Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mary Schäffer Warren (1861–1939) was an American-Canadian naturalist, illustrator, photographer, and writer. She was known for her experiences in the Canadian Rockies in the early 20th century. [ 1 ]
The Times was sold to the owners of the Warren Sheaf later that year who had printed The Times for a short time after the second fire. In 1927, The Times was consolidated with rival paper, The Tribune. Former owner of The Tribune, William Dahlquist, stayed on as editor and part owner of The Times.
The popular story for the cause of the feud is a disagreement over a woman. As the story goes, a clerk that worked in French's mercantile store was madly in love. One day the clerk saw the woman with Benjamin Fulton French and he became jealous. He went to Joseph Eversole and told him that he had heard French say he sought to take his life.
On November 6, 2012, Warren defeated Brown with 53.7% of the vote. She is the first woman ever elected to the U.S. Senate from Massachusetts, [15] as part of a sitting U.S. Senate that had 20 women senators in office, which was the most in Senate history at the time, following the November 2012 elections.
This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Hunterdon County, New Jersey.Latitude and longitude coordinates of the sites listed on this page may be displayed in an online map.
Cornelia Warren (March 21, 1857 – June 4, 1921) was an American farmer and an educational and social service philanthropist, widely known for her investment in social improvement projects. She was a trustee of Wellesley College , bought the location for Denison House and ran a model farm in Waltham, Massachusetts.
[2] [3] Hensche painted a portrait of Warren as a young woman. Warren was the youngest woman to be given a solo exhibit at a major United States Museum (Berkshire Museum 1940), when she was twenty years old. [citation needed] She became nationally known as a portraitist by the 1980s. [3] She started an art school at Malden Bridge, New York. [1] [3]
Karen J. Warren (September 10, 1947 – August 21, 2020) was an author, scholar, and former professor and chair of philosophy at Macalester College. Biography [ edit ]