- self-service
laundries has
rendered washerwomen unnecessary in much of the
contemporary world. The
subject of
laundresses or
washerwomen was a po****r one in art...
- Les Lavandières, or the
Midnight Washerwomen, are
three old
washerwomen in
Celtic mythology.
Names in
various Celtic languages include the
kannerezed noz...
-
Previous names Troy
Trojans (1901-1916) Troy
Washerwomen (1900-1901) Troy
Trojans (1895, 1899) Troy
Washerwomen (1894) Troy
Trojans (1886-1888, 1890-1893)...
-
Washerwomen during a
typhus outbreak in
Haparanda in 1918...
- very
available son and that he
would be able to give her children. Six
washerwomen: the
voice of the town. They
represent the
various thoughts of the citizens...
-
Taylor –
Dubliner Rebecca Wilkinson – One of Two
Washerwomen Gladys Sheehan – One of Two
Washerwomen Gabrielle Keenan –
Cissy Caffrey Mic****e O'Connor...
- Look up washerwoman or
washerwomen in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Washerwoman or
Washerwomen may
refer to: Washerwoman, a laundress, i.e. a woman...
- The
Atlanta washerwomen strike of 1881 was a
labor strike in Atlanta,
Georgia involving African American washerwomen. It
began on July 19, 1881, and lasted...
- at
auction by Christie's. The
subject of laundresses, also
known as
washerwomen, was a po****r one in art,
especially in France. La
Blanchisseuse was...
- in most
cultures falling to
women (formerly
known as
laundresses or
washerwomen). The
Industrial Revolution gradually led to
mechanized solutions to...