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Prince William's wife, the Duchess of Cambridge visited the Fishing Heritage Centre at Grimsby on 5th March 2013
Interview by Sonja Pascho.
Kate left the hustle and bustle of Fremantle for a life in country Western Australia in 1987.
After years of happy holidays on the south west coast, she and her husband took the plunge and bought a hobby farm near Albany, making the move with their two young sons.
It was a fresh start, but funnily enough the answer of what to do with their acres of land came from Kate's past work as a nurse in Fremantle.
When the legendary Australian bushman Harry Butler ended up in hospital, Kate was assigned to help care for him.
She spent two days with him and he gave her some unexpected advice.
Cut flowers, mushrooms and cabinet making timber.
He told her, if you want to make some money from a small patch of land in the south west those three would be the best options.
Kate and her husband decided on cabinet making timber. Their trees are now growing quite tall and they're starting to think about who will be the buyer.
Kate says Harry got it right on cut flowers and mushrooms as well.
Since the start of her new life she's seen both crop up in the region and become successful.
Harry has of course now long since left Albany, but Kate's still tipping her hat to the bushman's tip.
Paper Magazine Beautiful People Party
Absolut Wild Tea And Paper Party
Good Units at Hudson, New York City
March 30th 2011
In Ottawa for the CANADA DAY festivities - which just happened to coincide with the Royal visit (Kate & Wills)
Stopped in at the Moulin de Provence bakery in Ottawa's Byward Market. This is the same bakery that President Barack Obama visited during his visit to Canada in 2009 - check it out:
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/story/2009/02/23/obama-cook...
In Ottawa for the Canada Day festivities
July 1st, 2011
'Kate Winslet and Liam Hèmsvort the first trailer of the film "the Dressmaker"
celebsters.com/kate-winslet-and-liam-hemsvort/
'Kate Winslet and Liam Hèmsvort the first trailer of the film "the Dressmaker"
celebsters.com/kate-winslet-and-liam-hemsvort/
'Kate Winslet and Liam Hèmsvort the first trailer of the film "the Dressmaker"
The Big Boy rolls across the new Kate Shelley high bridge as a couple hundred nerds with cameras get brush-flanked going-away shots of the train. Still cool to see the Big Boy cross the famous bridge nonetheless.
UP 4-8-8-4 #4014
Boone, IA
July 15th, 2019
Kate, 1 Large octa behind camera, 2 studio strobes on background. Shot at f/11, background about a stop over.
Not even a beautiful woman could distract Thomas Jefferson.
My friend Kate playing around in Williamsburg, Virginia.
AZOURY - Kate Hat- from the weekend sales
-SU!- Disaster Earrings /With Safety Pins/ from weekend sales
TECHNOFOLK_Retake Tank Top_006.
Kate Bush display on Tūhuratanga | Discovery, Level 3, Tūranga. Friday 29 July 2022.
File reference: IMG_8806
Photo by Donna Robertson.
From the collection of Christchurch City Libraries
Kate Warne. (1833- January 28, 1868) was the first female detective in the United States.
Described by Allan Pinkerton as a slender, brown haired woman, there is not much else known about Kate Warne prior to when she walked into the Pinkerton Detective Agency in 1856. Born in New York, Warne became a widow shortly after she married. In answer to an ad in a local newspaper, Kate Warne walked into Allan Pinkerton’s Chicago office in search of a job. There is still debate whether or not she walked in with intentions to become a detective or just a secretary. Women were not detectives until well after the Civil War. Allan Pinkerton himself claimed that Kate Warne came into his agency and demanded to become a detective.
Pinkerton employed Kate Warne as the first female detective Pinkerton soon had a chance to put Kate to the test. In 1858 Kate was involved in the case of Adams Express Company embezzlements where she was successfully able to bring herself into the confidence of the wife of the prime suspect, Mr. Maroney. She thereby acquired the valuable evidence leading to the husband's conviction. Mr. Maroney was an expressman living in Montgomery, Alabama. The Maroney’s stole $50,000 from the Adams Express Company. With Warne’s help, $39,515 was returned. Mr. Maroney was convicted and sentenced to ten years in Montgomery, Alabama.
In 1861, Allan Pinkerton was secured by Samuel H. Felton, president of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad, to investigate secessionist activity in Maryland. Felton believed that threats of damage to the railroad by "roughs and secessionists of Maryland." Allan Pinkerton soon was at work, placing agents at various points in Maryland to investigate the possibility of damage to the railroad.
As the information came forth, Pinkerton became increasingly aware that the activity in Maryland did not just end with the railroad, but included the president-elect, Abraham Lincoln. Pinkerton received permission to continue his investigation and focus on the possible assassination plot. As part of Allan Pinkerton's team at the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, Kate was one of five agents sent to Baltimore, Maryland on February 3, 1861 to investigate the hotbed of secessionist activity occurring just months prior to the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln. During the investigation, evidence supported attacks on the railroads and also unveiled the plot to assassinate president-elect Abraham Lincoln on his way to take office. The secessionist feeling in Baltimore was that if Lincoln came through the city that he would leave in a casket. Under the aliases Mrs. Cherry and Mrs. M. Barley (M.B.) Kate tracked suspicious movement among the Baltimore secessionists.
During the American Civil War, Allan Pinkerton and Kate Warne were used as a covert war intelligence-gathering bureau. She could easily penetrate into southern social gatherings. Warne said that women are most useful in worming out secrets in many places which would be impossible for a male detective. Believed to be a mistress of Allan Pinkerton, the two would often pose as a married couple while undercover. She also had an assortment of names: Kay Warne, Kay Waren, Kay Warren, Kate Warne, Kate Waren, Kate Warren, Kitty Warne, Kitty Waren, Kitty Warren, Kittie Waren, Kittie Warne, and Kittie Warren. Warne was known as Kitty to Robert Pinkerton, Allan's brother. Robert Pinkerton often argued with Kate Warne over expenses turned over to the agency, but her relationship with Allan remained for years.
After the quelled assassination attempt on Abraham Lincoln, Kate continued to travel with Allan Pinkerton as his Female Superintendent of Detectives. On April 12, 1861 the Confederate States of America's cannons in Charleston began firing on Fort Sumter. These cannon shells marked the beginning of the American Civil War. Within nine days, Pinkerton wrote to the now President, Lincoln, offering the services of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency. However, before Lincoln could respond, Major General George B. McClellan asked Pinkerton to set up a military intelligence service for McClellan's command. Therefore, by the end of July, 1861 Pinkerton took Kate, Timothy Webster and later George Bangs west to set up a headquarters in Cincinnati, Ohio to follow McClellan's Ohio division.
Kate Warne did not survive long after the Civil War. She suddenly caught pneumonia on New Year's Day, 1868, and died on the 28th with Pinkerton at her bedside. She is buried in the Pinkerton Family Plot in Chicago Illinois' Graceland Cemetery. The grave is marked in the Graceland Cemetery under the name of Kate Warn and that she died of congestion of the lungs at the age of 38. She was buried January 30, 1868.
Kate Warne, First Female Private-Eye
By Barbara Maikell-Thomas
Kate Elizabeth Winslet (born October 5, 1975) is a British actress most famous for her role in the movie Titanic.
Kate, 1 Large octa behind camera, 2 studio strobes on background. Shot at f/11, background about a stop over.