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Lydia Sayer Hasbrouck (December 20, 1827 – August 24, 1910) was an American hydrotherapist, an advocate for women's dress reform, and the founder and editor of The Sibyl, a periodical devoted to that attire reform topic. [1]
Terms of office begin on January 1. ... Washington Heights – A hamlet bordering Middletown to its north. ... Lydia Sayer Hasbrouck, women's dress reformer;
Board of Education - Lydia Sayer Hasbrouck - 1880 [282] Mayor - Susanna M. Salter - 1887 [ 283 ] Chief of the Cherokee Nation - Wilma Mankiller - 1985 [ 284 ]
Lydia Sayer Hasbrouck; Mary Garrett Hay (1857–1928) – suffrage organizer around the United States. [25] Mary Foote Henderson; Ami Mali Hicks; Margaret Hinchey; Marie Jenney Howe; Mary Seymour Howell; Maud Humphrey; Arria Sargent Huntington; Addie Waites Hunton (1866–1943) – suffragist, race and gender activist, writer, political ...
A Hasbrouck Heights man has been indicted on charges connected to the fatal April 14 crash that killed Serenity Law, 15, of Ridgefield, according to a statement from the Bergen County Prosecutor's ...
Lydia Sayer Hasbrouck was born December 20, 1827, in Bellvale, New York, the daughter of Benjamin Sayer (1791–1874) and his wife, Rebecca Forshee Sayer (1796–1858). Lydia would move to Middletown, and began wearing Bloomers , which was considered a "radical" article of clothing at that time.
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Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ridulph await the arrival of a pathologist at the sheriff's office in Galena, Ill., before a positive identification of a body found near Woodbine, Ill., can be made, April 27 ...