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Louie Crew
377 S. Harrison Street, 12D
East Orange, NJ 07018

Phone: 973-395-1068 h


lcrew@andromeda.rutgers.edu

Please sign the guestbook and view it.


Louie & Ernest Clay-Crew
Married February 2, 1974


12/21/1974
 
8/17/2006


Poster Key for Famous Female Episcopalians

These are pictures in my "Famous Female Episcopalians," -- Louie Crew

 

 

 

Laura Ahrens, Bishop Suffragan of Connecticut

 

Madeline Albright, first female to serve as United States Ambassador to the United Nations

 

Bonnie Anderson, Vice-President of the House of Deputies

 

Hanan Ashrawi, a leading Palestinian activist.

 

Jane Austen, 18th century British novelist

 

Amelia Jenks Bloomer, prominent suffragist, who advocated practical changes in female dress, “bloomers.”

 

Elizabeth Barrett Browning, British poet, author of Sonnets from the Portuguese.

 

Willa Cather, major novelist with special attention to the pioneers of the Midwest.

 

Pamela Chinnis, first female President of the House of Deputies.

 

Lois Carter Clark, Muscogee Native American very influential in St. Oakerhater's canonization

 

Natalie Cole, vocalist, daughter of vocalist Nat King Cole.

 

Judy Collins, folk singer.

 

Olivia Dehavilland, actress.

 

Bessie Delany, dentist, daughter of the first African American Bishop in the Episcopal Church, and co-author with Sadie Delany of The Delany Sisters’ First 100 Years.

 

Jane Dixon, 2nd female bishop in the Episcopal Church, in the Diocese of Washington, first as Bishop Suffragan, then a Bishop Pro Tem.

 

Verna Dozier, theologian, author of The Dream of God et al.

 

Madeleine L'Engle, novelist.

 

Betty Ford, First Lady, wife of President Gerald Ford.

 

Carol Gallagher,  Resigined Bishop Suffragan of Southern Virginia, first Native American female to be a bishop in the Episcopal Church.

 

Judy Garland, actress.

 

Barbara Harris, retired Bishop Suffragan of Massachusetts, the first female bishop in the Anglican Communion.

 

Gayle Harris, Bishop Suffragan of Massachusetts.

 

Dena Harrison, Bishop Suffragan of Texas

 

Carter Heyward, one of the “Philadelphia 11” first women priests in the Episcopal Church, a theologian, and professor at Episcopal Divinity School.

 

Sue Hiatt, one of the “Philadelphia 11” first women priests in the Episcopal Church and Professor of Pastoral Theology at Episcopal Divinity School (died 2002).

 

Caroline Tanner Irish, Bishop of Utah.

 

Molly Ivins, satirist and political commentator.

 

P. D. James, contemporary British novelist.

 

Lady Bird Johnson, first lady, widow  of President Lyndon Baines Johnson.

 

Emma Kamehameha, native queen in Hawaii and a major benefactor of the Episcopal Church.

 

Chilton Knudsen, Bishop of Maine.

 

Margaret Mead, prominent anthropologist, author of Growing Up in New Guinea and Coming of Age in Samoa.

 

Jacque Means, coordinator of prison ministries for the Episcopal Church, first female “regularly ordained” on January 1st, 1997.

 

Mary Adelia McLeod, Retired Bishop of Vermont.  The first female to serve as a diocesan bishop in the Episcopal Church.

 

Ethel Merman, famous Broadway star,  vocalist.

 

Paul Murray, one of the founders of NOW (National Organization of Women), lawyer, and Episcopal priest.

 

Florence Nightingale, nurse.

 

Eleanor Holmes Norton, at large delegate to the U. S. Congress from the District of Columbia.

 

Sandra Day O’Connor, first female justice on the Supreme Court.

 

Li (also 'Lee') Tim-Oi, first female priest in the Anglican Communion, ordained in during World War II by Bishop Hall in Hong Kong for work in Macau.

 

Ann Randolph Page, early feminist and slave reformer.

 

Frances Perkins, first woman member of the cabinet of a U.S. President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Secretary of Labor, economist, and social worker.

 

Jeanette Piccard, one of the “Philadelphia 11” first women priests of the Episcopal Church, and the first licensed female  balloonist in the world..

 

Diane Rehm, radio talk show host.

 

Bavi ‘Nedi’ Rivera, Bishop Suffragan of Olympia

 

Eleanor Roosevelt, leader in creating the United Nations, 1st Lady as wife of Franklin D. Roosevelt.

 

Catherine Roskam, Bishop Suffragan of New York.

 

Betsy Ross, seamstress, designer of the first flag of the United States.

 

Susan Russell, President of Integrity; represent The Episcopal Church at Nottingham.  Priiest associate at All Saints in Pasadena, California

 

Katharine Jefferts Schori,  Presiding Bishop.

 

Vida Scudder, progressive labor activist who founded the Settlement House in Boston.

 

Judy Shepard, mother of Matthew Shepard, crucified for being gay.

 

Harriet Beecher Stowe, abolitionist author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin.

 

Phyllis Tickle, author, religious review editor for Publishers Weekly

 

Bess Truman, First Lady as wife of U. S. President Harry S. Truman.

 

Elizabeth Tutor, a.k.a. Elizabeth Ist, Queen of England.

 

Leslie Uggams, actress.

 

Our Lady of Walsingham, the Virgin Mary as Patron Saint of the Anglican shrine at Walsingham, England.

 

Martha Washington, wife of the first President of the United States.

 

Cate Waynick, Bishop of Indianapolis.

 

Cynthia Wedel, renowned ecumenist and advocate, co-founder of The Churches’ Center, sometime president of the National Council of Churches and the World Council of Churches.

 

Diana Windsor, the late Princess of Wales, a.k.a. Lady Di.

 

Elizabeth Windsor, a.k.a. Elizabeth II, Queen of England.

 

Geralyn Wolf, Bishop of Rhode Island


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