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Janice A. Brown,
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Women’s History
"The ongoing invisibility of women and girls is a serious issue for our country, and for the world. The invisibility of our history, heroes, stories, challenges, and success handicaps the future of all Americans, and it deeply affects our economy and our communities."--Megan Smith, U.S. Chief Technology OfficerWhat History Isn’t
“History isn’t about dates and places and wars. It’s about the people who fill the spaces between them.”
— Jodi Picoult, The StorytellerApril 2025 M T W T F S S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Recent Comments
- SOMME ABMC CEMETERY - AMERICANS FIGHT WITH THE MOTHER COUNTRY IN THE GREAT WAR - Meandering through the PrologueMeandering through the Prologue on A Nurse Hero of WWI: Elma Irene Groves of Lodi Wisconsin (1888-1918)
- Friday’s Family History Finds | Empty Branches on the Family Tree on New Hampshire Tidbits: Wow–Palindrome Dates To Notice in 2021
- Legend Has It: Doc Benton – The Morbid Library on The Strange Haunting of Mt. Moosilaukee
- James E Ramsey on New Hampshire Missing Places: Lone Star Ranch, Reeds Ferry
- LIVES LOST BEYOND THE MEDALS at MEUSE-ARGONNE ABMC CEMETERY - Meandering through the PrologueMeandering through the Prologue on More Lost Faces of WWI: American Nurses Who Died in Europe
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Tag Archives: England
New Hampshire Slanguage: Muffler
Before the automobile was invented, the term muffler was an entirely different item than a metal tail pipe. It was, instead, an object of clothing, worn to keep dust, dirt, or the extremes of sun and cold from the mouth … Continue reading
Posted in History, Humor, New Hampshire Slanguage
Tagged England, Hampshire, muffler, new, New Hampshire, NH, Philadelphia, scarf, Shakespeare, slang, slanguage
5 Comments
New Hampshire WWI Military: U.S. Army Nurse Lucy Nettie Fletcher of Concord NH (1886-1918)
“I have a soul that, like an ample shield, Can take in all, and verge enough for more…” [1] These words are inscribed as the graduation quote of Lucy Nettie Fletcher, in the 1910 Class yearbook of Radcliffe College. Lucy … Continue reading
Posted in History, Military of New Hampshire, New Hampshire Women, NH WW1 Military
Tagged 1, Binet, Channel, college, Concord, died, disease, England, English, Europe, Fletcher, France, great, Hampshire, I, islands, Lucy, meningitis, Nettie, new, New Hampshire, NH, nurse, nursing, One, Radcliffe, war, world, WW1, WWI
6 Comments
The Lost Faces of World War One — Part Nine
This is the continuation of a series of stories about men who died in World War 1, and whose photographs appeared in a publication called “Our Nation’s Roll of Honor.” The original post and explanation can be found at this … Continue reading
Posted in History, Lost Faces of WW1
Tagged 1, accident, action, airplane, AK, AL, Alabama, Almyra, Arkansas, Arthur, Bernard, Birmingham, Bureau, Cullman, Daniel, died, Duncan, Emile, England, France, gill, Grant, Halberg, Harder, Henckell, I, IL, KIA, killed, McLoud, new, NYC, Oakland, OK, Oklahoma, One, war, world, Wounds, WW1, York
4 Comments
Chief Nurse of WW1 Expeditionary Forces, Red Cross Chief Nurse Harvard Unit, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital School of Nursing Founder, National Association President and Pioneer of American Nursing: Nashua New Hampshire’s Carrie May Hall (1873-1963)
Carrie M. Hall’s career was long and varied. She was first an educator, then an organizer, and always a nurse. Because of her essential and important role in the American Red Cross, as Chief Nurse of the World War 1 … Continue reading
Posted in History, Military of New Hampshire, New Hampshire Women
Tagged 1, 2, American, awards, Britain, Carrie, Civil, Commission, committee, Cross, defense, England, Expeditionary, Forces, founder, France, great, Hall, Hampshire, health, Home, hospital, I, II, Margaret, medals, military, Nashua, new, New Hampshire, NH, nurse, nursing, organization, Pillsbury, red, school, war, woman, women, world, WW1, WWI
8 Comments
The Face of Manchester New Hampshire’s Lena E. (Bower) Graf (1881-1972)
Lena Etta Bower was born in Manchester, New Hampshire in 1881. Her father was from England, having immigrated in 1855, arriving in Boston Massachusetts. It was a time when skilled textile workers from England were being sought to work in … Continue reading