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Mary Frances McDonald (1929–2021), Irish feminist; Mary-Frances Monroe (born 1980), American soccer player; Mary Frances Overbeck (1878–1955), American potter; Mary Frances Penick, birth name of Skeeter Davis (1931–2004), American country music singer and songwriter; Mary Frances Reynolds (1932–2016), American actress, singer, and ...
Frances E. Lee (Ph.D. 1997) – professor of politics and public affairs, Princeton University; co-editor of Legislative Studies Quarterly [43] Peter Mancina (Ph.D. 2016) – research associate at the Centre for Criminology, Law Faculty of the University of Oxford [44]
O'Connell was born in Nashville, Tennessee, to Beatrice, a retired teacher, and Tim, a federal civil servant and part-time songwriter. [5] He graduated from Montgomery Bell Academy in 1995, and earned two bachelor's degrees from Brown University in 2000, one in Music and the other in Computer Science.
Thomas F. Frist Jr. was born on August 12, 1938, to Thomas F. Frist Sr., a prominent internal medicine specialist in Nashville, [1] and Dorothy Cate. Frist has four siblings: physician and former U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist; [6] Dr. Robert A. Frist; Dorothy F. Boensch; and Mary F. Barfield.
Psychiatric Hospital at Vanderbilt (Nashville) Regional Hospital of Jackson (Jackson) RegionalOne Health Center (Memphis) Riverview Regional Medical Center (Carthage) Roane Medical Center, Harriman, operated by Covenant Health; St. Francis Hospital (Bartlett) St. Francis Hospital (Memphis) St. Johns & Mary Specialist Children Hospital
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.
In 1845, the patient Green Grimes wrote the book A Secret Worth Knowing, extolling the hospital. [1]After visiting Tennessee's first mental health facility, the Tennessee Lunatic Asylum, in November 1847, Dorothea Dix urged the state legislature to replace the unfit facility. [2]
Amanda Margaret Ross née McKittrick (1860–1939), known by her pen name Amanda McKittrick Ros, Northern Irish writer; Bobb McKittrick (1935–2000), American professional football player; David McKittrick (b. 1949), Northern Irish journalist; Ralph McKittrick (1877–1923), American golfer and tennis player; Rob McKittrick (b. 1973), American ...