Opinion, Arts, 2014-present The Atlantic, Contributor, 2015-present Amer. Assoc. of Law Schools (AALS) Minority Section Executive Board, 2017-Present Kaplan/PMBR Bar Lecturer, 2008-Present Indigenous Nations and Peoples Law, SSRN, Co-editor, 2006-2014 Alternatives to Marriage Project, Board Member 2009-2012 LatCrit, Planning Committee, 2008-2010 Association for Law, Culture, and Humanities, Board Member 2007-2009 Cooney Colloquium for Law and Humanities, Director 2006-2008 PUBLICATIONS Books and Book Chapters Commentary, FEMINIST JUDGMENTS: REWRITTEN REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE (Cambridge Univ. Press, forthcoming) LOVING IN A "POST-RACIAL" WORLD: RETHINKING RACE, SEX AND MARRIAGE, Kevin Noble Maillard and Rose Cuizon Villazor, eds.
    [Show full text]
  • The Poetry of Rita Dove
    University of New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository Doctoral Dissertations Student Scholarship Winter 1999 Language's "bliss of unfolding" in and through history, autobiography and myth: The poetry of Rita Dove Carol Keyes University of New Hampshire, Durham Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation Recommended Citation Keyes, Carol, "Language's "bliss of unfolding" in and through history, autobiography and myth: The poetry of Rita Dove" (1999). Doctoral Dissertations. 2107. https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/2107 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Scholarship at University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized administrator of University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMi films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps.
    [Show full text]
  • National Geographic Society
    MAKING A MAN | THE SCIENCE OF GENDER | GIRLS AT RISK SPECIAL ISSUE GENDER REVOLUTION ‘The best thing about being a girl is, now I don’t have to pretend to be a boy.’ JANUARY 2017 I CONTENTS JANUARY 2017 • VOL. 231 • NO. 1 • OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY THE GENDER ISSUE Can science help us navigate the shifting land- scape of gender identity? 0DQG\ EHORZ LGHQWLƃHV as IDşDIDƃQH a third gender in Samoa. 48 RETHINKING GENDER %\5RELQ0DUDQW]+HQLJ 3KRWRJUDSKVE\/\QQ-RKQVRQ | CONTENTS ELSEWHERE 30 | I AM NINE YEARS OLD 74 | MAKING A MAN TELEVISION GENDER REVOLUTION: 1DWLRQDO*HRJUDSKLF traveled to 80 In traditional cultures the path to man- A JOURNEY WITH homes on four continents to ask kids hood is marked with ceremonial rites of KATIE COURIC KRZJHQGHUDƂHFWVWKHLUOLYHV7KH passage. But in societies moving away answers from this diverse group of from strict gender roles, boys have to A look children were astute and revealing. ƃQGWKHLURZQZD\VWREHFRPHPHQ at how %\(YH&RQDQW %\&KLS%URZQ genetics, 3KRWRJUDSKVE\5RELQ+DPPRQG 3KRWRJUDSKVE\3HWH0XOOHU culture, and brain chemistry shape gender. February 6 at 8/7c on National Geographic. TELEVISION JOIN THE SAFARI Watch live as guides track Africa’s iconic animals on 6DIDUL/LYH a series premiering January 1 at 10/9c on Nat Geo WILD. 110 | AMERICAN GIRL 130 | DANGEROUS LIVES OF GIRLS The guides also will take In some ways it’s easier to be an Amer- In Sierra Leone, wracked by civil war and viewers’ questions via ican girl these days: Although beauty Ebola, nearly half of girls marry before Twitter at #SafariLive.
