Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Mary Berry CBE (29 June 1917 – 1 May 2008), also known as Sister Thomas More CRSA, was a canoness regular, noted choral conductor and musicologist. She was an authority on the performance of Gregorian chant , founding the Schola Gregoriana of Cambridge to revive this ancient style of music.
Dame Mary Rosa Alleyne Hunnings [3] DBE (née Berry; born 24 March 1935) is an English food writer, chef, baker and television presenter.After being encouraged in domestic science classes at school, she studied catering at college.
John Carroll (1) became the first American bishop in 1790. Portrait of Jean-Louis Lefebvre de Cheverus by Gilbert Stuart. Jean-Louis Lefebvre de Cheverus (7) was the first bishop of Boston, and became a cardinal after he returned to France. John McCloskey (42) was Archbishop of New York and became the first American cardinal in 1875.
The York Mechanics' Institute was founded in 1827 and taught art and science classes. By 1877, the institute had a library that contained over 10,000 volumes. In 1891, a technical school was founded by the City of York Council and this took over teaching from the Mechanics' Institute which was dissolved in 1892 with its library and many of the books being handed over to the council.
Mary Frances Berry (born February 17, 1938) is an American historian, writer, lawyer, activist and professor who focuses on U.S. constitutional and legal, African-American history. [1] Berry is the Geraldine R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought where she teaches American legal history at the Department of History, School of Arts ...
Former Great British Bake Off judge Mary Berry has made an emotional plea to her fans 35 years after the death of her son in a car accident.. Berry, 89, who left The Great British Bake Off in 2016 ...
Benedict Joseph Fenwick SJ (September 3, 1782 – August 11, 1846) was an American Catholic prelate, Jesuit, and educator who served as the Bishop of Boston from 1825 until his death in 1846.
John Joseph Carberry was born in Brooklyn, New York, the youngest of ten children of James Joseph and Mary Elizabeth (née O'Keefe) Carberry. [1] His father worked as a clerk at Kings County Court. [2] He received his early education at the parochial school of St. Boniface Parish in Brooklyn. [3]