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  1. 18 de mai. de 2018 · And since by default, the aristocracy didn’t work, ... In 1880, stock and railway heiress Frances Ellen Work married the future Baron Fermoy. Like many “dollar princess” matches, ...

  2. 25 de set. de 2020 · In the 1860s, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper was a free, Black, young woman working as a teacher in Pennsylvania when her home state of Maryland passed a law stating that ANY African American who returned to Maryland would be sold into slavery. This prompted the already ambitious educator to devote herself as an organizer in the abolition ...

  3. 8 de ago. de 2019 · In 1895 alone, nine American girls, including Consuelo Vanderbilt Spencer-Churchill, Frances Ellen Work La Roche, Millicent Rogers and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, all married into the British aristocracy. Reading between the lines, we can see that Fellowes was also heavily influenced by Lady Almina’s daughter-in-law, Lady Catherine, and Lady ...

  4. 22 de fev. de 2024 · Frances Ellen Watkins Harper — considered the mother of African American journalism — died on this date 113 years ago at the age of 85. Harper’s legacy lives on through the writing she left behind and her inspiring lifelong pursuit of civil rights, justice and freedom for all. The 19th’s HBCU fellowship program is named in her honor.

  5. 30 de abr. de 2022 · About Franklin H. Work (italiano) Franklin H. Work was born on FEB 10 1819 in Dogsburg, Chillicothe, OH. (130) He resided in 1834 in Columbus, OH. He was a Dry Goods Merchant after 1837 in New York City, NY. W.J. Daily; later Daily and Work. He resided after 1837 in New York City, NY. He was a Banker about 1856 in New York.

  6. Atypical biographical sketch details Harper’s early work-life with a Baltimore bookseller’s family as well as her paternal uncle’s (William Watkins’s) trade as a shoemaker and his self-training in medicine and languages. Foster, Frances Smith. “Frances Ellen Watkins Harper.” In Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia. Vol. 1.

  7. 28 de jan. de 2007 · After the Civil War Frances Ellen Watkins Harper worked among African Americans as a representative of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union. From her new position Harper publicized the violence and intimidation in the South directed at the freedpeople. She argued African Americans must organize to complete the work of Reconstruction rather ...