Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"The After-Years" was repeated at 9pm on 30 July, this time in an hour-long slot as it was followed by a new interview between Margaret Wilkins and Paul Watson. Margaret and Terry divorced three years after the programme's broadcast due to Terry's ill health. [1] Both remarried; Margaret became Margaret Sainsbury. She died of a reported heart ...
Margaret Wilkins may refer to: Margaret Lucy Wilkins, English composer and music educator; Margaret Wilkins, character in Jennings (novels) Margaret Wilkins, character in The Family (1974 UK TV series)
The Wilkins disapproved of John Willard immediately after Margaret Wilkins decided to marry him. This was partly due to Willard's chosen profession and the failure of a business venture by Bray Wilkins decades earlier, which had led to him selling 2/3 of his land holdings and very narrowly holding out on a court-ordered foreclosure of the remaining third.
Allynwood Academy, formerly the Family Foundation School, was a private, co-educational, college preparatory, therapeutic boarding school located in Hancock, New York. [1] The school was in operation from 1984 through 2014, when it closed due to declining enrollment amid a raft of physical, emotional, and sexual abuse allegations made by alumni ...
The Van Rensselaer family (/ ˈ r ɛ n s l ər,-s l ɪər /) is a family of Dutch descent that was prominent during the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries in the area now known as the state of New York. Members of this family played a critical role in the formation of the United States and served as leaders in business, politics and society.
Eloise Margaret Wilkin, born Eloise Margaret Burns (March 30, 1904 – October 4, 1987), was an American illustrator. She was best known as an illustrator of Little Golden Books . Many of the picture books she illustrated have become classics of American children's literature.
Mrs. Julia Wilkins. (New York Daily News Archive/) Doctors from a nearby veterans hospital tried to save her, but she died on the operating table within an hour.
Lee was born in Manhattan on October 2, 1877. He was the only surviving son and eldest of ten children, six of whom lived to adulthood, born to Dr. James Lee (born 1852) [2] and Mary Theresa Lee, née Norton (born c. 1851), [3] both children of Irish Catholic immigrants.