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Heroes and Good Citizens – Harriet Tubman Hector P. Garcia Ruby Bridges
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Harriet was born a slave in Maryland around 1820 (Locate Maryland on a U.S. map.) slavery: the owning of a person by another person
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Harriet began working all day in the fields when she was a child. She was a hard worker but was considered to be rebellious by her masters and was often beaten. What does it mean to be rebellious? What kinds of things do you think a slave could do to be rebellious?
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She was always willing to stand up for others. At the age of 15, she tried to help a runaway slave. She was hit in the head with a heavy weight and knocked out. When she was 24, Harriet married a free black man named John Tubman, but she still remained a slave.
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Fearing that she would be sold and shipped to the South, Harriet was determined to escape to freedom in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She followed the North Star by night and made the 90-mile trip with the help of a network of people who were part of the Underground Railroad.
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Was a group of people who helped slaves escape along secret routes to the North or to Canada; it was organized and secret. Locate Canada on the map.
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Routes of the Underground Railroad
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Harriet risked her life by returning to the South many times to guide more than 300 slaves along the Underground Railroad to freedom. conductors – the guides who led the slaves along the Underground Railroad stations – the houses, barns, churches, stores and other places where runaways hid along their journey
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Harriet Tubman: Animated Classic http://player.discoveryeducation.com/inde x.cfm?guidAssetId=1B1523CD-0DD4- 4CDE-A06B-1301419EFBCE http://player.discoveryeducation.com/inde x.cfm?guidAssetId=1B1523CD-0DD4- 4CDE-A06B-1301419EFBCE
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http://www.galenaparkisd.com/curriculum/ social_studies/documents/FollowtheNorth Starrdrtheater.pdf http://www.galenaparkisd.com/curriculum/ social_studies/documents/FollowtheNorth Starrdrtheater.pdf http://www.galenaparkisd.com/curriculum/ social_studies/documents/AuntHarrietsSt oryrdrtheater.pdf http://www.galenaparkisd.com/curriculum/ social_studies/documents/AuntHarrietsSt oryrdrtheater.pdf
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A Picture Book of Harriet Tubman – David A. Adler Aunt Harriet’s Underground Railroad in the Sky – Faith Ringgold Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt – by Deborah Hopkinson Under the Quilt of Night – Deborah Hopkinson Young Harriet Tubman: Freedom Fighter – Ann Benjamin Harriet Tubman and the Freedom Train – Sharon Gayle
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How did Harriet Tubman show responsibility in daily life? How did she show courage? Do you think she ever felt both brave and afraid at the same time? Do you think she was a hero? Why, or why not?
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Hector Garcia
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a physician, decorated war veteran, civil rights leader A teacher once told him “No Mexican will ever make an “A” in my class” With the support of his parents who were both teachers and his family, he became educated and fought for equal rights for all Americans.
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He was born in a small town in Tamaulipas, Mexico, in 1914 His family came to Texas in 1917 to escape the Mexican Revolution He graduated from the University of Texas and became a medical doctor.
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During World War II, he served in the Army in Europe and North Africa and was awarded the Bronze Star. He met and married his wife, Wanda, while serving in Italy. After the war, he returned to practice medicine in Corpus Christi, Texas.
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He soon realized that the war did not change how Mexican Americans were treated in Texas. Anglo neighborhoods, restaurants, theaters, swimming pools, and even hospitals continued to be off limits to Mexican Americans. In 1948, he and other Mexican American leaders founded the American GI Forum to improve veterans’ benefits and medical attention for them.
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It soon grew into addressing other problems concerning Mexican Americans such as discrimination in education, housing, health care, voter registration, and employment. As he fought for the rights for Mexican Americans by peaceful means, his life was threatened. Today, the GI Forum is in 24 states and continues to help all Americans in these areas.
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His true passion was in the area of education He felt that education was a way out for those living in poverty. In the 1950s, the American GI Forum began filing lawsuits to help desegregate Texas schools. Till his death, Dr. Garcia continued to support and fight for equal education for all students.
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Dr. Garcia was the first Mexican American to serve on the US Commission on Civil Rights (appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1968) He was the first Mexican American to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom (awarded to him by President Ronald Reagan in 1984). In July of 1996, Dr. Hector P. Garcia died in his hometown of Corpus Christi, Texas.
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Ruby Bridges
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Ruby Nell Bridges was born in Mississippi in 1954. When she was four, her family moved from a farm to the city of New Orleans, Louisiana. When she was a child, African American children and white children attended separate schools. In 1960 the city of New Orleans had been ordered to desegregate their schools.
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When Ruby was old enough to go to school, her family volunteered her to participate in the integration of the public school system in New Orleans by attending an all-white elementary school. She is the first black child to attend William Frantz Elementary School, as well as the first African American child to go to an all-white elementary school located in the South.
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On November 14, 1960, Ruby Bridges was scheduled to enter William Frantz Public School. There was a huge crowd of people surrounding the school, shouting and throwing things. Once Ruby made it into the school, escorted by federal marshals, she spent the entire first day sitting in the office with her mother.
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During the day, parents continued to show up, pulling their children out of school because they refused for their children to be educated alongside a black child. All of the teachers, with the exception of one, Ms. Barbara Henry, refused to teach Ruby.
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She became Ruby’s teacher, and her only student for the entire year was Ruby. Ruby and Ms. Henry became very close, but Ms. Henry’s decision to teach Ruby caused her to be ostracized from the rest of the staff who treated her badly.
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Each day Ruby continued to walk through the jeering crowds of people. One woman threatened to poison Ruby. Another woman in the crowd held a coffin that had a black baby doll inside. Ruby’s mother suggested that she begin praying on her way to school, so Ruby did do this.
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A child psychiatrist named Robert Coles provided counseling for Ruby while she was at William Frantz Elementary. He met with her once a week in her home and later wrote a book about her called The Story of Ruby Bridges.
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By the end of the first year, a few white children had returned to the school, but they were not with Ruby. They had their own classes. Ms. Henry was not asked to return, so she moved back to Massachusetts. She never forgot about Ruby, and the two were reunited in adulthood. Ruby is now Ruby Bridges Hall, and she still lives in New Orleans today.
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She worked as a travel agent and then later became a fulltime mom to her four sons. She is currently the head of the Ruby Bridges Foundation, which was created in 1999. Its goal is to teach tolerance, appreciation of differences, and respect.
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http://www.rubybridges.com/ http://www.rubybridges.com/ http://rubybridgesfacts.com/ http://rubybridgesfacts.com/
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