Henson And Peary example essay topic
Matthew Henson was born on August 3, 1866 in Baltimore, Maryland. He was raised in Carrol County. At an early age, Henson's mother died, leaving him alone to live with his father. Unfortunately the family experienced problems with the Ku Klux Klan.
To escape the problems and make a better life for his son, Henson's father moved the family to Washington, D.C... While Henson's father worked, he took care of the elderly uncle they lived with. While still living in Washington Henson's father died, leaving him in care of his uncle. The uncle was mean and abusive to the point that it caused him to runaway from the only home he had. For awhile, Henson wandered the streets. He was a poor, ragged, and uneducated kid.
What could he offer to someone to earn a living Finally, he came to a small restaurant. The owner hired Henson to sweep and mop the floors, clean the kitchen and wash the dishes. Henson had no place to stay so they owner let him sleep on the floor of the restaurant after closing. One day, Henson saw a sign advertising a ship captain looking for young men to work on his ship. Since he had nothing better to do, Henson decided to sign up.
That was the beginning of Henson's sailing career. For the rest of Henson's teenage years, Henson sailed around the world. He learned much aboard the ship such as: mathematics, navigation, the operations of a ship, and how to read books and maps. By the age of 21, Henson was a skilled and experienced sailor. Between his terms at sea, Henson would sometimes work to earn a little money. One job he had would change the course of his life.
While a store clerk in Washington, D.C., he met Robert Peary and was hired as his valet for a trip to survey canal sites in Nicaragua in 1887-88. Beginning in the year 1891, he accompanied Peary on many expeditions to the Arctic. The kinship that Henson had established with the Eskimos and his resourcefulness with handling equipment made him indispensable to Peary in polar explorations. On April 6, 1909, six men made a frenzied dash for the North Pole. They were (in order from first to last) Matthew Henson, followed by four Eskimos pulling Robert Peary on a sled (his feet were frostbitten).
Henson outran them all, becoming the first man to reach the North Pole. Peary handed him the American flag, which he planted at the site in the snow. He then posed for a picture with the four Eskimo guides who led Henson and Peary to the top of the world. Matthew Henson's contribution to humanity was this polar excursion. This paved the way for other extensive journeys to the Pole and similar places.
If Henson and Peary had not made this journey others might not have been motivated to explore new and different places, which is why this is still relevant today. This also gave meaning to racial equality. Henson proved that even though he was black he could do anything he put his mind to. There were many other momentous happenings also going on at this time. National Conference on the Negro convened May 30, leading to founding of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
The NAACP is organized at New York following a January meeting in the apartment of W.E. Walling with social worker Mary W. Ov ington and immigrant leader Henry Moskowitz who begin "a revival of the Abolitionist spirit". Constantinople recognizes Austrian annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina January 12, Vienna pays the Turks a 2.2 million indemnity, the Russians cancel a 20-million Turkish indemnity in return for Constantinople's recognition of Bulgarian independence, and internal strife disrupts the Ottoman Empire. Nearly two decades of Hawaiian plantation disturbances begin with a strike by exploited Japanese workers. It is the first major Hawaiian strike. In conclusion, the explorers returned home to a divided public. Their claim to be the first to reach the North Pole was disputed by some and believed by others.
Another explorer even claimed to have reached the Pole first. Their claim was finally proven to be true but, not without consequence. Matthew Henson was shoved out of the limelight. Peary, his fellow explorer and "friend", claimed that he was the first in the world to reach the North Pole even though it was not true. Henson, the foremost man to reach the North Pole was reduced to carrying luggage and parking cars for a living. Years after that famous sojourn, Henson was accepted as a member of the Explorer's Club.
The club gave Henson his overdue, but well deserved recognition. The club worked to get Henson accredited as the true discoverer of the North Pole. Their efforts were partially paid off in 1954. In 1954, the year before Henson died, President Dwight D. Eisenhower presented him with an award acknowledging his great accomplishment. It was not until 1982 that Henson was reburied in Arlington National Cemetery, where he should have been buried in the first place.