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She was the daughter of the civil engineer and banker Philip Edward Sewell (1822–1906), [3] son of Isaac Sewell and his wife Mary Wright Sewell; the author Anna Sewell was her aunt. She was born in Brighton on 10 November 1852. [1] [4] Margaret Sewell was tutored privately, and entered Newnham College, Cambridge in 1884.
Margaret Elizabeth Egan (March 14, 1905 – January 26, 1959) was an American librarian and communication scholar who is best known for “Foundations of a Theory in Bibliography,” published in Library Quarterly in 1952 and co-authored with Jesse Hauk Shera.
Elizabeth Sewell (March 9, 1919 – January 12, 2001) was a British-American critic, poet, novelist, and professor who often wrote about the connections between science and literature. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Among her published works were five books of criticism, four novels, three books of poetry, [ 1 ] and many short stories, essays, and other work in ...
Elizabeth Missing Sewell (19 February 1815 – 17 August 1906) was an English author of religious and educational texts notable in the 19th century. As a home tutor, she devised a set of influential principles of education.
Margaret E. Ingalls (née Cook; September 16, 1939 – January 9, 2018), [1] [2] known by her pen name Nema Andahadna or simply Nema, was an American occultist, ceremonial magician, and writer known for her magical writings about the Ma'atian current, best known for her work Liber Pennae Praenumbra and as co-founder of the Horus-Maat Lodge.
The institution was preceded by a freeholders' library in the 1860s, which was eventually replaced in 1901 by a reading room organized and funded by a women's group. Various funds including a $15,000 grant were used to create a new library for Ballard, then an independent city. The library opened to the public on June 24, 1904.
State Offices South at Tift College Monroe Hall. Tift College was a private liberal arts women's college located in Forsyth, Georgia.Founded in 1849, the college ceased operations in 1987, after being merged with Mercer University in nearby Macon, Georgia.
William Hamilton Sewell (November 27, 1909 – June 24, 2001) was a United States sociologist and the chancellor of the University of Wisconsin–Madison during the 1967–1968 school year. He is the father of William H. Sewell Jr.