Neill, Dora Brock
Narrative
Records not imported into INDI (individual) Gramps ID I12175878896:
Line ignored as not understood Line 5640: 3 _APID 1,7884::139288727
Line ignored as not understood Line 5649: 3 _APID 1,7602::43035615
Line ignored as not understood Line 5658: 3 _APID 1,6224::97241011
Line ignored as not understood Line 5661: 3 _APID 1,2442::16801904
Line ignored as not understood Line 5676: 3 _APID 1,7884::139288727
Line ignored as not understood Line 5685: 3 _APID 1,7602::43035615
Line ignored as not understood Line 5694: 3 _APID 1,6224::97241011
Line ignored as not understood Line 5737: 3 _APID 1,2442::16801904
Line ignored as not understood Line 5749: 3 _APID 1,7602::43035615
Line ignored as not understood Line 5785: 3 _APID 1,7884::139288727
Line ignored as not understood Line 5984: 3 _APID 1,6224::97241011
Line ignored as not understood Line 6030: 3 _APID 1,2442::16801904
Line ignored as not understood Line 6036: 3 _APID 1,2442::16801904
Events
Parents
Relation to main person | Name | Birth date | Death date | Relation within this family (if not by birth) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Father | Neill, Henry Hart | 29 January 1848 | 1 September 1911 | |
Mother | Fagan, Dora M | November 1861 | ||
Brother | Neill, Robert Toombs | 27 April 1879 | 6 December 1962 | |
Neill, Dora Brock | January 1889 | 1 December 1961 |
Families
Family of Raymond, Frederick Nathaniel and Neill, Dora Brock |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Married | Husband | Raymond, Frederick Nathaniel ( * 26 September 1886 + 12 April 1941 ) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|
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Children |
Name | Birth Date | Death Date |
---|---|---|
Raymond, Edward Neill | 31 August 1911 | September 1986 |
Pedigree
Ancestors
Source References
-
Ancestry.com: 1910 United States Federal Census
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- Page: Year: 1910; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: ; Page: ; Enumeration District: ; Image: .
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Source text:
Birth date: 1889
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1910
Residence place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1910uscenindex&h=139288727&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
- Page: Year: 1910; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: ; Page: ; Enumeration District: ; Image: .
-
Source text:
Birth date: 1889
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1910
Residence place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1910uscenindex&h=139288727&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
- Page: Year: 1910; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: ; Page: ; Enumeration District: ; Image: .
-
Source text:
Birth date: 1889
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1910
Residence place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1910uscenindex&h=139288727&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
-
Ancestry.com: 1900 United States Federal Census
-
- Page: Year: 1900; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: T623_1611; Page: 11B; Enumeration District: 96.
-
Source text:
Birth date: Jan 1889
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1900
Residence place: San Antonio City, Bexar, Texas</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1900usfedcen&h=43035615&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
- Page: Year: 1900; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: T623_1611; Page: 11B; Enumeration District: 96.
-
Source text:
Birth date: Jan 1889
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1900
Residence place: San Antonio City, Bexar, Texas</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1900usfedcen&h=43035615&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
- Page: Year: 1900; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: T623_1611; Page: 11B; Enumeration District: 96.
-
Source text:
Birth date: Jan 1889
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1900
Residence place: San Antonio City, Bexar, Texas</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1900usfedcen&h=43035615&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
-
Ancestry.com: 1930 United States Federal Census
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- Page: Year: 1930; Census Place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia; Roll: 2434; Page: 8A; Enumeration District: 2; Image: 804.0.
-
Source text:
Birth date: abt 1890
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1930
Residence place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1930usfedcen&h=97241011&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
- Page: Year: 1930; Census Place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia; Roll: 2434; Page: 8A; Enumeration District: 2; Image: 804.0.
-
Source text:
Birth date: abt 1890
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1930
Residence place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1930usfedcen&h=97241011&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
- Page: Year: 1930; Census Place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia; Roll: 2434; Page: 8A; Enumeration District: 2; Image: 804.0.
