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Anne Smith (other)
Anne or Ann Smith may refer to: Arts and media *Ann Smith Franklin (born Ann Smith, 1696–1763), American newspaper printer and publisher *Anne Smith (silversmith) (fl. 1771–1782), English silversmith * Ann Eliza Smith (1819–1905), American author and patriot *Anne Smith (fl. 1955), actress in ''The Time of His Life'' *Anne Easter Smith, British-American novelist * Anne Mollegen Smith, American magazine editor and writer * Ann Lesley Smith (born 1956), American journalist Sport * Anne Smith (runner) (1941–1993), British middle-distance runner * Anne Smith (footballer) (born 1951), New Zealand footballer *Anne Smith (tennis) (born 1959), American tennis player Other fields *Ann Smith (activist) (fl. 1682–1686), English anti-Catholic political activist *Lady Anne Smith (1775–1844), sister of Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington *Dame Anne Beadsmore Smith (1869–1960), British Army nurse *Anne Ripley Smith (1881–1949), co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous *Anne Abel Sm ...
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Ann Smith Franklin
Ann Smith Franklin (October 2, 1696 – April 16, 1763) was an Thirteen Colonies, American colonial newspaper printer and publisher. She inherited the business from her husband, James Franklin (printer), James Franklin, brother of Benjamin Franklin. She published the ''Newport Mercury'', printed an almanac series, and printed Rhode Island paper currency. She was the country’s first female newspaper editor, the first woman to write an almanac, and the first woman inducted into the University of Rhode Island's Journalism Hall of Fame. Personal life Ann Smith Franklin was married to James Franklin, a printer and the brother of Founding Father Benjamin Franklin. They had five children including daughters Mary and Elizabeth, and son James Jr. (c.1730–1762). James Jr. attended Philadelphia Academy with his cousin William, Benjamin's son, before James Jr. was apprenticed in the printing trade to his uncle Benjamin. After a long illness, James died in Newport in 1735, leaving Ann a w ...
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Ann Smith (activist)
Ann Smith ( 1682–1686) was an English anti-Catholic political activist. A devout Baptist, she and her family sheltered the rebel 9th Earl of Argyll when he was in hiding in London and fled with him to the Spanish Netherlands in 1683. She lived with her husband in Utrecht and following his death funded Argyll's Rising in Scotland and the contemporaneous Monmouth Rebellion in England. She hosted fellow conspirator Elizabeth Gaunt in Amsterdam and received a royal pardon for her activism in 1686, after which time records of her life cease. Early life Nothing is known of Ann Smith's early life before 1682. At that time, it was recorded she was married to a prosperous sugar-baker in London and involved in the business, pursuing a debt owed by the nephew of the Spanish ambassador. Together they had at least one child. Political activism After the Exclusion Crisis ended in 1681, King Charles II cracked down upon religious dissenters and this may have motivated Smith to take ...
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Anne Smith, Lady Smith
Anne Smith, Lady Smith, (born 16 March 1955) is a Scottish lawyer, and a retired judge. Smith is currently the chair of the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry. Early life Smith was educated at Jordanhill School and Cheadle County Grammar School for Girls, before attending the School of Law of the University of Edinburgh, where she graduated with an LL.B. (Hons.). She served a two-year apprenticeship with Shepherd and Wedderburn WS, and was admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1980. Legal career Smith worked as standing junior counsel to the Countryside Commission, before becoming a Queen's Counsel in 1993. She served as a temporary sheriff from 1995 to 1999, as chairman of the Scottish Partnership on Domestic Abuse from 1998 to 2000, and as an advocate depute from 2000 to 2001. In April 2001 she was blamed by Donald Findlay for falling dress standards in the courts. In 1997, she had been the first woman to appear before the Court of Session in trousers; Findlay said ...
