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Maude E. Miner Hadden (1880–1967) was a pioneer in the field of social work and an activist in the anti-prostitution movement.She was the first woman probation officer of the Magistrates' court in New York City, and the co-founder of Waverly House for Girls, the Girls Service League, the Committee on Protective Work for Girls, the Institute of World Affairs, and the Palm Beach Round Table.
Maude and Alexander Hadden, met when the two of them founded the institution. Alexander was son to a well off family, whose father did not wish for him to go to college. Alexander did end up going to college, funded his education at Columbia University by “saving his allowance and depriving himself of luxuries
She was born Maude Gertrude Annesley Webster-Wedderburn on 11 January 1871 in Newcastle-under-Lyme, the daughter of Major George Gordon Trophime-Gérard de Lally-Tollendal Webster-Wedderburn, son of James Webster-Wedderburn, and Caroline Teresa Dixon. [1] [2] She married Henry Alexander Hadden, a solicitor, in 1892. Still married to Hadden ...
Maude Miner Hadden [bv] 29 June 1880 Leyden, Massachusetts, United States 14 April 1967 Palm Beach, Florida, United States 1962 Nominated the only time by Åke Sandler. [215] 1963: Catherine Devilliers (LEBLANC, Marie - Catherine) [bw] 30 December 1923 Montpellier, Hérault, France — 1963 [216] Stella Monk [bx] — — 1963
Hadden was born on March 31, 1858, in New York City. [2] He was the eldest son of John Aspinwall Hadden (d. 1906) [3] and Frances "Fanny" (née Mactier) Hadden. The family lived on Fifth Avenue between 35th and 36th Streets. [4] He was the brother of Alexander Mactier Hadden, [1] a close friend of Edward Coleman Delafield. [5]
At 10 years, Stone said he would rather close Maude’s doors to a successful run rather than attempt to one day pivot it again, or lose focus or quality trying to balance all three of his concepts.
Hadden Clark may not be as well known as Ted Bundy or Jeffrey Dahmer, but the serial killer – who admitted to drinking the blood of his victims, drew caricatures of his victims and confessed his ...
Occupied at the time by high-society dropouts "Big Edie" and "Little Edie" Beale—aunt and cousin of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis—and their 52 cats, the crumbling mansion came dangerously close ...