The following is a list of some of the "firsts" achieved by women during the administrations of Franklin D. Secretary of Labor. S Minister. She was U. Minister to Denmark and Iceland Daughter of William Jennings Bryan. Minister to Norway Mint Treasury Florence Allen, Ohio: First woman appointed to U. Circuit Court of Appeals Mary W. Marion J. Harron, California: First woman member of U. Court of Tax Appeals. Carrick H. Jewell W. Swofford, Missouri: First woman member of U.
Employees' Compensation Commission. Served as U. Delegate to U. Conference of Food and Agriculture. What was the Good Neighbor Policy? Under the new policy, the United States pledged that it would treat Latin American nations with respect and avoid intervening in their foreign and domestic affairs. The goal of the policy was to strengthen the United States economy by increasing trade with Latin America.
Twice a week we compile our most fascinating features and deliver them straight to you. Live TV. This Day In History. History Vault. Recommended for you. Access to Oil. For Over Years, U. Presidents Had No Term Limits. Grant also sought a third term in , but he lacked enough party support to get a nomination.
The first president, Washington, set the two-term precedent in when he decided to pass on a third term, setting up a scramble between John Adams and Thomas Jefferson in the fall race. In , a friend urged Washington to come out of retirement to run for a third term.
Washington made his thoughts quite clear, especially when it came to new phenomena of political parties. Instead, he backed William Howard Taft as a surrogate candidate, but the urge to control his own political party drove Roosevelt back to the campaign trail in Today we explore the first of two likely scenarios where this and similar plates may have been used: The suffrage conferences Alva organized at Marble House, her Newport estate, in and Ever conscious of her new role as suffrage publicist, Alva identified Marble House as the ideal venue for the late August Read More.
Despite busy schedules, throngs of tourists and cold temperatures, you would be hard-pressed to find a New Yorker who doesn't find joy in holiday traditions. How would we know it was December without the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, store windows on Fifth Avenue, street vendors selling chestnuts, and nostalgic subway trains and toy train exhibitions?
Thousands have already visited our Holiday Express exhibition this season, and we look forward to sharing these newly-acquired toys and trains from the
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