1,893 research outputs found

    Hancock Letter, 1868

    No full text
    Winfield S. Hancock tells of his part in the execution of the Lincoln conspirators, with references to Mary Surratt and the writ of habeas corpus

    Haustorius allardi Hancock & Wicksten 2018, sp. nov.

    No full text
    Haustorius allardi sp. nov. Other Gulf Species:Published as part of Hancock, Zachary B. & Wicksten, Mary K., 2018, Two new species of sand-burrowing amphipods of the genus Haustorius Müller, 1775 (Amphipoda: Haustoriidae) from the northwestern Gulf of Mexico, pp. 101-127 in Zootaxa 4459 (1) on page 103, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4459.1.4, http://zenodo.org/record/145841

    Marlene R. Hancock : A biographical statement:

    No full text
    A statement from Marlene Hancock describing her academic interest in the Middle East, and her experience as the organizer and faculty advisor of the Douglas College Internationl Model United Nations (DOUGIMUN)

    Mary Hancock Perkins letter to Eliza O. Perkins

    No full text
    Letter from Mary Perkins, at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Saint Louis, to her mother, Eliza, describing a "feast" at the convent

    The works of Mary Birkett Card 1774-1817 originally collected by her son Nathaniel Card in 1834: an edited transcription with an introduction to her life and works in two volumes

    No full text
    This thesis makes available the writings of Mary Birkett Card, a Dublin Quaker, as collected by her son Nathaniel Card in 1834. It provides an annotated transcription of the manuscript collection, with textual and editorial notes, and an introduction recovering her life within her cultural community. The writings consist of a spiritual autobiography, 43 religious letters, other prose pieces and over 220 poems. Two poems were published in her lifetime: A Poem on the African Slave Trade (1792) and Lines to the Memory of our Late Esteemed and Justly Valued Friend Joseph Williams (1807). The introduction is in three parts. Part 1 offers a biographical outline and sets Mary Birkett Card's childhood poems in the context of the Quaker community in which she grew up. Part 2 explores her autobiography, questioning concepts of a separate female autobiographical tradition. It then investigates her encounter with 'deist' thought, and later conflicts, after her marriage. These concern money (seeking to reconcile the spiritual and material) and issues of language and gender (a desire for'a pure language', linked to constraints upon women's speech). Part 3 contrasts her 1790s verse with her later poems, and epistles, arguing that embedded within these works as a whole lies a struggle with her literary imagination. Throughout, the writings are set within the context of contemporary literary forms in poetry, Quaker writing and women's writing. They are considered in relation to now current critical debates - on public and private spheres, autobiography, abolitionist verse, women's intimate friendships, domesticity, philanthropy and sensibility. It is shown that Mary Birkett Card's literary creativity was intimately connected with her Quakerism, and, moreover, with attempts to negotiate an ideal of Quaker womanhood. One important aspect is the challenge her work poses to assumptions, still generally prevalent, about Quaker women's far greater autonomy within marriage in comparison to women in society at large

    Mary Hancock Perkins letter to Eliza O. Perkins

    No full text
    Letter from Mary Perkins, at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Saint Louis, to her mother, Eliza, describing a "feast" at the convent

    Mary Ann Hancock

    No full text
    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/hall-of-fame/1462/thumbnail.jp

    Hancock - Larsen Family

    No full text
    Back row: Cyrus Brigham Larsen, Joseph Frizzell, Ether Thomas Hancock Sr., Ether Thomas Hancock Jr. Front rwo: Anna Mary Hancock Larsen, Zina Kathern Hancock Frizzell, Lois Arabelle Alexander Hancock, Malinda Belle Hancock Pike

    Either T. Hancock Family

    No full text
    Back row: James Bird Hancock, Anna Mary Hancock Larsen, Malinda Belle Hancock Pike, Ether Thomas Hancock Jr. Zina Kathern Hancock Frizzell, Velvaleen Hancock, Leo Vernon Hancock . Front row: Roka LaMar Hancock, Warda Fritz Hancock, Ether Thomas Sr., Lois Arabelle Alexander Hancock, Ina Lillian Hancock, Gladys Ardell Hancock (insert

    Corrigendum: Human mental workload: A survey and a novel inclusive definition

    No full text
    In the published article, the name of Gabriella Hancock was incorrectly written as “Gabriela M. Hancock.” The correct name is “Gabriella Hancock.” In the published article, there was also an error in the author list as published. Gabriella Hancock was listed as the last author, but should have been listed as third author. P. A. Hancock was listed as third author but should be listed as the last author. The corrected author list appears below. Luca Longo1, Christopher D.Wickens, Gabriella Hancock and P. A. Hancock. The authors apologize for this error and state that this does not change the scientific conclusions of the article in any way. The original article has been updated
    corecore