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Ann Alexander Smith
Tangipahoa Parish School Board is a school district headquartered in Amite City, Louisiana, Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana, United States. The district serves Tangipahoa Parish. Robert L. Frye (1927-2011), the Republican nominee for state education superintendent in 1972, was a former member of the Tangipahoa Parish School Board. The Board has a long history of racial discrimination in the hiring of teachers. In 1975, it was ordered to ensure one-third of the teaching staff were Black. Both the Board and the Court ignored the mandate for more than thirty years. During the period from 1998 to 2008, the Board hired fewer Black teachers than any other school system in the state. In 2010, a second ruling strengthened the first. In 1994, the Board adopted a requirement that a disclaimer be read aloud before any instruction on the theory of evolution. Local parents sued. In 2000, the Supreme Court declined to revise a lower court ruling striking down the policy. School uniforms ...
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Anne Briar Smith
Anne Briar Smith (née Riddall, 13 August 1940 – 22 May 2016) was a New Zealand professor at the University of Otago, and was a pioneering children's rights researcher. Early life and education Smith was born on 13 August 1940 in Porthcawl, Wales, to Dora and Geoff Riddall. Her father worked for the Iraq Petroleum Company, and when that necessitated the family move to Syria, Smith boarded at the Welsh Girls' School in England, aged nine. The family moved to New Zealand in 1954, and Smith attended Te Aroha College, where she was dux in both 1956 and 1957. Academic career Smith completed a BHSc in Home Science at the University of Otago in 1963, and then completed a BA in Education at both Otago and Auckland Universities in 1965. She then undertook an MEd at the University of Alberta in 1969, and then completed a PhD titled ''Verbalization and selective attention in discrimination shift problems'' there in 1971. She was supported during her PhD by a Commonwealth Schola ...
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Anne Abel Smith
Anne Mary Sibylla Abel Smith (formerly Liddell-Grainger; born 28 July 1932) is a British aristocrat and Christian charity worker. A great-great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria and a cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, she was married for 25 years to Scottish politician David Liddell-Grainger and is the mother of Conservative MP Ian Liddell-Grainger. In her sixties, she attended gospel meetings in Kennington, did missionary work in Africa, and was often invited to Royal Ascot and other functions by the Queen. Early life and education Anne was born Anne Mary Sibylla Abel Smith to Lady May Cambridge (formerly Princess May of Teck) and Sir Henry Abel Smith in 1932. She was the eldest of their three children and older sister to Richard and Elizabeth. She is a direct descendant of Queen Victoria; her maternal grandmother was Princess Alice of Albany, the eldest daughter of Victoria's youngest son, Prince Leopold. Her maternal grandfather was Alexander Cambridge, 1st Earl of Athlone, ...
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Anne Ripley Smith
Anne Ripley Smith (March 3, 1881 – June 1, 1949) was a co-founder of AA, along with her husband, Dr. Bob Smith, and Bill Wilson. Anne Smith's influence in AA became widely known through her publication, ''Anne Smith's Journal, 1933-1939''. She compiled and shared with early AAs and their families the materials that comprised the early AA's spiritual program—the Bible, Quiet Time, the teachings of Sam Shoemaker, the principles of the Oxford Group, and Christian literature of the day. Anne became one of the first members of Al-Anon when another founder, the wife of Bill W., Lois Wilson visited her in Akron, Ohio Akron () is a city in Summit County, Ohio, United States, and its county seat. It is the List of municipalities in Ohio, fifth-most populous city in Ohio, with a population of 190,469 at the 2020 United States census, 2020 census. The Akron metr ... during his stay at their house. Al-Anon officially began in 1951, after Anne's death. External links * Anne Smith ...
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Anne Beadsmore Smith
Dame Anne Beadsmore Smith, (1869 – 12 July 1960), also known as Ann or Annie, was a British nurse and British Army officer. She was a military nurse during the Second Boer War and the First World War. She then served as Matron-in-Chief of the Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service from 1917 to 1924 and Matron-in-Chief of the Territorial Army Nursing Service from 1925 to 1931. Honours In the 1918 New Year Honours, Smith was awarded a Bar to her Royal Red Cross "in recognition of ervery valuable services during the war". She was also made a Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur by France for her war service, and she was granted permission to wear the award in 1920. In the 1925 King's Birthday Honours, she was made Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in recognition of her work as Matron-in-Chief of Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service, and thereby granted the title of ''dame ''Dame'' is a traditionally British honorific title gi ...
