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How a Scots girl interned in Germany turned to Hitler to sanction her marriage pressandjournal.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pressandjournal.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In an Early Republic period defined by expansion and concurrent policies such as Andrew Jackson’s Indian Removal Act, national narratives seemed to have no place for Native Americans. But the novelist and activist Sedgwick offered a different vision of that foundational American community, creating in her historical novel Hope Leslie a case for what she called (in the book’s preface) “their high-souled courage and patriotism.” And her character Magawisca, a young Pequot woman who narrates to an English audience her own account of the 1637 massacre at Mystic, offers a “new version of an old story,” what Sedgwick calls “putting the chisel in the hands of truth, and giving it to whom it belonged.” ....
Milwaukee County’s census data currently is being tabulated by the U.S. Census Bureau for its end-of-December scheduled delivery to the President, who in turn delivers the count to Congress. In March 2020 COVID-19 protocols disrupted and replaced years of 2020 census planning – extending collection timelines and shifting collection processes that, in turn, were suddenly abbreviated by presidential order in September. On December 18, 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a census-related decision – just thirteen days before the census was scheduled to be delivered to the president. The Court reviewed a July 2020 presidential order directing the Census Bureau to present two sets of data: 1)the total census, and 2) the full census minus the total number of undocumented persons. The presidential intent is that Congress use the immigrant-purged data for Congressional reapportionment and state taxation purposes. ....
Women’s rights activist By Isabella Warner - For The Times-Gazette Late Greenfield resident Wenona Marlin was instrumental in efforts to win women the right to vote in the United States. Courtesy photo Of women’s rights and how to vote; On various topics she did touch; And from the masters she could quote. Wenona Marlin, the New York Times 2015 Wenona Marlin was born in 1871 in Greenfield. She grew up comfortably, her father a Union army veteran and her mother something of a Greenfield socialite. She attended Greenfield High School and graduated in 1888, but she refused to get married, much to the consternation of her parents. There was too much she wanted to see and do; she didn’t want to settle down. She moved to Cincinnati and became a stenographer for Proctor and Gamble, earning enough money to move to New York City. ....