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John Maynard Keynes blue plaque, Gordon Square WC1, Bloomsbury, London. Keynes was a member of the Bloomsbury Group. Other members of the Bloomsbury Group who lived in Gordon Square included Virginia Woolf, Clive Bell and Lytton Strachey.
January 11, 2013 - Conor Maynard Promotes His Debut Album "Contrast" at The Franklin Mills Mall in Philadelphia, PA, USA, famouspix.zenfolio.com/p501925035
Senator Maynard stands with volunteers in September at the Walk-N-Roll for Spina Bifida. With him are Derek Vrieze of Groton (holding/behind sign, on right), rhe Lamb family of North Stonington, and Kiley J. Carlson, Executive Director of the Spina Bifida Association of Connecticut (in the red shirt).
Mary Maynard was the daughter of James E. Maynard and Mary Frost. She was born in 1895, near Burlingame, Kansas. She was the sister of Isabelle Maynard Kelsay, Charles Maynard, and Georgie (Daisy) Maynard Dickerson.
I reworked this with Lightroom and was able to make it come up quite nicely. Shot in late 2006 at Wembley Arena, London, UK
From left to right: Isabelle Maynard and Clarence Kelsay, Bertha Kelsay, Daisy (Georgia) Maynard Dickerson, Minnie Graves, John Dickerson and Daisy's friend (far right.)
In front, kneeling, is Mary Ann Brewer holding daughter, Delane Brewer.
Daisy, or Georgia as she was called, was sister to Isabelle and the mother of John Dickerson. Isabel was the mother of Bertha Kelsay Graves. Bertha was the mother of Minnie Graves and Mary Ann Brewer.
Isabelle Maynard was the daughter of James Maynard and Mary Frost. She was born in 1879, and raised in Burlingame, Kansas. She left Burlingame and moved to Atchison where she worked in a cigar factory.
Her father, James, was born and raised in the wild west, known as the Kansas Territory. He claimed to have ridden for the Pony Express as a boy. He also taught Belle to shoot. Her gun is now owned by her grandnephew (Clayton Maynard Dickerson), grandson of her sister (Daisy) Georgie Dickerson, in Washington State.
Isabelle, or Belle as she was known (left), is pictured with her younger sister, Sofie. Both were born in the 1880's, and raised near Burlingame, Kansas, the daughters of James E. Maynard and Mary Frost.
Sofie died of "consumption" as a young teen in the early part of the 20th century. With no means to embalm her, the family buried her soon after her death. Her grieving mother, Mary Maynard, wondered if maybe the burial was too soon. For months she fretted and wondered if her lovely young daughter might actually have been buried alive!
To re-assure Mrs. Maynard, James and the family agreed to exhume Sofie's grave. There are two stories as to what they discoverd, depending on which of Belle's granddaughter's you ask. One, is that she had pulled out clumps of her hair, and there were claw marks on the top of the wooden coffin she was buried in.
The other, of course, is that she was found to be resting quite peacefully.