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  1. Anne Spencer was born Anne Bethel Scales Bannister on February 6, 1882, on a plantation in Henry County, Virginia, to former slaves, Joel Cephus Bannister and Sarah Louise Scales, the daughter of a slaveholder. Spencer’s parents separated in the late 1880s. Her mother supported the family by working as an itinerant cook.

  2. Anne Spencer was born inauspiciously on a Virginia plantation. Yet the combination of loving, though irreconcilable, parents and an unorthodox, isolated youth formed her extraordinary independence, introspection, and conviction.

  3. Anne Spencer, second daughter of the first Duke of Marlborough, became Countess of Sunderland after her marriage in 1700. She is noted for her great beauty and influence in politics, and between 1702 and 1712 she served as a Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Anne.

  4. Anne Spencer was born Anne Bethel Scales Bannister on February 6, 1882, on a plantation in Henry County, Virginia, to former slaves, Joel Cephus Bannister and Sarah Louise Scales, the daughter of a slaveholder. Spencer’s parents separated in the late 1880s. Her mother supported the family by working as an itinerant cook.

  5. Spencer passed away from cancer at the age of 93 in 1975. She is buried alongside her husband, who died in 1964, at Forest Hills Cemetery in Lynchburg. In 2019, the United States Postal Service announced that Spencer would be honored on a Forever Stamp as part of the “Voices of the Harlem Renaissance” series, alongside writer and critic ...

  6. Encarcelada en el Instituto para Mujeres de California. [ editar datos en Wikidata] Brenda Ann Spencer ( San Diego, 3 de abril de 1963) es una asesina convicta que, con 16 años, protagonizó un tiroteo con varios heridos y dos víctimas mortales en un colegio estadounidense el lunes 29 de enero de 1979.

  7. After Anne Spencer’s death, family and community interest led to the site’s being named to the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. The house museum opened in 1977, and the garden has been restored twice—the first time in the 1980s—with help from the local Hillside Garden Club.