-
Source text:
Birth date: abt 1890
Birth place: Texas
Residence date: 1930
Residence place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia</line><line /> -
Citation:
http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1930usfedcen&h=97241011&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
-
-
1940 United States Federal Census
-
- Page: Year: 1940; Census Place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia; Roll: T627_4244; Page: 12B; Enumeration District: 5-5
-
- Page: Year: 1940; Census Place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia; Roll: T627_4244; Page: 12B; Enumeration District: 5-5
-
- Page: Year: 1940; Census Place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia; Roll: T627_4244; Page: 12B; Enumeration District: 5-5
-
- Page: Year: 1940; Census Place: Court House, Amherst, Virginia; Roll: T627_4244; Page: 12B; Enumeration District: 5-5
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-
Arrow of Pi Beta Phi, The
-
- Date: June 1922
- Page: Vol. XXXVIII, Number 4, p. 693
-
Source text:
Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A
A very signal honor was recently conferred upon Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A, by the American Association of University Women in awarding to her the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of $1,000 as an aid for further research work in history. This fellowship is only available to women holding the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Dr. Raymond was elected by the A. A. of U. W. because of the very unusual work which she did in obtaining her doctor's degree. The only obligation attached to this Fellowship is that Dr. Raymond continue her work in historical research on a plan which she has already outlined.
Dr. Raymond, the daughter of the late Judge Henry Hart Neill and his wife, was born in El Paso, Texas, and when very young went with her parents to live in San Antonio, There, for nine years, she attended St. Mary's Episcopal School for girls and finished her preliminary training with two years at the High School. During her senior year she was editor-in-chief of the school magazine, The Huisache, and received a prize offered by the San Antonio Chapter of the Colonial Dames for a paper on "Early Education in the Colonies."
Entering the University of Texas in 1907, she was initiated into Texas A of Pi Beta Phi. The following year she served on the editorial board of The Coyote.
In her junior year, she married and left the university to live in Raymondville, Texas. There in 1911, was born her son, Neill Raymond.
Returning to the university in 1915, Mrs. Raymond resumed her work and in two years received the degrees of B.A. and M.A. In 1918, she held the University Fellowship in History and was editorin-chief of the college magazine, The Longhorn.
In the fall of the same year she entered Columbia University in New York City as Schiff Fellow in Political Science. Though there is no proviso against this fellowship being awarded to a woman, Mrs. Raymond is the only woman thus far to have held it. At Columbia she continued her research work under the very able direction of Professors William A. Dunning and Charles Downer Hazen, receiving the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1921.
Dr. Raymond's dissertation, British Policy and Opinion During the Franco-Prussian War, was selected by the editor of the Columbia Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, to be the first number of the one-hundredth volume of that series. With bibliography and index it comprises 435 pages and is published separately by Longmans, Green and Company of New York and by P. S. King and Son of London.
The author has been gratified by favorable reviews in the London Times, Court Gazette, Edinburgh Scotsman, and New York Tribune. More highly prized than these, however, is a long letter from the late Viscount Bryce, who wrote shortly before his death to say that he was reading the monograph with much interest. Frederic Harrison and Sir Henry Lucy, two other eminent Englishmen, who were living during the time of which the dissertation treats, have also written of it very approvingly.
In addition to her historical work, Mrs. Raymond has contributed books reviews to the Sunday magazine section of the New York Times and has had published several poems in Poet Lore of Boston. She makes her home with her mother and son in New York City and is an active member of the New York Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. -
Citation:
http://books.google.com/books?id=ODjPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA693
-
- Date: June 1922
- Page: Vol. XXXVIII, Number 4, p. 693
-
Source text:
Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A
A very signal honor was recently conferred upon Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A, by the American Association of University Women in awarding to her the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of $1,000 as an aid for further research work in history. This fellowship is only available to women holding the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Dr. Raymond was elected by the A. A. of U. W. because of the very unusual work which she did in obtaining her doctor's degree. The only obligation attached to this Fellowship is that Dr. Raymond continue her work in historical research on a plan which she has already outlined.
