Dubuque- Henry Ford, a 25 year resident of the Dubuque county area, passed away Tuesday the 10th of April at Finely hospital. Henry had lung cancer and was terminally ill. Born in 1919 in Pennsylvania, Henry received a Bachelor's of Science in Nursing Education from Penn State College in 1941. He continued his education at Clarke College in Dubuque, Iowa. There, he received the status of an LPN(Licensed Practical Nurse) for Nursing in 1944. Henry worked in Dubuque as a registered nurse at Finley Hospital in the mid- 1950s. Henry also worked at various healthcare facilities throughout Iowa. After the death of his father, Henry returned to Dubuque and applied for another job at Finely hospital. Henry worked at Finely hospital until his retirement
Dr. Kolecki graduated from Thomas Jefferson University in 1988. He started training as a Doctor for the next three years at Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia. Kolecki then spent the next three years training at Lankenau Hospital in the Cardiology Department in Bryn Mawr, Pa. In 1994 Kolecki started in private practice while being associated with St. Luke’s Hospital in Bethlehem Pa.
The Ford Motor Company is an automotive manufacturer that was started in the late 1900’s. Many people have run the Ford Motor Company but the founder Henry Ford, he was unlike any other. Henry Ford’s imagination was unlike any other and his brain could come up with some of the greatest things. Until the day Mr. Ford died he created and succeeded in the automotive world and never failed to give to America.
Herman Hudson was born in Biringham, Alabama in 1923 and grew up to get his bachelors, masters, and doctorate degrees from the university of michigan. He had a long career at teaching at other colleges and universitys until the landed at Indiana University. During his time there he established all of the African American studies institues at the college and helped inprove race relations among the community.
Dr. Benson was born in Yonkers, New York in 1935. He attended Wesleyan University and graduated with his B.A in Biology in 1957. He went on to attend Harvard medical school graduating in 1961 with his M.D. Dr. Benson went in to practice but followed his love for research and was part of many ground breaking research studies in what would be referred to as the PNI field later.
This essay is about a man named Henry ford who joined the car industries that got a company named after him and got built the first car the ford modal a. before he made the ford modal a though he make other cars the model t and the model tt. They also built a motorized carriage when they first started the company.Also after that they built some famous cars like the mustang and the maverick. There were lots of other things that were built by him and his childhood will be found in this essay.
Henry was born the year of 1934 in Jackson, Mississippi and still lives today. Sampson was named after his father Henry T. Sampson. Henry was the oldest of two, his younger brother name is John and his mother is Ester Sampson. Dr. Laura Howzell Young-Sampson is the wife of this inventor. Henry attended Lanier High School in Jackson, Mississippi and graduated in 1951 then proceeded his career at Morehouse college in Atlanta for two years. He then transferred to Perdue University also in Lafayette, Indiana where he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering. His fraternity is the Omega Psi Phi. Henry also obtains a bachelor’s degree in science, a master’s degree in engineering from the University of California, and also he has
Wendell Ford was born on September 8, 1924 in Daviess County, Kentucky, and, after graduating from Daviess County High School in 1942, attended the University of Kentucky. Two years later, Ford enlisted in the army and served for two years before his honorable discharge in the summer of 1946 and continued to serve in the National Guard until 1962 (Quisenberry). He married Jean Neel on September 18, 1943; he has two children and five grandchildren (Kentucky).
During the years between 1915 and 1970, some six million black southerners left their homelands in the South to move to the northern and western states looking for a better life.( The Reason why this i so significant to me is during this time period the great moving from one place to another was in effect and during this time period 6 million African Americans from the away from cities South to the cities of the North, Midwest and West from 1916 to 1970, affected a lot city based life in the United States. Driven from their homes by unsatisfactory money based opportunities and marsh separating people by race, religion, etc.ist laws, many blacks headed north, where they took advantage of the need for industrial workers that first rose up during
During the early 1930s, the world was at a turning point from all areas. The Great War had taken the lives of many young men demonstrating how important life was, while the roaring twenties saw men and women waste their lives away from all the parties and social interaction. During this time, many would rise and fall throughout the political world, ultimately leading to the rise of the Great Depression and the ultimate economic downturn to occur within all of history. Many would come to try their best at retraining the United States into its powerful nation. However, only one man would be able to develop a plan that would not only bring the United States out of the upcoming world events and leave a legacy both within the United States and
Henry Morgentaler was born in Łódź, Poland to Josef and Golda Morgentaler on March 19, 1923. His father was a Jewish Labour Bund who later died during World War 2 when the Germans began occupying Poland. Soon after, Henry, along with his mother and brother, were sent to the Auschwitz Concentration Camp. After being moved around between several different concentration camps Henry was finally freed by the US Army in April of 1945 and began receiving treatment for the wounds he accumulated during his time in the camps. In 1947 he moved to Belgium before sailing to Canada in 1950 with his new wife, writer, Chava Rosenfarb, whom he married in 1949. The couple lived in Montreal, Quebec where he studied medicine in the University of Montreal. Soon after receiving a Canadian Citizenship he became a general practitioner who specialized in family planning before becoming one of the first Canadian doctors to perform vasectomies. In addition he and his wife gave birth to two kids before getting a divorce in the mid 1970s. Morgentaler also pursued a short political career in 1972 when he ran in the Saint-Denis riding for the Federal Election as an independent where he finished in fourth place.
On a breezy spring day in 1868 in Childersburg, Alabama, James Ford sat in on the steps of the New Baptist Church meditating on how he is going to support his wife, Mabel, and his daughter, Dixie. He wasn’t sure how to survive in this place since his rights as a citizen were being withheld from him, even though he was no longer a slave after the 13th amendment abolished it. He was a freed man after that piece of legislation passed. Although in the eyes of the white southern men, he was still viewed the same whether he was in shackles or not. As James pondered about the various ways to become treated like a real citizen, the people of the Freedmen’s Bureau begin to ascend the steps carrying crates full
From birth, it’s the experiences that shape who we become. James Farmer was a boy that was the first generation born out of slavery. He was born in Marshall, TX to a father who was a minister and a mother who would stay at home. My intellectual development was simpler than that of James Farmer, due to the time period in which he grew up in that affected his education, the way he was parented and because of the color of his skin.
James Polk was the 11th president of the United States, James Polk was 10 years when his parents crossed the Appalachian Mountains. James Polk was born November 2, 1795. James Polk
In 1891, at the age of 22, Lillian Wald decided to attend nursing school. She moved to New York and acquired her education at New York Hospital’s Training School
Mercer born October 4, 1929, obtained her nursing degree at the young age of 21 from St. Margaret’s School of Nursing in Montgomery, Alabama. Mercer spent her first 10 years as a nurse working in pediatrics and obstetrics. Following this, she obtained her