    [Show full text]
  • Friendsof Acadia
    FRIENDS OF ACADIA 2013 ANNUAL REPORT 1 2013 BOARD OF DIRECTORS HONORARY TRUSTEES David Rockefeller Diana R. McDowell Hilary Krieger Edward L. Samek, Chair Eleanor Ames Jeannine Ross Director of Finance and Environmental Compliance and Administration Recreation Management Intern John Fassak, Vice Chair Robert and Anne Bass Howard Solomon Mike Staggs Allison Kuzar Michael Cook, Treasurer Curtis and Patricia Blake Erwin Soule Office Manager Ridge Runner Emily Beck, Secretary Robert and Sylvia Blake Diana Davis Spencer Geneva Langley Frederic A. Bourke Jr. Julia Merck Utsch SEASONAL STAFF Wild Gardens of Acadia Fred Benson Tristram and Ruth Colket Supervising Gardener EMERITUS TRUSTEES Anna Adams Brownie Carson Gail Cook Senior Field Crew Leader Moira O’Neill W. Kent Olson Ridge Runner Gail Clark Shelby and Gale Davis David Anderson Charles R. Tyson Jr. Hannah Sistare Clark Dianna Emory Acadia Youth Technology Noah Sawyer Team Intern Wild Gardens of Acadia Intern Andrew Davis Frances Fitzgerald FRIENDS OF ACADIA STAFF Kristin Dillon Abigail Seymour Nathaniel Fenton Sheldon Goldthwait Theresa Begley Ridge Runner Recreation Technician Chris Fogg Neva Goodwin Projects and Events Coordinator Benjamin Dunphey Kevin Tabb Jill Goldthwait Paul and Eileen Growald Mary Boëchat Field Crew Leader Acadia Youth Technology John* and Polly Guth Development Officer Team Leader C. Boyden Gray Jared Garfield Paul Haertel Liam Torrey Anne Green Sharon Broom Ridge Runner Lee Judd Development Officer Acadia Youth Technology Cookie Horner Ari Gillar-Leinwohl Debby Lash Aimee Beal Church Team Intern Jan Kärst Exotic Plant Management Courtney Wigdahl Linda Lewis Communications and Team Member Jack Kelley Aquatic Scientist Liz Martinez Outreach Coordinator Sara Greller Meredith Moriarty Tyler Wood Gerrish and Phoebe Milliken Stephanie Clement Acadia Youth Technology Lili Pew Conservation Director Team Evaluation Fellow Acadia Youth Technology George J.
    [Show full text]
  • Inside • Academe Vol
    Inside • Academe Vol. XIII • No. 3-4 • 2007–2008 A publication of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni In This Issue… Bradley Project Puts Focus on American Identity 2 In Box Pluribus Unum—from many, one. teractive, where more than 60 percent Th at is the name of a compelling of Americans surveyed believe that our ATHENA Preview E new report issued by the Bradley Proj- national identity is getting weaker. More 3 Georgia Launches ect on America’s National Identity that troubling, younger Americans are less Study of Campus fi nds America is facing an identity crisis. likely than older Americans to believe in Climate Funded by the a unique national 4 NEA Calls for Action Lynde and Harry identity or even a on Reading Bradley Foundation unique American To Require or Not to and coordinated by culture. Require History ACTA, the report Over 200,000 focuses on issues E PLURIBUS UNUM visitors have al- 5 Hawaii Regent Urges central to ACTA’s ready visited the Trustee Engagement mission—civic project website and 6 Heard on Campus education and the commentary has 7 Professor Kagan to teaching of Ameri- been widespread. to Receive Merrill can history—and ACTA friend Award calls for a national THE BRADLEY PROJECT ON David McCullough conversation on AMERICA’S NATIONAL IDENTITY endorsed the report 8 New Guide Helps these topics. Citing calling it “the clear- Trustees a number of ACTA est, most powerful Meet ACTA’s Interns studies, the report summons yet, to 9 George Washington, fi nds that American all of us, to restore Education, and the identity is weakening and that America the American story to its rightful, vital Next Generation is in danger of becoming “from one, place in American life and in how we Change at ACTA many.” Underscoring this conclusion are educate our children.” And at the Na- sobering results of a new national poll, tional Press Club event announcing the 10 Alexander Hamilton conducted for the Project by HarrisIn- report, James C.