Dr. Raymond, the daughter of the late Judge Henry Hart Neill and his wife, was born in El Paso, Texas, and when very young went with her parents to live in San Antonio, There, for nine years, she attended St. Mary's Episcopal School for girls and finished her preliminary training with two years at the High School. During her senior year she was editor-in-chief of the school magazine, The Huisache, and received a prize offered by the San Antonio Chapter of the Colonial Dames for a paper on "Early Education in the Colonies."
Entering the University of Texas in 1907, she was initiated into Texas A of Pi Beta Phi. The following year she served on the editorial board of The Coyote.
In her junior year, she married and left the university to live in Raymondville, Texas. There in 1911, was born her son, Neill Raymond.
Returning to the university in 1915, Mrs. Raymond resumed her work and in two years received the degrees of B.A. and M.A. In 1918, she held the University Fellowship in History and was editorin-chief of the college magazine, The Longhorn.
In the fall of the same year she entered Columbia University in New York City as Schiff Fellow in Political Science. Though there is no proviso against this fellowship being awarded to a woman, Mrs. Raymond is the only woman thus far to have held it. At Columbia she continued her research work under the very able direction of Professors William A. Dunning and Charles Downer Hazen, receiving the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1921.
Dr. Raymond's dissertation, British Policy and Opinion During the Franco-Prussian War, was selected by the editor of the Columbia Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, to be the first number of the one-hundredth volume of that series. With bibliography and index it comprises 435 pages and is published separately by Longmans, Green and Company of New York and by P. S. King and Son of London.
The author has been gratified by favorable reviews in the London Times, Court Gazette, Edinburgh Scotsman, and New York Tribune. More highly prized than these, however, is a long letter from the late Viscount Bryce, who wrote shortly before his death to say that he was reading the monograph with much interest. Frederic Harrison and Sir Henry Lucy, two other eminent Englishmen, who were living during the time of which the dissertation treats, have also written of it very approvingly.
In addition to her historical work, Mrs. Raymond has contributed books reviews to the Sunday magazine section of the New York Times and has had published several poems in Poet Lore of Boston. She makes her home with her mother and son in New York City and is an active member of the New York Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. -
Citation:
http://books.google.com/books?id=ODjPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA693
-
- Date: June 1922
- Page: Vol. XXXVIII, Number 4, p. 693
-
Source text:
Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A
A very signal honor was recently conferred upon Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A, by the American Association of University Women in awarding to her the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of $1,000 as an aid for further research work in history. This fellowship is only available to women holding the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Dr. Raymond was elected by the A. A. of U. W. because of the very unusual work which she did in obtaining her doctor's degree. The only obligation attached to this Fellowship is that Dr. Raymond continue her work in historical research on a plan which she has already outlined.
Dr. Raymond, the daughter of the late Judge Henry Hart Neill and his wife, was born in El Paso, Texas, and when very young went with her parents to live in San Antonio, There, for nine years, she attended St. Mary's Episcopal School for girls and finished her preliminary training with two years at the High School. During her senior year she was editor-in-chief of the school magazine, The Huisache, and received a prize offered by the San Antonio Chapter of the Colonial Dames for a paper on "Early Education in the Colonies."
Entering the University of Texas in 1907, she was initiated into Texas A of Pi Beta Phi. The following year she served on the editorial board of The Coyote.
In her junior year, she married and left the university to live in Raymondville, Texas. There in 1911, was born her son, Neill Raymond.
Returning to the university in 1915, Mrs. Raymond resumed her work and in two years received the degrees of B.A. and M.A. In 1918, she held the University Fellowship in History and was editorin-chief of the college magazine, The Longhorn.
In the fall of the same year she entered Columbia University in New York City as Schiff Fellow in Political Science. Though there is no proviso against this fellowship being awarded to a woman, Mrs. Raymond is the only woman thus far to have held it. At Columbia she continued her research work under the very able direction of Professors William A. Dunning and Charles Downer Hazen, receiving the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1921.
