Showing posts with label Walker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walker. Show all posts

April 11 - Juan Santamaria Day in Costa Rica

Posted on April 11, 2021

This is an update of my post published on April 11, 2010:




Did you know that a private American citizen overthrew the country of Nicaragua and tried to conquer other nations of Central
 America, too? William Walker wanted to form a private slave-holding empire!

(This was in 1856, shortly before the U.S. Civil War.
)





Costa Rica's national hero Juan Santamaria died during a battle at Rivas, Costa Rica, against William Walker's forces. Santamaria was (some sources say) able to light a hostel on fire before he died, and by eliminating the hostel and its superior firing position, he turned the tide of the battle, leading to Costa Rica's victory.



In 1860 William Walker was captured and executed in another Central American country, Honduras.



A person who takes this kind of unauthorized military action—when a citizen of the U.S. mounts an attack on another country, without U.S. government knowledge or support, in order to create or further a revolution, they are called a filibuster. According to Wikipedia, filibusters created revolutions for financial gain, for their political ideals, or just for adventure.

In Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,
Jimmy Stewart talks and talks and talks...

Later the term filibuster was used figuratively for the political act of one person talking and talking and talking in the U.S. Senate and thereby single-handedly delaying or preventing a vote on a particular bill. And recently the Senators doing a filibuster actually just threaten to talk and talk and talk - they don't even bother to put the hard work in to delay or kill a bill!

Nowadays (thank goodness!) we don't have American citizens randomly trying to overthrow other governments through military force, so the term filibuster is used almost entirely for the Senatorial maneuver; and a lot of citizen of the U.S. want THAT kind of filibuster gone, too.

Learn a bit about Juan Santamaria

Santamaria was a poor laborer and the son of a single mother. He answered the call by the Costa Rican president to fight against William Walker's attack, joining the army as a drummer boy.

He was nicknamed “the Porcupine” (el erizo) because of his spiked hair.


When he volunteered to do the dangerous task that got him killed, Santamaria asked that, if he died, others would take care of his mother. The Costa Rican government did give his mother a pension for the rest of her life. Perhaps she was comforted in her loss by the fact that her son is one of very few Costa Rican heroes honored by statues, an airport named for him, and a national day.


Learn a Bit About Costa Rica


This nation in Central America lies just north of Panama. It is one of the most stable and peaceful of the Central American countries, with a higher literacy rate and better economy than most. It is the oldest democracy in Latin America and is ranked the “greenest” or most ecologically-minded country in Latin America.

The official language is Spanish.

Check out some of the beauties of Costa Rica and its rainforests:






All sea turtle species are endangered. Here is a YouTube video about kids helping to save sea turtles in Costa Rica. It's in Spanish (very rapid Spanish!), so I just enjoyed the footage of kids with the lumbering mama turtle and countless hatchlings.


Eco-tourism is important to Costa Rica. This includes visitors
who want to experience the rainforest and the incredible animals that live there. Learn about the rainforest at Kids Saving the Rainforest. Be sure to take a look at the baby animals the organization has rehabilitated, here

At Kids National Geographic, check out this Costa Rican frog that looks like Kermit the Frog!


Speaking of frogs, learn about frogs at KidZone. You could also label this diagram of a frog.







December 23 – Happy Birthday, Madame C. J. Walker

Posted on December 23, 2016


Born Sarah Breedlove on this date 1867, in Louisiana, Madame C. J. Walker became "the most" in several categories:

She was the first self-made female millionaire in the U.S.

She was one of the wealthiest African American women of her time.

She was one of the most successful African American business owners of all time!

There was no indication from the start of Walker's life that she would become so mostiest! She was the first in her family to be born into freedom (her parents and older siblings were all enslaved), and she was an orphan by age seven. She went to work as a domestic (maid) when she was ten years old, and she married at a shockingly young age -- 14! She had a baby girl, and her husband died when that daughter was only two years old.

So...things were hard!

Sarah was living in Missouri, working as a laundress, and determined to make enough money to provide her daughter with an education. She was experiencing skin and hair problems - a common thing for poor women and for black women - but she was learning about hair from her barber brothers, and eventually she began to sell hair products as a commission agent. At that point, she began to fiddle around with products, experimenting with what worked or didn't work for her own hair, and she ended up developing her own line. 

At that point, marriage had given her the Walker name, and so Sarah's products became Madame C. J. Walker's hair care products.

How did Walker build her business? She sold her products door-to-door and taught other black women how to groom their hair. She ran a mail-order operation. She traveled with her husband to expand the business. Together they relocated and opened a beauty salon. They opened a college and began to train "hair culturists." They expanded to a second office and beauty salon.

Eventually, Walker built a factory, hair salon, beauty school, and even a laboratory to help her develop better and better products. 

Walker worked with her husband and her grown daughter, but she also of course hired many people to work in her growing business. She hired a lot of women, including for management positions. 

Walker did a lot of charitable works, including raising money to start a branch of the YMCA, establishing scholarships to the Tuskegee Institute, and contributing money to schools and projects started by other African Americans. She was also active in politics and the NAACP.

Madame C. J. Walker died too soon, at age 51, from high blood pressure. She willed a lot of money to orphanages and institutions and directed that her profits made from her estate would continue to support charities.





Also on this date:






























































Plan ahead:

Check out my Pinterest pages on:

And here are my Pinterest boards for:

November 26 – How to Keep Your Medal of Honor

Posted on November 26, 2014

Today is the birthday of Mary Edwards Walker. Born on this date in 1832, Walker became a doctor and acted as a surgeon during the Civil War. She crossed enemy lines to treat injured civilians, and she was captured by Confederate forces and kept for a while as a prisoner of war, just in case she was a spy!

In 1865, President Andrew Johnson awarded her with the Congressional Medal of Honor for her wartime service.

That's all pretty normal – if you can call hard work, dedication, and courage normal, and if you think that rewarding those things is normal – but then the story gets distinctly odd.

Fifty-two years after she received that medal, Congress changed its standards for awarding the Medal of Honor. Congress decided that only achievements in “actual combat with an enemy” now count toward the honor. Walker had of course battled “enemies” like disease and injury and death, but she'd also tangled with the non-metaphorical enemy, the Confederate army – hence her capture and imprisonment! – however, she hadn't been engaged in “combat” with the Confederate soldiers.

And so it was that, when the army reevaluated all the medals previously given out, Walker's name, as well as 910 other names, were struck from the Medal of Honor Rolls!

In other words, the army took away the Medal of Honor from 911 people – including Walker – to retroactively fit the new standards! Wh-wh-what???

Apparently, none of the recipients were asked to send back their medals, but some thought that the 911 people whose names had been removed from the Medal of Honor Rolls should no longer wear their medals. However, Walker reportedly wore it every day until her death.

It may have been her tenacity in claiming and proudly wearing her Medal of Honor that helped inspire others to re-evaluate Walker's re-evaluation. However it went, in 1977, President Jimmy Carter restored her medal posthumously. 


Did you know...?

Mary Edwards Walker is still the only woman to have ever received the Congressional Medal of Honor!

Walker is one of only eight civilians to win the Medal of Honor.

After the Civil War, Walker became a writer and lecturer supporting the women's suffrage movement.


Also on this date:






























Plan ahead:

Check out my Pinterest boards for:

And here are my Pinterest boards for: