Wednesday, March 25, 2020
J.Edgar Hoover Essays (1476 words) - American Outlaws, FBI Agents
  J.Edgar Hoover    J. Edgar Hoover was a young 25-year-old when he became the acting director of the Federal Bureau of Investigations. His first federal job was as a clerk in the files division, and he quickly became one of the most respected and feared men in the free world. Even presidents knew better than to cross him.  A consummate politician, Hoover was one of the first to ride the media train to power. He used the media as a tool and he knew that what people read and what they see and hear directly affect what they think.  A brief biography, as an introduction to the man will aid us in the understanding of who he was, and through this we may gain incite into the reasons for why he did the things he did. Hoover was born New Years Day 1895 in Washington D.C. the youngest of three children. He had an older brother and sister that lived and an older sister that died as a baby. His mother, Annie Hoover had the greatest influence on him as a child. She was strong willed and militaristic in her approach to raising her children and running a family. She instilled in him a strong sense of right and wrong, and taught him the work ethic for which he would live by. Hoover was a winner, during his school years and beyond. As a boy Hoover was afflicted with a speech impediment. He was so determined to overcome this handicap that he read aloud for hours a day until he no longer stuttered. Hoover was short and slight in stature but he was athletic and quite agile.  He was a member of his high school track team that went all-American. He was on the debate team and did quite well. This is probably where he got his combative nature. He was also the captain of his ROTC company in college. Giving him the leadership skills that he would need in later years. Hoover graduated near the top of his class from George Washington University with a bachelors degree in Law. (Powers, pp.48-52) With all of this going for him one might expect him to join the army as an officer as other men his age were being drafted to war, but as sole provider for his mother he was exempt from the draft.  He also got his first taste of federal service when his uncle got him a position as a clerk in the files office of the Department of Justice. He quickly rose in the Dept. in part because of the void left by other men his age being drafted. After several successful posts he was finally made acting Chief of the General Bureau of Investigation in 1924. (Bardsley, Ch.2, pp.1-2)  Media coverage came quickly for Hoover as he was involved in several high profile busts early in his career. In the early thirties a crime wave was hitting the mid-west. This gangster era was marked by names such as John Dillenger, Pretty Boy Floyd, Machine Gun Kelly, and Ma Barker. This was a time of depression and prohibition, a time when distrust of lawmen and the government was at an all time high. Newspapers and magazines celebrated the crimes and the criminals. (Bardsley, Ch.4, pp.1) Some of the criminals burned mortgages and loan papers as they robbed the banks, this turned them into modern day Robin Hoods and they were made into folk heroes. His first bust involved the capture of Machine Gun Kelly. Hoover made the arrest at Kellys farm without the firing of one bullet. The newspapers loved it.  They praised Hoover and the articles made up ground in the public trust. The Bureau was taking on a whole new image with the American people. (Bardsley, Ch.4, pp.2)  His future media attention would not be so clean. When John Dillenger, a convicted bank robber, and Public Enemy Number One, escapes from prison another Special Agent, Melvin Purvis, asks for Hoovers help. They set Dillenger up with the help of a local madam and Dillenger is gunned down in an alleyway as he leaves a theater. Again the media swarms over this real-life drama. This time they are not as generous to Hoover with their praise. Purvis    
Friday, March 6, 2020
Economic and Political Developments in the US 1800-1830 essays
Economic and Political Developments in the US 1800-1830 essays    After the defeat of British colonists against the American and French     forces in the American Revolution, which ended in 1781, Americans began     rebuilding their nation by developing stable economic and political     institutions.  This paper will discuss economic and political developments     that paved the way for the Americas or United States become a prosperous     and powerful nation not only in the Western bloc, but in the whole world as           Upon establishing their own government right after the American     Revolution, Americans began rehabilitating their economy, by spurring     agriculture, the main source of income of most Americans during that     period.  What paved the way for agriculture to proliferate and flourish in     the country is through the invention of the cotton gin in the 1790s,     invented by Eli Whitney.  Through the cotton gin, it became possible for     cotton farmers to separate raw cotton fibers from seeds and other foreign     materials in it. Cotton farming became a lucrative market for Americans     during the 1800s, establishing bug cotton plantations in the Northern and     Southern regions of America.  Furthermore, cotton gin farming became the     catalyst for black slave trading and selling to emerge as a new form of           Further developments in agriculture continued even after the War of     1812, another conflict between the American and the British forces.  After     the war, agriculture flourished once again, and agriculture was no longer     limited to cotton gins, but other lucrative agricultural form called "mixed     agriculture," which included plants and animals as primary source of     agricultural products and resources.  Like the economic development during     the 1800s, economic prosperity during the mid-1800s resulted to rampant     support for black slavery and spurred migration, where European nationals     transferred to the US to work as farmers, and eventually live as America    ...     
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