Dr. Raymond's dissertation, British Policy and Opinion During the Franco-Prussian War, was selected by the editor of the Columbia Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, to be the first number of the one-hundredth volume of that series. With bibliography and index it comprises 435 pages and is published separately by Longmans, Green and Company of New York and by P. S. King and Son of London.
The author has been gratified by favorable reviews in the London Times, Court Gazette, Edinburgh Scotsman, and New York Tribune. More highly prized than these, however, is a long letter from the late Viscount Bryce, who wrote shortly before his death to say that he was reading the monograph with much interest. Frederic Harrison and Sir Henry Lucy, two other eminent Englishmen, who were living during the time of which the dissertation treats, have also written of it very approvingly.
In addition to her historical work, Mrs. Raymond has contributed books reviews to the Sunday magazine section of the New York Times and has had published several poems in Poet Lore of Boston. She makes her home with her mother and son in New York City and is an active member of the New York Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. -
Citation:
http://books.google.com/books?id=ODjPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA693
-
- Date: June 1922
- Page: Vol. XXXVIII, Number 4, p. 693
-
Source text:
Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A
A very signal honor was recently conferred upon Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A, by the American Association of University Women in awarding to her the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of $1,000 as an aid for further research work in history. This fellowship is only available to women holding the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Dr. Raymond was elected by the A. A. of U. W. because of the very unusual work which she did in obtaining her doctor's degree. The only obligation attached to this Fellowship is that Dr. Raymond continue her work in historical research on a plan which she has already outlined.
Dr. Raymond, the daughter of the late Judge Henry Hart Neill and his wife, was born in El Paso, Texas, and when very young went with her parents to live in San Antonio, There, for nine years, she attended St. Mary's Episcopal School for girls and finished her preliminary training with two years at the High School. During her senior year she was editor-in-chief of the school magazine, The Huisache, and received a prize offered by the San Antonio Chapter of the Colonial Dames for a paper on "Early Education in the Colonies."
Entering the University of Texas in 1907, she was initiated into Texas A of Pi Beta Phi. The following year she served on the editorial board of The Coyote.
In her junior year, she married and left the university to live in Raymondville, Texas. There in 1911, was born her son, Neill Raymond.
Returning to the university in 1915, Mrs. Raymond resumed her work and in two years received the degrees of B.A. and M.A. In 1918, she held the University Fellowship in History and was editorin-chief of the college magazine, The Longhorn.
In the fall of the same year she entered Columbia University in New York City as Schiff Fellow in Political Science. Though there is no proviso against this fellowship being awarded to a woman, Mrs. Raymond is the only woman thus far to have held it. At Columbia she continued her research work under the very able direction of Professors William A. Dunning and Charles Downer Hazen, receiving the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1921.
Dr. Raymond's dissertation, British Policy and Opinion During the Franco-Prussian War, was selected by the editor of the Columbia Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, to be the first number of the one-hundredth volume of that series. With bibliography and index it comprises 435 pages and is published separately by Longmans, Green and Company of New York and by P. S. King and Son of London.
The author has been gratified by favorable reviews in the London Times, Court Gazette, Edinburgh Scotsman, and New York Tribune. More highly prized than these, however, is a long letter from the late Viscount Bryce, who wrote shortly before his death to say that he was reading the monograph with much interest. Frederic Harrison and Sir Henry Lucy, two other eminent Englishmen, who were living during the time of which the dissertation treats, have also written of it very approvingly.
In addition to her historical work, Mrs. Raymond has contributed books reviews to the Sunday magazine section of the New York Times and has had published several poems in Poet Lore of Boston. She makes her home with her mother and son in New York City and is an active member of the New York Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. -
Citation:
http://books.google.com/books?id=ODjPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA693
-
- Date: June 1922
- Page: Vol. XXXVIII, Number 4, p. 693
-
Source text:
Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A
A very signal honor was recently conferred upon Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A, by the American Association of University Women in awarding to her the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of $1,000 as an aid for further research work in history. This fellowship is only available to women holding the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Dr. Raymond was elected by the A. A. of U. W. because of the very unusual work which she did in obtaining her doctor's degree. The only obligation attached to this Fellowship is that Dr. Raymond continue her work in historical research on a plan which she has already outlined.
