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Despite the difficulties of their often tumultuous union, [10] Hardwick maintained that Lowell was the best thing that had ever happened to her. [11] Their daughter was Harriet Lowell. [1] Hardwick died in a Manhattan hospital on December 2, 2007, aged 91. [1] [12]
A federal judge ruled Westchester Disabled on the Move did not show how Lyft could improve services to those in wheelchairs. Plaintiffs to appeal.
The named plaintiffs suing the San Francisco-based ride share company are Harriet Lowell, a White Plains resident who relies on a mobility scooter, and Westchester Disabled on the Move, a Yonkers ...
The Lowell family is one of the Boston Brahmin families of New England, ... Harriet Lowell (1836–1920), m. George Putnam (1834–1917)
Charles Russell Lowell (1807–1870) Charles Russell Lowell Jr. (1835–1864), Civil War general, m. Josephine Shaw; Harriet Lowell (1836–1920), m. George Putnam (1834–1917) William Lowell Putnam (1861–1923), lawyer and banker, m. Elizabeth Lowell (see above) Mary Traill Spence Lowell Putnam (1810–1898), author, translator
Betsey Guppy Chamberlain (1797–1886), one of Harriet's companions in the mills, became a noted contributor of sketches and stories to the Lowell Offering. [22] Harriet said that "the fame of The Lowell Offering caused the mill girls to be considered very desirable for wives; and that young men came from near and far to pick and choose for ...
Harriet Jane Farley (February 18, 1812, Claremont, New Hampshire – November 12, 1907, New York City, New York) was an American writer and abolitionist, editor of the Lowell Offering from 1842–1845, and editor of the New England Offering from 1847–1850.
Harriet Farley, against her family and friends wishes, left Atkinson, New Hampshire in 1838 to work in Lowell's textile mills. In Lowell, although working 11 to 13 hours a day, and living in a crowded company boardinghouse, she felt a sense of freedom to “read, think and write…without restraint.”