-
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy Search on This Blog
Copyright Disclaimer
All rights reserved © 2006-2024
Janice A. Brown,
Blog: Cow Hampshire
www.cowhampshireblog.com
Formerly
blogharbor.cowhampshire.com
All unpublished works.Translate this Page
-
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 StorytellerNovember 2024 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
- Janice Brown on Littleton New Hampshire: Kilburn Stereoscopic Views
- Valley News - Upstart prevails in Grafton County sheriff’s contest on New Hampshire’s First Woman Sheriff and Deputy Sheriffs: Helen Kenney of Concord, M. Jennie (Wood) Kendall of Nashua, and Lillian (Christian) Bryant of Conway
- Upstart prevails in Grafton County sheriff’s contest – Westlebanon Valley News on New Hampshire’s First Woman Sheriff and Deputy Sheriffs: Helen Kenney of Concord, M. Jennie (Wood) Kendall of Nashua, and Lillian (Christian) Bryant of Conway
- Friday’s Family History Finds | Empty Branches on the Family Tree on Samuel Joy and His Spite Tombstone in Durham New Hampshire
- “Mowed down like a pack of cards”: Carrie M. Hall, nurse. | American Women in World War I on 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)
Categories
- Boulders and Profiles
- Carnivals and Memes
- Cow Stories
- Creatures
- Current Events
- Genealogy
- Haunted New Hampshire
- History
- Holidays
- Humor
- Irish in New Hampshire
- Lost Faces of WW1
- Military of New Hampshire
- Military Squares
- Moovers And Shakers
- N.H. Historical Markers
- N.H. Missing Places
- Native Peoples
- New Hampshire Aviation
- New Hampshire Entertainers
- New Hampshire Glossary
- New Hampshire Inventors
- New Hampshire Men
- New Hampshire Politics
- New Hampshire Slanguage
- New Hampshire Sports
- New Hampshire Women
- NH Persons of Color
- NH Tidbits
- NH WW1 Military
- Not New Hampshire
- Oddities, Accidents and Crazy Weather
- Personal History
- Poetry
- R.I.P
- Really Old News
- Recipes
- Speechless Sunday
- Structures
- Travel
Tag Archives: people
Manchester New Hampshire’s Human Rights Champion, Volunteer, Civic and Community Leader: Vanessa Leah Washington-Johnson-Bloemen (1953-2011)
Many living in Manchester New Hampshire today probably have heard of Vanessa Washington-Johnson-Bloemen. This is because she worked in, and behind the scenes of, countless city organizations or agencies. Her goal was to solve problems and promote the interests of … Continue reading
Posted in History, New Hampshire Women, NH Persons of Color
Tagged American Lung, black, board, Cancer, club, color, girl scout, Hendrix House, Johnson, Lionel, Lions, Lung, Manchester, Martin Luther King, Mayor's Task Force, NAACP, National Convention, New Hampshire, NH, people, person, scholarship, United Way, Van, Vanessa, volunteer, YMCA
7 Comments
New Hampshire: Run-Aways, Desertions & Elopements of the 18th Century
When we think about ‘Run-Aways’ of colonial times, what first comes to mind is often run-away slaves. In fact the majority of these ‘errant’ individuals, at least in colonial New Hampshire, were either wives, apprentices or indentured servants. Indentured Servants … Continue reading
Posted in Genealogy, History, New Hampshire Women, NH Persons of Color, Really Old News
Tagged ad, advertisement, apprentice, colonial, color, common law, contract, elope, elopement, indenture, newspaper, people, person, runaway, servant, slave, wife
2 Comments
New Hampshire Glossary: Smallpox
Before the introduction of inoculation, small-pox was the most fatal disease in Great Britain and the American colonies. It killed about one out of four of those who contracted it, and left many survivors blinded, scarred and weak for life. After inoculation became common practice, the disease killed only one in several hundred people.
Eventually as a preventative, and to limit deaths, New Hampshire townships were given the power to isolate individuals and families who had small-pox or those who had come in contact with the disease. These people were placed in pox-houses (or sick-houses). Doing so often reduced the number of people who came in contact with them, and contracted the disease themselves. Continue reading
Posted in History, New Hampshire Glossary
Tagged biological, contagious, deadly, diease, disease, first, George, Hampshire, house, Indian, infectious, innoculate, innoculation, native, new, New Hampshire, NH, people, pest, pesthouse, pox, pustules, revolution, shot, sick, sickhouse, small, small-pox, smallpox, war, Washington, weapon
Leave a comment
Milford New Hampshire Black Novelist and Spiritualist: Harriet "Hattie" E. (Green) Adams Wilson Robinson (1825-1900)
Harriet “Hattie” E. (Green) Adams is believed to have been born on March 15, 1825(?), possibly in Milford, New Hampshire. … Continue reading