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The McKittrick Hotel (also known as The McKittrick) was a performing arts venue themed as a 1930s hotel in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It was located at 530 West 27th Street and was best known as the setting of the immersive theater production Sleep No More . [ 1 ]
Center Harbor, New Hampshire – Col. Joseph Senter (settler) (note the spelling) [117] Chadds Ford Township, Pennsylvania – Francis Chadsey (proprietor) [117] Chalfant Valley, California – Arthur Chalfant (newspaper publisher) Chamberlain, South Dakota – Selah Chamberlain (railroad director)
The Frances Perkins Center is a nonprofit organization located in Newcastle, Maine. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Its mission is to inspire current and future generations to understand and uphold the government's role in providing social justice and economic security for all, based on the vision of workers’ rights advocate Frances Perkins .
Richard Chenevix Trench married his cousin, Hon. Frances Mary Trench, daughter of Francis Trench and Mary Mason, and sister of the 2nd Lord Ashtown, on 1 June 1832. [2] They had 14 children; 8 sons and 6 daughters: [citation needed] Francis William Trench (1833–1841) Melesina Mary Chenevix Trench (1834–1918) Richard Trench (1836–1861)
McKittrick Farmers Mercantile is a historic commercial building located at McKittrick, Montgomery County, Missouri. It was built about 1897, and is a two-story, brick building on a concrete foundation. The McKittrick Farmers Mercantile was locally significant in the areas of commerce, entertainment, and recreation.
Frances Mary McHie Rains (1911–2006) was an American nurse. She was the first Black woman admitted to the University of Minnesota School of Nursing. She was admitted to the School of Nursing after the Minnesota State Legislature learned of her initial rejection from the school based on race. She graduated in 1932.
Fanny Robertson (1765 – 18 December 1855), born Frances Mary Ross, was an actress and later the manager of the provincial theatres of the Lincoln Circuit.
The congregation took the Rule of the Third Order Regular of St. Francis at that time, combining a life of service with that of contemplation. To support themselves, the sisters provided home nursing care and worked in the sacristy of the Church of Santa Maria della Pietà in Camposanto dei Teutonici, the German national church of Rome. [3]