Dr. Raymond, the daughter of the late Judge Henry Hart Neill and his wife, was born in El Paso, Texas, and when very young went with her parents to live in San Antonio, There, for nine years, she attended St. Mary's Episcopal School for girls and finished her preliminary training with two years at the High School. During her senior year she was editor-in-chief of the school magazine, The Huisache, and received a prize offered by the San Antonio Chapter of the Colonial Dames for a paper on "Early Education in the Colonies."
Entering the University of Texas in 1907, she was initiated into Texas A of Pi Beta Phi. The following year she served on the editorial board of The Coyote.
In her junior year, she married and left the university to live in Raymondville, Texas. There in 1911, was born her son, Neill Raymond.
Returning to the university in 1915, Mrs. Raymond resumed her work and in two years received the degrees of B.A. and M.A. In 1918, she held the University Fellowship in History and was editorin-chief of the college magazine, The Longhorn.
In the fall of the same year she entered Columbia University in New York City as Schiff Fellow in Political Science. Though there is no proviso against this fellowship being awarded to a woman, Mrs. Raymond is the only woman thus far to have held it. At Columbia she continued her research work under the very able direction of Professors William A. Dunning and Charles Downer Hazen, receiving the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1921.
Dr. Raymond's dissertation, British Policy and Opinion During the Franco-Prussian War, was selected by the editor of the Columbia Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, to be the first number of the one-hundredth volume of that series. With bibliography and index it comprises 435 pages and is published separately by Longmans, Green and Company of New York and by P. S. King and Son of London.
The author has been gratified by favorable reviews in the London Times, Court Gazette, Edinburgh Scotsman, and New York Tribune. More highly prized than these, however, is a long letter from the late Viscount Bryce, who wrote shortly before his death to say that he was reading the monograph with much interest. Frederic Harrison and Sir Henry Lucy, two other eminent Englishmen, who were living during the time of which the dissertation treats, have also written of it very approvingly.
In addition to her historical work, Mrs. Raymond has contributed books reviews to the Sunday magazine section of the New York Times and has had published several poems in Poet Lore of Boston. She makes her home with her mother and son in New York City and is an active member of the New York Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. -
Citation:
http://books.google.com/books?id=ODjPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA693
-
- Date: June 1922
- Page: Vol. XXXVIII, Number 4, p. 693
-
Source text:
Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A
A very signal honor was recently conferred upon Dr. Dora Neill Raymond, Texas A, by the American Association of University Women in awarding to her the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of $1,000 as an aid for further research work in history. This fellowship is only available to women holding the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Dr. Raymond was elected by the A. A. of U. W. because of the very unusual work which she did in obtaining her doctor's degree. The only obligation attached to this Fellowship is that Dr. Raymond continue her work in historical research on a plan which she has already outlined.
Dr. Raymond, the daughter of the late Judge Henry Hart Neill and his wife, was born in El Paso, Texas, and when very young went with her parents to live in San Antonio, There, for nine years, she attended St. Mary's Episcopal School for girls and finished her preliminary training with two years at the High School. During her senior year she was editor-in-chief of the school magazine, The Huisache, and received a prize offered by the San Antonio Chapter of the Colonial Dames for a paper on "Early Education in the Colonies."
Entering the University of Texas in 1907, she was initiated into Texas A of Pi Beta Phi. The following year she served on the editorial board of The Coyote.
In her junior year, she married and left the university to live in Raymondville, Texas. There in 1911, was born her son, Neill Raymond.
Returning to the university in 1915, Mrs. Raymond resumed her work and in two years received the degrees of B.A. and M.A. In 1918, she held the University Fellowship in History and was editorin-chief of the college magazine, The Longhorn.
In the fall of the same year she entered Columbia University in New York City as Schiff Fellow in Political Science. Though there is no proviso against this fellowship being awarded to a woman, Mrs. Raymond is the only woman thus far to have held it. At Columbia she continued her research work under the very able direction of Professors William A. Dunning and Charles Downer Hazen, receiving the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in 1921.
