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Lydia Flood Jackson continued her family's legacy to fight for African American civil rights and was a champion of women's rights. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] She was an active clubwoman, and first legislative chair and first citizenship chair of the California State Federation of Colored Women's Clubs . [ 2 ]
Lidian Jackson Emerson (born Lydia Jackson; September 20, 1802 – November 13, 1892) was the second wife of American essayist, lecturer, poet and leader of the nineteenth century Transcendentalism movement, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and mother of his four children.
Lydia Mugambi is a Ugandan visual artist, theatre actress, a former lecturer, and a former school teacher. She was born in 1937 to Mr Asanansio Ssempala Lubwama and ...
NEW YORK -- Students at P.S. 28X in Tremont celebrated the start of Black History Month on Monday with a visit from Lincoln University's marching band. Staff at the primary school collaborated ...
Jackson school board, Skrmetti propose change in Title IX discrimination law. Gannett. Sarah Best, Jackson Sun. July 31, 2024 at 2:37 PM. The Long-Range/Strategic Planning and Policy Committee ...
With just two candidates for L.A. Unified Board District 7, the March primary will pick the final winner -- unlike in the other school-district contests.
Lydia Patrice Jackson was born March 5, 1960. Her father, Alphonse J. Jackson of Shreveport, was an educator, a former member of the Louisiana House, and one of the ten founders of the Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus. Jackson graduated from Radcliffe College, the female attachment to Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. [1]
While Ralph Waldo Emerson was preparing to marry Lydia Jackson (whom he called "Lidian"), he told her he could not live in her home town of Plymouth, Massachusetts. "Plymouth is streets", he wrote to her, "I live in the wide champaign." [3] He had previously lived in Concord at The Old Manse, the Emerson family home, [4] and hoped to return to ...