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She lived in Boston for a few years following her husband's death in 1857, but in 1861 moved with her three surviving children to live in Madrid.
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She and lived
She was Ellen Aldridge, a widow of good repute who was employed by Gorton's wife and lived with the family.
She and her husband had formerly lived in New York, where she had many friends, but Mr. Flannagan thought the country would be safer in case of war.
She lived in an ultra-modern house whose decoration, appointments, paint, and even pets were chosen to complement her coloring ; ;
She knew that I lived at a good address on the Gold Coast, that I had once been a medical student and was thinking of returning to the university to finish my medical studies.
She lived alone in the older part of the city, in one of those renovated houses whose brick facade some early settler had constructed.
She gave birth to a daughter on 10 November, but the child was weak and lived either only a few hours or at most a week.
According to Rachael Hanel, " She lived off her savings, interest income from a trust, money from her parents, and selling her simple, Rubenesque line drawings.
She was born on 5 July 1996 and she lived until the age of six, at which point she died from a progressive lung disease.
She lived separately from Philby, settling with their children in Crowborough while he lived first in London and later in Beirut.
" She has undertaken a signature personal element of traveling around the country and talking to women at hospital and community events featuring the experiences of women who live, or had lived, with the condition.
She traveled many times to Africa to photograph the Nuba tribes in Sudan, with whom she sporadically lived, learning about their culture so she could photograph them more easily.
She spent her last years in a close personal and professional collaboration with anthropologist Rhoda Metraux, with whom she lived from 1955 until her death in 1978. Letters between the two published in 2006 with the permission of Mead's daughter clearly express a romantic relationship.
She lived exclusively in the company of her German ladies-in-waiting and had difficulty in adapting herself to the Swedish people, countryside and climate.
She lived much of her adult life in France, where she first befriended Edgar Degas and later exhibited among the Impressionists.
She and Boston
She currently lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts and attends School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
She then transferred as a piano student to the Berklee College of Music in Boston, in the hope of finding a band with which to sing.
She and Lee Hazlewood embarked on a US tour playing the House of Blues, the Viper Room, the Whiskey-a-Go-Go, the now-defunct Mama Kin in Boston, the Trocadero in Philadelphia, and The Fillmore.
She presented the North End in Boston, Massachusetts, as an idealization of this persistent occupation and tasking in a condensed city space, as a model for criminal control.
" She joined the literary circles of New York and Boston and made the acquaintance of local lights on the lecture circuit, such as Oliver Wendell Holmes, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, a book whose anti-slavery message Leonowens had brought to the attention of the royal household.
She attended the University of Florida, Florida State University, and Boston University, but graduated from the University of Florida in theater.
She was design consultant for over a dozen universities including: Princeton in Princeton, New Jersey ; Yale in New Haven, Connecticut ; and the Arnold Arboretum for Harvard in Boston, Massachusetts.
Hundreds of tributes appeared in newspapers around the world, including The Boston Globe, which wrote, “ She did a wonderful — an extraordinary work in the world and there is no doubt that she was a powerful influence for good .”
She was born in the town of Hampden, Maine, and grew up first in Worcester, Massachusetts, and then in her wealthy grandmother's home in Boston.
She was born in Boston, Massachusetts on July 26, 1996, and her family was a resident of Stanton, California.
She alluded to her Communism during her last United States tour, in 1922 – 23 ; Duncan waved a red scarf and bared her breast on stage in Boston, proclaiming, " This is red!
She later opened a book store, Elizabeth Palmer Peabody's West Street Bookstore, at her home in Boston ( ca. 1840-1852 ).
This situation was exacerbated further by the success of The Single Guy ( which many attributed to piggybacking off of Friends ), as well as another freshman sitcom, Boston Common, which debuted in March 1996 against the second half of Murder, She Wrote.
" She was dark and intense ... since the season of her coming out in 1926-7, she had been known around Boston as fast, a ' bad egg '... with a good deal of sex appeal.
" She was also from a prominent Boston family that first settled in Provincetown on Cape Cod in 1690.
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