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Dillon was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, the fourth of six siblings. [15] [16] Her father worked as a steelworker, while her mother was a housewife.[17] [18] Dillon studied college at the University of Illinois and worked various jobs, such as a waitress, a house cleaner, and a bank teller, to acquire money for her tuition. [19]
Dillon was also on the Mayor's Business Advisory Council and the War Council of the City of New York. [2] Dillon married Henry Farber in 1923 but always used her own name. [5] Farber died in 1948. Dillon retired in 1949 and moved to Vermont until 1973 when she moved to Hawaii where she lived for the rest of her life. [2] [6]
Mary Dillon was born in Dungiven, where she still lives with her two children, a son and a daughter. She was raised in a musical household and one of her five siblings is fellow folk singer Cara Dillon. [2] She has never pursued singing as a full-time career and currently works as an English teacher at St Cecilia's College in Derry. [3]
Mary Dillon (businesswoman) (born 1961/62), American businesswoman Mary Dillon (singer) (born 1965), Northern Irish singer Mary E. Dillon (1886–1983), American businesswoman
He was the third son of Thomas Dillon [1] and his wife Margery Dillon of Kilmore, also called Mary. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] His father was the eldest son of his grandfather James Dillon, nicknamed the Prior , [ 4 ] because he took care of several monastic properties at the dissolution of the monasteries.
Josephine Dillon (January 26, 1884 [1] [2] – November 11, 1971) was an American stage and film actress and acting teacher. She was Clark Gable 's patron, acting coach and first wife. Early years and education
Dillon published a volume of her brother Joseph's poetry posthumously, a month after his execution in June 1916, The poems of Joseph Mary Plunkett, [6] having been named as his literary executor. [9] Dillon was the member of the Plunkett family who had the most interaction with her brother's widow, Grace. Grace lived with her at Larkfield after ...
Hon. Mary Ethelfreda Stanley (25 July 1849 – 15 September 1849), died in infancy; Three of their daughters died young. A stained glass window in their memories was erected in 1860 at St Mary's Church, Nether Alderley. [13] On Lord Stanley's tomb in the same church, a brass plaque features an engraving of Lady Stanley and their 12 children. [14]