    [Show full text]
  • National Capital Area
    National Capital Area Joint Service Graduation Ceremony For National Capital Consortium Medical Corps, Interns, Residents, and Fellows National Capital Consortium Dental Corps and Pharmacy Residents Health and Business Administration Residents Healthcare Administration Residents Rear Admiral David A. Lane, Medical Corps, U.S. Navy Director National Capital Region Medical Directorate Colonel Michael S. Heimall, Medical Service Corps, U.S. Army Director Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Arthur L. Kellermann, M.D., M.P.H. Professor and Dean, F. Edward Hebert School of Medicine Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences Jerri Curtis, M.D. Designated Institutional Official National Capital Consortium Associate Dean for Graduate Medical Education Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences Colonel Brian M. Belson, Medical Corps, U.S. Army Director for Education Training and Research Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Colonel Clifton E. Yu, Medical Corps, U.S. Army Director, Graduate Medical Education Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Program of Events Academic Procession Arrival of the Official Party Rendering of Honors (Guests, please stand) Presentation of Colors...............................Uniformed Services University Tri-Service Color Guard “National Anthem”...............................................................................The United States Army Band Invocation.................................................................................LTC B. Vaughn Bridges, CHC, USA
    [Show full text]
  • Theodore Roosevelt Formed the Rough Riders (Volunteers) to Fight in the Spanish- American War in Cuba
    951. Rough Riders, San Juan Hill 1898 - Theodore Roosevelt formed the Rough Riders (volunteers) to fight in the Spanish- American War in Cuba. They charged up San Juan Hill during the battle of Santiago. It made Roosevelt popular. 952. Treaty of Paris Approved by the Senate on February 6, 1898, it ended the Spanish-American War. The U.S. gained Guam, Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines. 953. American Anti-Imperialist League A league containing anti-imperialist groups; it was never strong due to differences on domestic issues. Isolationists. 954. Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico, Cuba The U.S. acquired these territories from Spain through the Treaty of Paris (1898), which ended the Spanish-American War. 955. Walter Reed Discovered that the mosquito transmitted yellow fever and developed a cure. Yellow fever was the leading cause of death of American troops in the Spanish-American War. 956. Insular cases Determined that inhabitants of U.S. territories had some, but not all, of the rights of U.S. citizens. 957. Teller Amendment April 1896 - U.S. declared Cuba free from Spain, but the Teller Amendment disclaimed any American intention to annex Cuba. 958. Platt Amendment A rider to the Army Appropriations Bill of 1901, it specified the conditions under which the U.S. could intervene in Cuba's internal affairs, and provided that Cuba could not make a treaty with another nation that might impair its independence. Its provisions where later incorporated into the Cuban Constitution. 959. Protectorate A weak country under the control and protection of a stronger country. Puerto Rico, Cuba, etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring Literature Second Edition
    Instructor's Manual to accompany Madden Exploring Literature Second Edition Frank Madden SUNY Westchester Community College New York Boston San Francisco London Toronto Sydney Tokyo Singapore Madrid Mexico City Munich Paris Cape Town Hong Kong Montreal NOTE REGARDING WEB SITES AND PASSWORDS: If you need a password to access instructor supplements on a Longman book-specific Web site, please use the following information: Username: awlbook Password: adopt Instructor's Manual to accompany Madden, Exploring Literature, Second Edition Copyright ©2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Instructors may reproduce portions of this book for classroom use only. All other reproductions are strictly prohibited without prior permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. ISBN: 0-321-17979-X 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10–DPC–06 05 04 03 Table of Contents Preface xv Alternate Table of Contents by Genre 1 PART I MAKING CONNECTIONS CHAPTER 1 Participation: Personal Response and Critical Thinking 10 Writing to Learn 10 Collaboration and Privacy 11 Ourselves as Readers 11 Different Kinds of Reading 12 Peter Meinke, Advice to My Son 12 Making Connections 13 Images of Ourselves: 13 Paul Zimmer, Zimmer in Grade School 13 Stevie Smith, Not Waving, But Drowning 14 Culture, Values, and Experience 14 Robert Hayden, Those Winter Sundays, 15 Marge Piercy, Barbie Doll 16 Being in the Moment 17 Dudley Randall, Ballad of Birmingham 17 Participation and Imagination
    [Show full text]