Dr. Raymond's dissertation, British Policy and Opinion During the Franco-Prussian War, was selected by the editor of the Columbia Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, to be the first number of the one-hundredth volume of that series. With bibliography and index it comprises 435 pages and is published separately by Longmans, Green and Company of New York and by P. S. King and Son of London.
The author has been gratified by favorable reviews in the London Times, Court Gazette, Edinburgh Scotsman, and New York Tribune. More highly prized than these, however, is a long letter from the late Viscount Bryce, who wrote shortly before his death to say that he was reading the monograph with much interest. Frederic Harrison and Sir Henry Lucy, two other eminent Englishmen, who were living during the time of which the dissertation treats, have also written of it very approvingly.
In addition to her historical work, Mrs. Raymond has contributed books reviews to the Sunday magazine section of the New York Times and has had published several poems in Poet Lore of Boston. She makes her home with her mother and son in New York City and is an active member of the New York Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. -
Citation:
http://books.google.com/books?id=ODjPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA693
-
-
New York Times
-
- Date: December 4, 1961
- Page: “Dora Raymond Dies; Former Professor of History at Sweet Briar Was 72” (Obituary)
-
Source text:
[Material is under copyright]
-
Citation:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061FF73F591A728DDDAD0894DA415B818AF1D3
-
Citation:
Dateline: Vienna, Va. Dec. 3, (AP)
Name: Dora Neill Raymond
Age: 72
Graduation: 1917, University of Texas
Occupation: History Instructor, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Occupation: Faculty of Sweet Briar College (Va.) in 1925; Ret'd 1950
Occupation: Head of Government and History Department at Sweet Briar
Divorce: 1915 from Frederick D. Raymond, who died in 1940
Survivor: Son: E. Neill Raymond of Arlington, Va.
Survivor: Brother: Robert T. Neill of San Angelo, Tex.
-
- Date: December 4, 1961
- Page: “Dora Raymond Dies; Former Professor of History at Sweet Briar Was 72” (Obituary)
-
Source text:
[Material is under copyright]
-
Citation:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061FF73F591A728DDDAD0894DA415B818AF1D3
-
Citation:
Dateline: Vienna, Va. Dec. 3, (AP)
Name: Dora Neill Raymond
Age: 72
Graduation: 1917, University of Texas
Occupation: History Instructor, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Occupation: Faculty of Sweet Briar College (Va.) in 1925; Ret'd 1950
Occupation: Head of Government and History Department at Sweet Briar
Divorce: 1915 from Frederick D. Raymond, who died in 1940
Survivor: Son: E. Neill Raymond of Arlington, Va.
Survivor: Brother: Robert T. Neill of San Angelo, Tex.
-
- Date: December 4, 1961
- Page: “Dora Raymond Dies; Former Professor of History at Sweet Briar Was 72” (Obituary)
-
Source text:
[Material is under copyright]
-
Citation:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061FF73F591A728DDDAD0894DA415B818AF1D3
-
Citation:
Dateline: Vienna, Va. Dec. 3, (AP)
Name: Dora Neill Raymond
Age: 72
Graduation: 1917, University of Texas
Occupation: History Instructor, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Occupation: Faculty of Sweet Briar College (Va.) in 1925; Ret'd 1950
Occupation: Head of Government and History Department at Sweet Briar
Divorce: 1915 from Frederick D. Raymond, who died in 1940
Survivor: Son: E. Neill Raymond of Arlington, Va.
Survivor: Brother: Robert T. Neill of San Angelo, Tex.
-
- Date: December 4, 1961
- Page: “Dora Raymond Dies; Former Professor of History at Sweet Briar Was 72” (Obituary)
-
Source text:
[Material is under copyright]
-
Citation:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061FF73F591A728DDDAD0894DA415B818AF1D3
-
Citation:
Dateline: Vienna, Va. Dec. 3, (AP)
Name: Dora Neill Raymond
Age: 72
Graduation: 1917, University of Texas
Occupation: History Instructor, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Occupation: Faculty of Sweet Briar College (Va.) in 1925; Ret'd 1950
Occupation: Head of Government and History Department at Sweet Briar
Divorce: 1915 from Frederick D. Raymond, who died in 1940
Survivor: Son: E. Neill Raymond of Arlington, Va.
