Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q15491794> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 42 of
42
with 100 triples per page.
- Q15491794 subject Q13282778.
- Q15491794 subject Q6562188.
- Q15491794 subject Q7214888.
- Q15491794 subject Q8248504.
- Q15491794 subject Q8426208.
- Q15491794 subject Q8548592.
- Q15491794 subject Q8738501.
- Q15491794 subject Q9712628.
- Q15491794 abstract "Marjabelle Young Stewart (16 May 1924 – 3 March 2007) was an American writer and expert on etiquette.Marjabelle Young Stewart was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa, to Marie and Clarence Cullen Bryant (a great-grandson of poet William Cullen Bryant). She and her three sisters lived in an orphanage after her parents divorced, where her youngest sister died of a mastoid infection at age 2. After her mother remarried they returned to live with her. She attended Thomas Jefferson High School in Council Bluffs. After graduating, she married scientist Jack Davison Young and moved to Washington, D.C. in 1941. She became a model and came into contact with Washington society as a result. She went on to teach etiquette and manners to American Presidents such as Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan. She moved to Kewanee, Illinois in 1965 after her divorce from Mr. Young and remarriage to attorney William E. Stewart. She created a network of etiquette classes, which at its height had locations in several hundred U.S. cities. These classes were called White Gloves (for girls) and Blue Blazers (for boys); they usually ran in cooperation with department stores. She wrote fifteen books on etiquette including, Marjabelle Stewart's Book of Modern Table Manners (1981), Can My Bridesmaids Wear Black? And 325 Other Most Asked Questions (1989), and Executive Etiquette in the New Workplace (1996). Stewart died of pneumonia at a Kewanee nursing home, at the age of 82 ([1]).".
- Q15491794 nationality Q30.
- Q15491794 wikiPageExternalLink 11stewart.html.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q12192.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q13282778.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q188907.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q454840.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q578989.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q61.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q6562188.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q695565.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q7214888.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q7791259.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q8248504.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q8426208.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q8548592.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q8738501.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q9588.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q9640.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q9712628.
- Q15491794 wikiPageWikiLink Q9960.
- Q15491794 type Person.
- Q15491794 type Agent.
- Q15491794 type Person.
- Q15491794 type Writer.
- Q15491794 type Agent.
- Q15491794 type NaturalPerson.
- Q15491794 type Thing.
- Q15491794 type Q215627.
- Q15491794 type Q36180.
- Q15491794 type Q5.
- Q15491794 type Person.
- Q15491794 comment "Marjabelle Young Stewart (16 May 1924 – 3 March 2007) was an American writer and expert on etiquette.Marjabelle Young Stewart was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa, to Marie and Clarence Cullen Bryant (a great-grandson of poet William Cullen Bryant). She and her three sisters lived in an orphanage after her parents divorced, where her youngest sister died of a mastoid infection at age 2. After her mother remarried they returned to live with her.".
- Q15491794 label "Marjabelle Young Stewart".