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Please match the correct person to the correct description. Question 1 options: Emmeline Pankhurst Elizabeth Cady Stanton Frederick Law Olmsted Thomas Edison Sigmund Freud Richard Warren Sears Aristide Boucicaut Louis Pasteur 1. Entrepreneur that created Le Bon Marche’ in 1838. Le Bon Marche’ was completely redone in 1852 and introduced the first modern department store. Sold a variety of good from food to high-end merchandise. 2. Inventor, businessman. Inventor of the Lightbulb, Phonograph, alkaline storage batteries, Kinetograph (motion picture camera). Worked with electricity and founded the Edison Illuminating Company to generate electric power. 3. Psychologist that developed psychoanalysis. Creates the ideas behind psychoanalytic theory that helps patients deal with repressed memories Created the ideas behind the three parts of human personality: Id, Ego, & Superego. Worked in the field of dream analysis. 4. Landscape architect, journalist, social critic. Designed a series of public parks starting with Central park in New York City. Worked with the Yosemite commission to preserve the area as a park (now a national park). Worked on many projects including the Capital grounds in Washington DC and Biltmore Estate for the Vanderbilt family. 5. Suffragette and women’s rights activist. For women’s rights and women’s voting rights in Britain and helped women across the world. Founded the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU). Arrested many times due to her activities. 6. Biologist, Chemist. Discovered the principles behind fermentation and pasteurization. Work in Germ Theory Discovered the principles of vaccination. Developed vaccinations for Rabies, Tuberculosis, Cholera and Anthrax 7. Abolitionist, suffragist and social activist for women’s rights. She worked with Mott to organize and hold the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, that started the fight for women’s rights. She worked with Lucretia Mott, Susan B Anthony, and other women’s rights activists to fight for changes to laws to improve women’s lives as well as the 19th amendment which granted women in the US the right to vote. 8. Salesman, Manager, Businessman, founder of Sears, Roebuck & Co. Begins the mail order business in the United States and in the world. Later creates a chain of department stores. Initially serves people in rural areas and later has stores in urban areas. Sells everything from medicines to houses.

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

1. Aristide Boucicaut

2. Thomas Edison

3. Sigmund Freud

4. Frederick Law Olmsted

5. Emmeline Pankhurst

6. Louis Pasteur

7. Elizabeth Cady Stanton

8. Richard Warren Sears

Step-by-step explanation:

1. After the death of Mr. Boucicaut in 1877, his wife continued running the business and 'Le Bon Marche' opened in 1892. Today, this departmental store is a property of well reputed 'LVMH' Luxury Group.

2. In 1882, Thomas Edison developed and installed the first large power station in the world in New York. However, later, his use of direct current was displaced by the alternating current system developed by the American inventors Nikola Tesla and George Westinghouse.

3. Freud was an avid reader who loves literature in German, French, Italian, Spanish, English, Hebrew, Latin and Greek. He read William Shakespeare in English throughout his life, suggesting that much of his knowledge of human psychology may have been derived from the works of Shakespeare.

4. Frederick Law Olmsted was born in Hartford, Connecticut, on April 26, 1822. Although he never attended college, he became a very educated man. He did not enroll in college because of a weakness in his eyes, but he attended lectures at Yale University intermittently and became an honorary member of the class of 1847.

5. Emmeline Goulden, her maiden name, was born on July 15, 1858 in Manchester into a family with rather modern ideas in those years. His father, Robert Goulden, was a businessman involved in the political life of his country defending the civil rights of men and women. His mother, Sophia Crane, descended from a family with a long tradition of defending women's rights.

6. Louis Pasteur was an average student in his early years, but was gifted for drawing and painting. His cakes and portraits of his parents and friends, made when he was 15 years old, are preserved in the Museum of the Pasteur Institute in Paris.

7. Until the age of sixteen, Elizabeth Stanton studied at the Johnstown Academy where she learned math, science, literature and several languages. At school she was an outstanding student who fought in intellectual duels with other students and received several awards.

8. Sears, Roebuck & Co was the Amazon of its time. The success was reflected when reaching sales for 750,000 dollars in 1893. In 1906 they became the first retailer in the financial history of the United States to launch their IPO. That same year they established their headquarters in Chicago, in the Sears Merchandise Building Tower. In 1973 they moved to the Sears Tower, the building that for a long time was considered the tallest in the world.

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