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Harriet McBryde Johnson was born in eastern North Carolina, July 8, 1957, in Laurinburg, one of five children by David and Ada Johnson. Her parents were college teachers. [1] She was a feisty child: A quote from her sister said that "Harriet tried to get an abusive teacher fired; the start of her hell raising."
The side advocating her inclusion prevailed and Johnson maintained her seat as the delegate from Allegheny City. [1] In 1870 Johnson married Frederick J. Loudin (c.1836–1904), a member of the Fisk Jubilee Singers and leader of the Loudin Jubilee Singers. [1] [2] Johnson died on November 18, 1907 in Portage County, Ohio. [3]
Finlay-Johnson was born in Hampstead in 1871. Her parents were Thomas Connolly and Jane (born FitzPatrick) Johnson. Harriet and her sister Emily both became teachers. [1] She qualified in 1892 after working for eight years at St Mary's School, Willesden. [1] The "Coronation of William and Mary" by the children using net curtains for costumes
Harriet Johnson may refer to: Harriet C. Johnson (1845–1907), African-American suffragist and educator Harriet McBryde Johnson (1957–2008), American author, attorney, and disability rights activist
Harriet Tubman, far left, with family and neighbors, circa 1887, at her home in Auburn, NY.Left to right: Harriet Tubman; Gertie Davis (adopted daughter); Nelson Davis (husband); Lee Chaney (neighbor's child); "Pop" John Alexander (elderly boarder in Tubman's home); Walter Green (neighbor's child); Blind "Aunty" Sarah Parker (elderly boarder); Dora Stewart (great-niece and granddaughter of ...
Harriet Merrill Johnson (1867 – February 21, 1934) was an American educator. Life. She was born in 1867 in Bangor, Maine. [1] She graduated from the Massachusetts ...
She had a recurring role in the 1960s NBC sitcom Hazel as Harriet Johnson. [8] She appeared on CBS's I Love Lucy as Mrs. Benson, the neighbour with whom the Ricardos switch apartments after the birth of Little Ricky in 1953. [9] In 1957, she guest-starred as Mrs. Weddington-Brown in Mr. Adams and Eve episode "The Social Crowd."
The Dover Eight refers to a group of eight black people who escaped their slaveholders of the Bucktown, Maryland area around March 8, 1857. [1] They were helped along the way by a number of people from the Underground Railroad, except for Thomas Otwell, who turned them in once they had made it north to Dover, Delaware.