Marion Margery Scranton

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

Marion Margery Warren Scranton (April 12, 1884 – June 23, 1960) was a 20th century women’s suffrage activist and leading member of the Republican Party in the United States. Known as “the Duchess and the Grand Old Dame of the Grand Old Party,” she was described in Life magazine as “the woman Pennsylvania politicians still remember as ‘Margery,’ and … the only woman who (in Tom Dewey’s much-quoted phrase) could wear two orchids through a coal mine and get away with it.” rdf:langString
rdf:langString Marion Margery Scranton
rdf:langString Marion Margery Scranton
rdf:langString Marion Margery Scranton
xsd:date 1960-06-23
xsd:date 1884-04-12
xsd:integer 67868696
xsd:integer 1114207403
xsd:date 1884-04-12
rdf:langString Marion Margery Warren
xsd:date 1960-06-23
rdf:langString Suffragette and vice-chair, U.S. Republican Party
rdf:langString Everett Warren and Ellen Hower Warren
rdf:langString Worthington Scranton
rdf:langString Marion Margery Warren Scranton (April 12, 1884 – June 23, 1960) was a 20th century women’s suffrage activist and leading member of the Republican Party in the United States. Known as “the Duchess and the Grand Old Dame of the Grand Old Party,” she was described in Life magazine as “the woman Pennsylvania politicians still remember as ‘Margery,’ and … the only woman who (in Tom Dewey’s much-quoted phrase) could wear two orchids through a coal mine and get away with it.” The first female vice-chair of the Lackawanna County Republican Committee, Margery Scranton was also a member of the Pennsylvania Republican State Committee from 1922 to 1934, and served as vice-chair of the Pennsylvania Republican Party from 1926 to 1928. A Pennsylvania delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1928, 1932, 1936, 1940, 1944, and 1948, she was also a Pennsylvania representative to the Republican National Committee from 1928 to 1951—during which time she served as that national committee’s vice-chair from 1936 to 1938. In 1954, she and her husband, Worthington Scranton, contributed one million dollars to establish the Scranton Foundation (now the Scranton Area Community Foundation), which was launched to support charitable and educational organizations in the city of Scranton.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 21752
rdf:langString Marion Margery Warren
xsd:gYear 1884
xsd:gYear 1960

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