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STUDYWORLD STUDYNOTES:
CLASSIC LITERATURE ANALYSIS
STUDYWORLD REPORTS & ESSAYS
RESEARCH AND IDEA DATABASE
Oakwood Publishing Company:
SAT; ACT; GRE
Study Material
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Cheaper by the Dozen
The book Cheaper by the Dozen written by Frank B. Gilbreth, Jr. and
Ernestine Gilbreth Carey was the life story of the Gilbreth family before Mr.
Gilbreth died. Frank Gilbreth, Jr. and Ernestine Gilbreth were two of the
twelve children. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbreth, both industrial engineers, ran a firm,
Gilbreth, Inc. which was employed as "efficiency experts" by major
industrial plants in the United States, Britain, and Germany.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbreth had twelve children, six girls and six boys. The
names of the children are Anne, Ernestine, Frank, Bill, Lillian, Martha, Jack,
Jane, Fred, Mart, Bob, and Dan. The older children's job is to take care of
the youngest and the mother took care of the intermediate children and babies.
Nothing was consider more a sin than wasting time, that is why the father,
Frank, times himself trying to go as fast as he can with almost everything. He
timed himself buttoning his shirt to see which way is faster, top-bottom or
bottom-top. He timed himself shaving to see which way took longer, using two
brushes to apply the shaving cream of one. He found that two were faster.
Frank, the father also experiment on which ways was faster, using two razors
of one. He found that one was faster, because with two he cut himself so many
times it took him twice as much time to cover the cuts up.
The book talked about how smart Frank, the Father was. He painted mores
code on the walls of their summerhouse to teach it to his children. When the
children decoded the message written on the wall, it revealed a clue that
tells the child who decoded it where a prize was hidden. He painted also all
of the planets and stars you can see in the sky on the walls of their
summerhouse to teach his kids astrology.
A neat power that the father, Frank, had was that as soon as he look at a
person he would know their nationality. When ever the family would go
somewhere were you would have to pay by the person, such as a toll bridge,
Frank, the father, would take one look at the person and know that their
nationality was Irish. The father, Frank, would say, "do my Irishmen come
cheaper by the dozen?" The owner would probably say, "Irishmen? If
you are Irish, you should not pay a toll on my road. Your trip is on the
house."
At the end of the book the father, Frank is called for work in Germany. He
decided to walk to the train station, which is only a few blocks away from
their house. When he arrived at the train station he called Lillie, the mother
and told her that he was fine, but before he hung up she heard him fall to the
ground. The mother told all of her neighbors to go look for all of the
children who were out playing. Frank, the boy, thought that one of the girls
was hit by a car. When the children finally arrived home they saw the second
youngest child, Jack, sit on the front step saying, "Daddy's dead."
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