Benson Stolworthy, Hiatt Sargeant, Alex Barr, Jensen Horlacher Megan Sanderson Lizzie Borden Case Closing arguments 12 March 2024 Lizzie Borden, Innocent The case of Lizzy Borden is a long-enduring mystery. In this report, we will be making a case for her innocence. Some of the key pieces of evidence to consider include her lack of motive, the fact that she never actually purchased any acidic substances, and Evidence#3. All of this evidence and more we will cover in the contents of this document. Would Lizzie Borden murder her loving father and stepmother for no reason?…
“No dead woman has done more for the living.” Hilary Mantel. On August 1, 1920 an unknowingly important person was born. Her name was Henrietta Lacks, or as most know her as HeLa; the line of cells created with the tumor cells from her body. Over sixty years ago, very important cells were extracted from a patient without their knowledge at the John Hopkins Hospital for black patients.…
Lizzie Borden was one of the famous murdered cases in the United States. On August 4, 1892 she was accused of committing a double parricide. Lizzie Borden grew up in Fall Rivers, Massachusetts. Her father Andrew Borden was a very hardworking respected man in the community. He was wealthy and had a few luxuries.…
Argumentative Essay How is medical treatment towards African Americans in 1951 different during today’s time period? The public interpretation would be different in 1951 in some ways like medical treatment and discrimination. However, it would also be different by the advances we have during this time. In the book The immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks By Rebecca Skloot It had talked about, when Henrietta had first gotten Cervical cancer.…
In fact, the paper wrote it in the article, they also wrote about the reaction of the people and the town. The paper wrote cruel articles about Lizzie Borden. Some papers stated that she was an odd…
Abby and Andrew Borden were murdered on August 4th, 1892 in their home. For example, on August 11, 1892 Lizzie Borden was arrested in Fall River for the murder of her father and stepmother. I think Lizzie did it because her sisters caught her burning a dress…
Henrietta Lacks is the name of an African American woman who died from an aggressive form of cervical cancer in 1951. She is described as beautiful, strong, stubborn, full of life, and incredibly loving. Henrietta was married to a man named David Lacks, whom they call Day, and she was the mother of Lawrence, Elsie, Sonny, Deborah, and Joe Lacks. After having Deborah, she noticed that she had a lump inside of her. She decided to tell a few close friends and they suggested that she could be “pregnant outside of the womb” or that maybe it was the “bad blood David sometimes brought home after nights with other women” (Skloot 14).…
Lizzie Borden was considered guilty and there are many clues that were used to prove this. For example, she used different alibis when she was asker were she was. Some thing she was just trying to cobe for someone…
In 1950’s Maryland, segregation was at it’s height-Jim Crow laws were in effect, schools were separate but equal, and the Klu Klux Klan had a mainstream following. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks tells the story of Henrietta Lacks, a black woman, whose cancer cells were taken from her without her permission. Though her lifespan only amounted to 31 years, the effect of her immortal cells will last an eternity. Although Henrietta was an African American woman, she received the best treatment available for her cancer at the time; however, her race affected her life greatly. Contrary to popular beliefs, Henrietta Lack’s race had little effect on her cells and the way she was treated in the hospital, in fact, she was given the best treatment that was available at the time.…
Segregation has had a strong presence in U.S history. In her life, Henrietta Lacks was greatly affected by segregation. Segregation was a major issue in the 19th century, it focused on the discrimination and separation of blacks from whites. This meant blacks where not equal members of society. Henrietta was born was born August 1, 1920 in Roanoke Virginia, A poor African American woman who after her mother death moved in with her grandfather to a cabin.…
Lizzie Borden killed her parents. Lizzie was the only other person in her house when her mom was murdered, her dad was running errands, her sister out of town and the maid was outside cleaning the windows. The maid said she heard Lizzie laugh around 10:30 as she was upstairs, which isn’t long after the murder took place. Lizzie was found burning one of her dresses and when asked what was on it she said paint which was really blood, she burned a dress with paint on it besides just throwing it away. You could argue that Lizzie didn’t kill her parents but Lizzie wouldn’t of been the only one in the house at the time of the murder, heard laughing upstairs not long after the murder took place and found burning the dress she wore on the day of the…
The Birth of HeLa What are your initial thoughts when the word ethics is mentioned? Some ideas that come to mind most likely may be guidelines, rules, behavioral conduct, the difference between what is acceptable or unacceptable, or simply just some type of establishment between what is right and what is wrong. Ethics is defined as the system or code of conduct and morals advocated by a particular individual or group (Towsley-Cook & Young, 2007). In The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, a beautiful, uneducated, African American tobacco farmer developed cervical cancer from which cell samples were taken during her treatment.…
It was during the Great Depression that the two crime obsessed lovers, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, went on their two year crime spree. To their advantage they used the fact that the attitude of the United States was against the government. The notorious duo of Bonnie and Clyde rebelled against the government, thrived for power, and rampaged across the country going through anyone and anything that got in their way. Bonnie Parker was born on October 1, 1910, in the small town of Rowena, Texas, which had a population close to 500 (Rosenberg). She was the second of 3 children and her father was a bricklayer, but when he died in 1914, her mother moved the family to Cement City, Texas, which is now part of Dallas.…
An African American abolitionist and women’s right activist, Sojourner Truth. Sojourner Truth’s real name is Isabella Baumfree. Truth was born into slavery in Swartekill, Ulster County, New York. Truth escaped with her daughter out of slavery in 1826 and 2 years later in 1828 she went to court to get her son. Truth became the first black woman to win such a case against a white person.…
African-American activist Rosa Parks was born on February 4, 1913, in Tuskegee, Alabama. Her refusal to surrender her seat to a white man on a Montgomery, Alabama transport caused one of the biggest bus boycott controversy. The city of Montgomery had no choice but to withhold the law requiring isolation on city transports. Rosa Parks receive numerous honors among her lifetime, including the NAACP 's most female courage honor. Rosa Parks ' adolescence carried her initial encounters with racial segregation and activism for racial balance.…