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Lady Anne Smith
Lady Anne Culling Smith (''née'' Wellesley, previously FitzRoy; 13 March 1768 – 16 December 1844) was an Anglo-Irish aristocrat, and the sister of Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington. She was the daughter of the 1st Earl of Mornington, and Anne Wellesley, Countess of Mornington, daughter of Arthur Hill-Trevor, 1st Viscount Dungannon. On 7 January 1790 she married the Hon. Henry FitzRoy, son of Charles FitzRoy, 1st Baron Southampton. They had two daughters: * Anne Caroline FitzRoy, died 16 December 1835 * Georgiana Frederica FitzRoy (3 October 1792 – 11 May 1821), married 25 July 1814 Henry Somerset, Marquess of Worcester, with two daughters. FitzRoy died on 19 March 1794 in Lisbon due to consumption. Anne's brother Henry came down to Lisbon to bring her back to England. However, on their way back, their ship was captured by a French frigate and the siblings were taken prisoners. In January 1795, Anne was freed. Anne remarried on 2 August 1799 to Charles Cull ...
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Anne Smith (tennis)
Anne Smith (born July 1, 1959) is an educational psychologist and a former professional tennis player from the United States. Smith's highest women's doubles ranking was world No. 1 in 1980 and 1981. Her highest singles ranking was world No. 11 in 1980. Major finals Grand Slam finals Doubles: 9 (5–4) Mixed doubles: 5 (5–0) Year-End Championships finals Doubles: 1 (0–1) WTA Tour finals Singles 4 (0–4) Doubles 69 (32–37) Grand Slam performance timeline Singles Doubles Mixed doubles Note: The Australian Open was held twice in 1977, in January and December. Education She received a Bachelor of Arts in psychology from Trinity University and a PhD. in educational psychology from The University of Texas. Career Smith is a licensed psychologist in Texas and Massachusetts. She was director of the Learning Center at Dean College in Franklin, Massachusetts. She was the coach of the WTT Boston Lobsters team in 2005, 2006, and 2007. Smith ...
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Anne Smith (silversmith)
Anne Smith was an English silversmith working in partnership with Nathaniel Appleton. Unusually, Smith does not appear to have been the widow of a silversmith when she registered her mark on 26 July 1771; her marital status at the time is given instead as "unknown". She lived in Aldersgate Street and was classified as a smallworker. Her partnership with Appleton appears in the Parliamentary Report list of 1773. The couple specialized in the making of saltcellars and small cream jugs. A George III cream jug of 1773 and a set of four George III saltcellars of 1782 by the partners are owned by the National Museum of Women in the Arts, while a collection of saltcellars is owned by the National Gallery of Victoria. Numerous other pieces are known to exist as well. References

Year of birth missing Year of death missing 18th-century English women artists Artisans from London English silversmiths Women silversmiths {{England-artist-stub ...
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Anne Smith (footballer)
Anne Smith (born 27 September 1951) is a former association football player who represented New Zealand at international level. Smith made her Football Ferns debut in a 3–0 win over a Switzerland on 8 December 1984 and ended her international career with 11 caps to her credit. Smith made her final appearance in a 5–0 win over Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea, officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, is an island country in Oceania that comprises the eastern half of the island of New Guinea and offshore islands in Melanesia, a region of the southwestern Pacific Ocean n ... on 30 March 1989, she continued to be included in the squad as second goalkeeper behind Leslie King through the Women's World Cup finals in China in 1991. References External links * 1951 births Living people New Zealand women's international footballers New Zealand women's association footballers Women's association football goalkeepers 1991 FIFA Women's World Cup pl ...
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