Strengths There are many strengths the Virginia Society of Professional Engineers has, one being the number of elite people in the society there are. These elite people have shown initiative and have done great things in their field. Copious amount of members have not only joined the organization for the benefits it provides but also joined for the networking. This is another strength that VSPE has as a society. Due to their being so many members in this organization there are countless opportunities they have to help one another. May it be a reference letter or even finding a new job. Everyone in this organization are held to a higher standard because of where they went to school and this can also help the members find jobs once they have graduated college or are looking for a new and exciting journey in their field. VSPE can help its members do just that. Weaknesses The organization has provided plentiful opportunities for its members which is a great strength that it has, however, there are also many weaknesses that set this organization back. These days it is a great deal harder to recruit members. The current members are on the older side and have been in for many years. To the younger generation this seems like a set back. There are few people right out of college or who have been in their field for less than five years who do not see the benefits of the organization. Due to the older generation being so heavily influential in the organization it is less catered to
People are judged through their actions and characteristics, but racism can easily blur a person’s perspective. In Almost Free: A Story About Family and Race in Antebellum Virginia, Samuel Johnson, a former slave, fights for his freedom with the help of influential white friends he made throughout his life. Eventually he buys his freedom and petitions the court to stay in Virginia, where his family resides. Even after emancipated, he works hard to free his family and petitions the court in their cause. Despite his relationships, family values, and law abiding, Samuel Johnson’s skin color ultimately acts as boundary in his Virginia society.
The Constitutional Convention of 1787 brought together delegates from thirteen divergent states to amend the Articles of Confederation. But James Madison, delegate from Virginia, had other ideas. He set the agenda for the Convention by drafting the Virginia Plan, an entirely new structure for the government. The strengths offered by the Virginia Plan included the framework for a strong, central government which separated powers into three branches: the legislative, executive, and the judicial. In addition, the Virginia Plan had built-in checks and balances between the branches. Madison believed that sovereignty rested with the people, and he proposed proportional representation in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. However,
"Although New England and the Chesapeake region were both settled largely by people of English origin, by 1700 the regions had evolved into two different societies, why did this difference in development occur?"
During particular time periods whichever product rose to popularity, whether it be cotton, rum, tobacco, or sugar, became the means of buying and selling or trading. Two major products that the people of the “new world” depended on during the early colonial times were tobacco and sugar. Both Virginia and the Caribbean were able to be successful and bloom due to these two major products. Virginia and the Caribbean had many similarities as well as differences on how they changed economically and socially due to tobacco and sugar plantations.
In the 15th century, European nations began to explore beyond the limits of Europe and the Mediterranean and England would fail to establish a permanent colony in the 1580's when the settlers on Roanoke island mysteriously disappeared. Almost two decades later after observing the success of other nations, they would make a second and third attempt. As a result, the iconic colonies of Virginia and Massachusetts would be born. Although the dates of the foundations of the colonies are in proximity, the colonies of Virginia and Massachusetts have drastically different political and economic systems because of the reasoning behind their founding, their means of gaining financial stability, and their characteristics of their residents.
Jamestown, Virginia, was founded in 1607 and after 22 years, the Puritans established Massachusetts Bay and Plymouth. These were two British colonies, but they came here with a different ideology and different reasons. Virginia has been used for economic reasons and a place to make a profit, and came very few families came only nobleman. The Massachusetts Bay Colony was more organized, but the Puritans came here for religious reasons. Two colonies, but in different ways what they are purposes and who and what happened in the colonies.
During the 1600s when England began colonizing in the New World, different colonies had their own concept of freedom backed by their beliefs and/ or motives for settling in America. Massachusetts and Virginia were settled for very different reasons therefore life in their settlements differed greatly. The political, economic, social and of course physical aspects of the colonies were not at all the same, yet they both resulted in their colonies prospering and successfully settling the land. The settlers of each colony had searched for a place to express two contrasting beliefs of what freedom meant to them. Massachusetts and Virginia are two prime examples of how freedom can mean something
The Virginia plan, New Jersey plan and Great Compromise were all necessary steps for getting our government to the way it is today. Even though there was a disagreement between the Virginia Plan and New Jersey Plan the Great Compromise joined aspects from both plans to create a government that benefited everyone in some way.
Jamestown, Virginia was America’s first founded permanent English colony. It was founded on May 14, 1607 when the first English colonists arrived and discovered the land. The Virginia Company settlers landed on Jamestown looking to create a colony about 60 miles from the Chesapeake Bay. The settlement of Jamestown was one of the first cultural encounters that planted the seeds of what would eventually become the nation America is today .
What relationships of power are featured in “Virginian Luxuries” (Document 1)? How are unequal power relationships reflected in Toqueville’s distinctions between the three races (Document 2)? What future does Toqueville predict for these groups of people and why? Based upon your own knowledge, how accurate do you believe Toqueville’s observations and predictions were?
Africans were always seen as slaves rather than free people. It came to a point were generation from generation, people with African ancestry were legally enslaved for life. European colonists’ even committed to legalizing enslavement of hundreds and thousands of people, but it led to Africans being slaves based on race. Slavery was a big part in Virginia and South Carolina. The history of slavery in Virginia first appeared in 1619 where the Africans were indentured servants. As for South Carolina, majority of their population were African Americans. 65% of their population of about 18,000 people were African American slaves. Upon the social, economic and political development of slavery in Virginia and South Carolina, it impacted their race, class and gender.
In the seventeenth century, the populace that left England for America were influenced by the prospects that could either help them personally, or the mother country. The English settled in regions in America based on the religious acceptance of that area and ones that offered a preferable lifestyle.
He inhaled deeply, euphoria filling him as the smoke hit his lungs. He couldn’t help but wonder who his enabler was. Who had helped to put these beautiful, yet deadly, things at his fingertips? Tobacco is just one of the many things that the Virginia Colony has influenced in the modern world. Because of its major influence on tobacco, the creation of representative self-government, and its impact on religion, the Virginia Colony has altered America more than its fellow colonies.
With the colonization of the New World came financial, religious, and strategic opportunities. England answered this call in various ways as British colonies began with certain interests in mind. Massachusetts and Virginia, besides being started with royal charters, were planted in separate locations, with unique resources, and by Englishmen with entirely different intentions.
The seventeenth century marked the start of great colonization and immigration to the New World that was North America. Mainly in on the eastern coast of what is now the United States, England established colonies on this new land to thrive socially and economically. The English government readily sent its citizens to America to exploit its abundant source of raw materials and the English people exponentially came to the colonies to start a new life for themselves and to thrive socially. In Virginia during the seventeenth century, the geographical attributes in this region allowed the establishment of the cash crop tobacco to rapidly transform the colony socially and economically. Particularly in the Chesapeake Bay, the goal of social and