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"e;What next?"e; A seemingly innocuous question posed to Jane Noble Knight on a BBC1 House Swap programme led her on a quest to discover the unsung Pilgrim Mothers ... as she felt an irresistible 'force' drawing her to discover women pioneers, past and present. The Inspiring Journeys of Women Entrepreneurs gets you up close and personal with: RACHEL ELNAUGH Founder & CEO Red Letter Days, Dragons' Den Panellist DAWN GIBBINS MBE Secret Millionaire, Multi-award Winning Founder FlowcreteMARIE-CLAIRE CARLYLE Best-selling Hay House Author How to Become a Money Magnet GILL FIELDING Property Investor, TV & Radio Presenter, Secret Millionaire GINA LAZENBY CEO & Founder 'Women Gathering Project', Co-f...
The Inspiring Journeys of Pilgrim Mothers shares and celebrates the uplifting stories of nine Pilgrim Mothers Jane met on her personal pilgrimage: women founding a New World; women with mighty missions; courageous in the face of adversity; mindful of their families; adding value to their communities; and leaving lasting legacies.
"It is our time..." SUSAN HARPER TODD Only British woman to sail the Atlantic and climb Mt Everest When Jane Noble Knight discovered there were Pilgrim Mothers - not just Pilgrim Fathers - who in 1620 set sail on the Mayflower from Plymouth, England, for America, she began her own journey to find out more about the hidden story of these unsung heroines. Along the way she connected with modern-day Pilgrim Mothers, women pioneers living their lives with integrity and courage. The Inspiring Journeys of Pilgrim Mothers shares the uplifting stories of: AMANDA REED Theatre, Film & TV Actor who began her successful acting career at 52 JULIE DUNSTAN Guardian of Scrooby Manor, Community Fundraiser & ...
An inspiring, no-holds-barred account of one woman's quest to find her true self.Shelley Bridgman is an award-winning stand-up comic, actor, script writer, professional speaker and a leading Psychotherapist - but it wasn't always this way.First she survived the hedonistic sixties with the inevitable round of clubbing, fashion and drugs; then she made the most of the seventies, travelling to over sixty countries whilst running a travel business - but it was the eighties that tested her to her limits. Battling depression, bankruptcy, addiction and suicide attempts; Bridgman found the courage to confront her need to change gender and achieve harmony with herself.This is a story about identity, ...
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This book documents descendants of Timothy Grealis/Greylis, who left a 1743 will in Dorchester Co., MD. Jesse Grayless was a Lt. and a Captain in the Caroline Co. Militia in the Revolution and married Trephina Johnson (descendant of Cornelius Johnson, b. 1650s in the Netherlands) and lived in Caroline Co. MD. Descendants moved to Beaufort Co. NC, Ross and Fayette Co. Ohio, Allen and Whitley Co. Indiana. Philadelphia Grayless married Curtis Carmean. Nancy Grayless married John Carmean. Descendants are now throughout the United States.
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James Roberts Worthington was born in 1933 and lived his growing up years in the north of England, doing what normal northern lads do. He took a job down South, met his wife and returned back to the North there after. Who is he then?Bob, as he was known, was just a normal gent who had a normal life up until he was struck down with Multiple Sclerosis, a disease of the nervous system.This book is a true life reflection of how Bob lived his life to the full and, in his own words, tells the stories of what happened in his life (all the comedy moments, warts and all) whilst coping with the onslaught of this dreadful, debilitating disease.Bob was always a 'Jack the Lad', having a laugh and a joke ...
We owe this our English Epic of Le Morte Darthur to Sir Thomas Malory, and to William Caxton the first English printer. Caxton's Preface shows (what indeed would have been certain from his appeal to the 'Knights of England' at the end of 'The Order of Chivalry') that however strongly he, 'William Caxton, simple person,' may have been urged to undertake the work by 'divers gentlemen of this realm of England,' he was not less moved by his own love and reverence for 'the noble acts of chivalry,' and his deep sense of his duty and responsibility in printing what he believed would be for the instruction and profit of his readers, 'of whatever estate or degree.' But to Sir Thomas Malory he gives a...
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