Ida Dorsey

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ida_Dorsey an entity of type: Thing

Ida Mary Dorsey (née Callahan; c. March 7, 1866 – June 18, 1918), also known as Ida Burkes and Ida Pillsbury, was an American madam who operated five successive houses of prostitution in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Dorsey's life came into focus when Penny Petersen published Minneapolis Madams: The Lost History of Prostitution on the Riverfront in 2013. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ida Dorsey
rdf:langString Ida Dorsey
rdf:langString Ida Dorsey
rdf:langString Minneapolis, Minnesota, US
xsd:date 1918-06-18
rdf:langString Woodford County, Kentucky, US
xsd:date 1866-03-07
xsd:integer 60038434
xsd:integer 1046445811
rdf:langString Lakewood Cemetery, Minneapolis
xsd:date 1866-03-07
rdf:langString Ida Mary Callahan
xsd:date 1918-06-18
rdf:langString built and owned last standing brothel in Minneapolis
rdf:langString Brothel owner
rdf:langString Ida Dorsey, Ida Burkes, Ida Pillsbury
xsd:integer 1885
rdf:langString Ida Mary Dorsey (née Callahan; c. March 7, 1866 – June 18, 1918), also known as Ida Burkes and Ida Pillsbury, was an American madam who operated five successive houses of prostitution in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Dorsey's life came into focus when Penny Petersen published Minneapolis Madams: The Lost History of Prostitution on the Riverfront in 2013. Part African-American, Dorsey catered only to whites and was among the city's most prominent and successful madams. The brothel she built at 212 Eleventh Avenue South is the only one still standing from Minneapolis' three red-light districts (c. 1870s – 1910). Dorsey is also remembered for her long-term friendship with Carleton Pillsbury, scion of the Pillsbury family.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 13040
xsd:gYear 1918
xsd:gYear 1885
rdf:langString Ida Dorsey, Ida Burkes, Ida Pillsbury
rdf:langString Ida Mary Callahan
xsd:gYear 1866
xsd:gYear 1918

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