6,437 research outputs found

    [Sarah-Ann Shaw at New England Circle]

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    From left to right sitting in a chair speaking at the audience is Sarah-Ann Shaw

    Becky Shaw: artist in residency reflections

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    There are three distinct, linked blogs

    Lost Light, Kayla Shaw, Spring 2020

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    Kayla Shaw was the first �freshman� to enroll in SIS Seminar. She is a pre�med major from Birmingham, Alabama

    The Forgotten, Kayla Shaw, Spring 2020

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    Kayla Shaw was the first �freshman� to enroll in SIS Seminar. She is a pre�med major from Birmingham, Alabama

    [Sarah-Ann Shaw with Theodore Sizer at New England Circle]

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    From left to right sitting in a chair is Sarah-Ann Shaw looking at Theodore Sizer as he is speaking to the audience

    The Family of Francis Marion Shaw Newsletter Volume 9 Number 3

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    This item contains 1 PDF file with 4 pages and 4 JP2 filesThis issue newsletter primarily details the paternity proceedings against 17-year-old Jeremiah Shaw, Jr., the father of Francis Marion Shaw, Sr., in Liberty County, Georgia, in 1818. Jeremiah Shaw, Jr. had an acquaintance with Sarah Morgan which resulted in the birth of a baby daughter on January 28, 1818. After 10 months, on November 24, 1818, Jeremiah, Jr. legally accepted paternity, with his father, Jeremiah Shaw, Sr., also listed as a legally responsible party. The Shaw family settled the case by paying $1000 in penalty and pledging to maintain, support and educate the child until age 14. The newsletter also explores the mystery of Sarah Morgan's identity, speculating she might be the daughter of local plantation owner Levy Morgan, using census records and wills, though her exact relationship and the later whereabouts of her and the child remain uncertain. Additionally, the document touches on the challenge of identifying old family photographs, specifically focusing on examples of Lacy Lester Shaw

    Author and literary critic Donald Shaw

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    Author and literary critic Donald Shaw, b&w.https://mds.marshall.edu/parthenon_photo_morgue/1399/thumbnail.jp

    Fred Shaw riding a pony

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    Sketch from the scrapbook of Sarah E.E. Mitchell of Lisdillon on the East Coast of Tasmania 1874. Sketch 112 - Taken about 1866 to 1869 - by Catherine Mitchell. Fred Shaw, son of Edward Carr Shaw of Red Banks, Swansea, riding to Triabunna called Spring Bay, then. His pony was short & his legs long so Kate made them longer for fun. Father, Mr William John Lyne & Kate meet him as they ride to Swansea. He used to play cricket matches there. Later he & Mrs Shaw had Red Banks, & turned out & built The Bluff House, for Edward Bernard Shaw, when he married Lois Mary Mitchell, of Mayfield, 19 Jan 1913. E.H.J, & Annie M Mitchell’s second daughter. The sketches by Catherine Penwarne (Kate), eldest daughter of John and Catherine Mitchell (of Cornwall, England, who settled at Lisdillon, East Coast Tasmania in 1852) were made between 1860 and 1876, and portray aspects of 19th Century social and domestic life. Catherine’s sketches were compiled by her sister Sarah. E.E.Mitchell. Derived from her own collection, from those of friends and relations, and from John Ball, Kate's husband, they were compiled sometime between 1928 and 1933. The sketches are mounted in an album, together with: locks of Kate's hair on red silk; a pressed fern arrangement; a coloured photograph of John and Catherine Ball; and coloured views of Buckland Churchyard in 1850, showing the grave of Paul Thomas Mitchell, aged 3 days, and in 1879 showing the grave of Catherine Penwarne Ball. The scrapbook was bequeathed to The Royal Society of Tasmania in 1946. RS 32/

    Tucker Center Talks: S2E7 - New Zealand's Gender Inequity

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    Runtime 35:26Nicole talks with two Tucker Center Affiliated Scholars from New Zealand, Drs. Sarah Leberman and Sally Shaw. We discuss opportunities that can arise for gender equity in sport for girls and women, and what individuals and organizations can do to achieve equity.LaVoi, Nicole M.; Leberman, Sarah; Shaw, Sally. (2020). Tucker Center Talks: S2E7 - New Zealand's Gender Inequity. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/217491
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