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Caroline Anderson (New Zealand Writer)
Caroline Anderson may refer to: * Caroline Anderson (writer), British novelist * Caroline Still Anderson (1848–1919), American doctor *Caroline Anderson (New Zealand writer), contributor to 2016 comics anthology Three Words {{Hndis, Anderson, Caroline ...
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Caroline Anderson (writer)
Caroline Anderson is the pseudonym by Caroline M. Woolnough (born British Hong Kong) is a popular British writer of over 80 contemporary romance novels to Mills & Boon (or Harlequin Enterprises Ltd) since 1991. She specializes in medical romances. Before writing, she has been a nurse, a secretary, a teacher, and has run her own business. Married with John, they had two sisters: Sarah and Hannah, and lived in Suffolk, England. Bibliography Single Novels *''Practice Makes Perfect'', 1991/12 *''Saving Dr. Gregory'', 1992/04 *''A Gentle Giant'', 1992/06 *''Just What the Doctor Ordered'', 1993/05 *''Picking Up the Pieces'', 1994/02 *''Once More, With Feeling'', 1994/12 *''Role Play'', 1995/02 *''Taken For Granted'', 1995/05 *''A Familiar Stranger'', 1995/08 *''One Step at a Time'', 1996/01 *''The Teapot Trail: A Taste of Cumbria'', 1996/01 *''Just Another Miracle!'', 1998/02 *''That Forever Feeling'', 1998/02 *''A Funny Thing Happened...'', 1999/01 *''Kids Included!'', 1999/06 *'' ...
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Caroline Still Anderson
Caroline Still Anderson (November 1, 1848 – June 1 or 2, 1919) was an American physician, educator, and activist. She was a pioneering physician in the Philadelphia African-American community and one of the first Black women to become a physician in the United States. Early life and education Caroline Still Anderson was born November 1, 1848, and was the oldest daughter of four to Letitia and William Still. Both of parents were leaders in the American abolitionist movement. Her father led the Philadelphia branch of the Underground Railroad, which began shortly after Caroline's birth. As a child, she attended Mrs. Gordon's Private School, The Friends' Raspberry Alley School, and the Institute for Colored Youth (now Cheyney University of Pennsylvania). Though these schools were costly, her father's lucrative coal industry position allowed him to afford a good education for his daughter. Still was very fortunate to have this opportunity because 19th-century Philadelphia was n ...
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