Survivor: Brother: Robert T. Neill of San Angelo, Tex.
-
- Date: December 4, 1961
- Page: “Dora Raymond Dies; Former Professor of History at Sweet Briar Was 72” (Obituary)
-
Source text:
[Material is under copyright]
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Citation:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061FF73F591A728DDDAD0894DA415B818AF1D3
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Citation:
Dateline: Vienna, Va. Dec. 3, (AP)
Name: Dora Neill Raymond
Age: 72
Graduation: 1917, University of Texas
Occupation: History Instructor, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Occupation: Faculty of Sweet Briar College (Va.) in 1925; Ret'd 1950
Occupation: Head of Government and History Department at Sweet Briar
Divorce: 1915 from Frederick D. Raymond, who died in 1940
Survivor: Son: E. Neill Raymond of Arlington, Va.
Survivor: Brother: Robert T. Neill of San Angelo, Tex.
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- Date: December 4, 1961
- Page: “Dora Raymond Dies; Former Professor of History at Sweet Briar Was 72” (Obituary)
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Source text:
[Material is under copyright]
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Citation:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061FF73F591A728DDDAD0894DA415B818AF1D3
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Citation:
Dateline: Vienna, Va. Dec. 3, (AP)
Name: Dora Neill Raymond
Age: 72
Graduation: 1917, University of Texas
Occupation: History Instructor, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Occupation: Faculty of Sweet Briar College (Va.) in 1925; Ret'd 1950
Occupation: Head of Government and History Department at Sweet Briar
Divorce: 1915 from Frederick D. Raymond, who died in 1940
Survivor: Son: E. Neill Raymond of Arlington, Va.
Survivor: Brother: Robert T. Neill of San Angelo, Tex.
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- Date: December 4, 1961
- Page: “Dora Raymond Dies; Former Professor of History at Sweet Briar Was 72” (Obituary)
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Source text:
[Material is under copyright]
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Citation:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061FF73F591A728DDDAD0894DA415B818AF1D3
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Citation:
Dateline: Vienna, Va. Dec. 3, (AP)
Name: Dora Neill Raymond
Age: 72
Graduation: 1917, University of Texas
Occupation: History Instructor, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Occupation: Faculty of Sweet Briar College (Va.) in 1925; Ret'd 1950
Occupation: Head of Government and History Department at Sweet Briar
Divorce: 1915 from Frederick D. Raymond, who died in 1940
Survivor: Son: E. Neill Raymond of Arlington, Va.
Survivor: Brother: Robert T. Neill of San Angelo, Tex.
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- Date: December 4, 1961
- Page: “Dora Raymond Dies; Former Professor of History at Sweet Briar Was 72” (Obituary)
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Source text:
[Material is under copyright]
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Citation:
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F3061FF73F591A728DDDAD0894DA415B818AF1D3
-
Citation:
Dateline: Vienna, Va. Dec. 3, (AP)
Name: Dora Neill Raymond
Age: 72
Graduation: 1917, University of Texas
Occupation: History Instructor, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Occupation: Faculty of Sweet Briar College (Va.) in 1925; Ret'd 1950
Occupation: Head of Government and History Department at Sweet Briar
Divorce: 1915 from Frederick D. Raymond, who died in 1940
Survivor: Son: E. Neill Raymond of Arlington, Va.
Survivor: Brother: Robert T. Neill of San Angelo, Tex.
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The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the American Historical Association: American Historical Review, The
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- Date: October 1925
- Page: “Historical News”, Vol. 31, No. 1 (Oct., 1925), pp. 185-218
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Source text:
Mrs. Dora N. Raymond, hitherto an instructor in Smith College, has been made assistant professor of history in Sweet Briar College, Virginia.
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