Addelita Cancryn was born on July 13, 1903, and died March 19, 1999 at the Sea View nursing home. Addelita Cancryn died at the age of 95 years old. She was born and raised on the beautiful island of St. Thomas, Danish West Indies. Addelita Cancryn was married to E. Vernon Cancryn and had one son name Emmanuel Rudolpho Cancryn. She was the daughter of Johannes C. Parrot and Ann Elisa, Nee Joshua. When Addelita Cancryn was growing up, she became an educator, organ music, and choir director. Addelita Cancryn was an elementary school teacher and a secondary school teacher. Also she was an acting principal, an assistant, and a principal at the Wayne Aspinall Junior High School. After Mrs. Cancryn served 53 years in the Department of Education and
A great hero Deborah Sampson in the Revolutionary War born on December 17th 1760 in Plympton, Massachusetts near Plymouth. Sampson was one of the seven children to Johnson Sampson Jr and Deborah Bradford AKA Sampson. Both were descendants of pilgrims Myles Standish and Priscilla Alden; his wife, the great-granddaughter of financially and, after Jonathan failed to return from a sea Voyage his wife was forced to place her children in different households 5 years later, age 10 Deborah was was a servant to Deacon Benjamin Thomas a farmer in Middleburg.
Edith Anglin Addie passed away at San Juan Villa of natural causes on Sunday, November 20, at the age of 91. A graveside service was held on December 3, at Laurel Grove cemetery with Reverend Carl Hanson officiating.
William met a young lady by the name of Mary Botham and a few months later, William asked Mary to marry him. William and Mary Howitt had one Daughter and named her Anna Mary Howitt after her mother and grandmother. Sadly, Howitt died on the 3rd of March in 1879, Rome, Italy. A few years later, Mary died on the 30th of January 1888, Rome, Italy.
Shellie Denece Craft Padgett, 46, of Magee, passed away on Tuesday, October 20, 2015 at St. Dominic Hospital in Jackson, MS.
Giselle Adriana Martinez Perez , passed away peacefully at home on March 18th, 2102. In Providence, Rhode Island at the age of 100 years.
She went to Cornell University and got her Bachelor’s degree. She was an elementary and middle school teacher at Agnes Irwin School in Rosemont.
On the day of December 17, 1760 Deborah Sampson was born in Plympton, Massachusetts. She was the oldest of the other 5 siblings she had Sylvia, Ephraim, Hanna, Jhonathan III, Elisha, and Nehemiah. Her birth parents are Deborah Bradford Sampson and Jonathan Sampson. Right before her 5th birthday her father left the family and no one ever heard from him after that. When she was around the age of 8-10 she became an indentured servant. The only education she got was from the boys in the family from what they had learned in school. When she was the age of 15 she started learning other types of things like sewing, spinning, and riding horses. Once she was 18 she was freed from being an indentured servant.
Within the community she has served in numerous roles contributing to the success of our youth.
Elma began her career, just after graduation, schooling Maryland high school students on the intricacies
In the beginning I was disillusioned and disheartened. I am a proud and patriotic American and I could not reconcile my love of country and admiration for the Founding Fathers with the fact that so many of them owned people who had been kidnapped from their homes in Africa, or were descended from people who had been kidnapped.
She is intelligent, hardworking, witty, charismatic, dedicated, loyal, and is an excellent speaker, reader, and writer. As a student, she read two or three grade levels above her grade level and was well read—reading most of the classics at a young age. I was quite impressed, but not surprised when she graduated at the top 10 percent of her high school class and graduated from The University of Texas in
After a few years of teaching at elementary and middle schools, she began as choral director at Bartlett High School. “At the high school, choir was a dumping ground. They put students in choir if they didn’t have anywhere else to go. I had a student who threw a chair once because he didn’t want to be in the class. He’s now a teacher and one of my dearest friends. We laugh about how he acted when he was first in the class,” Rupert
She was unapologetic about treating her students, especially her honors ones, like adults. She was strict about plagiarism and demanded our full efforts. Within our social studies curriculum, she found ways to infuse valuable life lessons and talk
The teachers profiled in “Unforgettable Miss Bessie”, “My Favorite Teacher”, and “And the Orchestra Played On” are remembered and admired by the narrators. Miss Bessie, Miss Hattie, and Mr. K. possessed significant qualities that made them remarkable educators. They inspired and encouraged students. They only wanted the best for their students and prepared them for their futures, enabling them to overcome difficulties in school. Besides the content of their subject matter these educators their taught students to believe that their lives and future all depends from themselves: whether they would choose the clean asphalt road or dirty, bumpy one.
Edgar Allan Poe, 40, passed October 7th 1849 in Baltimore of congestion of the brain. He was born Edgar Poe on January 19th 1809 in Boston, MA to David Poe Jr. and Elizabeth Poe, later John Allan and France's Allan. He was married to his first cousin, Virginia Clemm Poe on September 22nd 1835, who died of tuberculosis at age 24. He wrote short stories about his struggles in life and his misfortunes. He survived by his siblings, William and Rosalie Poe. He did not have any children or remaining immediate family. His stories will forever be a part of American Literature as pieces of art.