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  1. Lady Margaret Boleyn (c. 1454 – 1539) was an Irish noblewoman, the daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond. She married Sir William Boleyn and through her eldest son Sir Thomas Boleyn , was the paternal grandmother of Anne Boleyn , second wife of King Henry VIII of England , and great-grandmother of Anne and Henry's daughter, Elizabeth I of England .

  2. Margaret F. Butler ( Condado de Chester, 1861- Filadelfia, 16 de octubre de 1931) fue una médica estadounidense que presidió el departamento de otorrinolaringología del Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania. En 1908, se convirtió en la primera mujer en presidir un congreso internacional de médicos, siendo la única mujer y el único ...

  3. 27 de mar. de 2013 · Margaret Butler was the first female fellow at the American Nuclear Society and she was Director of the National Energy Software Center at Argonne National Laboratory from 1972-91. In 1949, Margaret returned to the Bureau of Labor Statistics to work on a project in St. Paul, Minn., and then returned to Argonne in 1951 and married Jim Butler, a fellow mathematician.

  4. Lady Margaret Butler. Lady Margaret Butler was born at Kilkenny Castle, Kilkenny, Ireland, somewhere between 1454 and 1465. She was the daughter of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond, (known as “The Wool Earl”) and his first wife, Anne Hankford, and her paternal grandparents were James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormonde, and Joan Beauchamp.

  5. 30 de may. de 2022 · Margaret was the daughter of Gerald Mor, the great Earl of Kildare and was married (aged 12) to Piers Butler, the heir to the earldom of Ormond in 1485 “for policy” (The Book of Howth). She is described by the chronicler Richard Stanihurst as “a rare woman and able for wisdom to rule a realm had not her stomach over-ruled her knowledge”.

  6. Margaret Butler passed away March 8, 2013, one day after her 89 th birthday, but her legacy as the first female ANS Fellow will serve as a model for generations of women scientists to come. Linda Zec is the Online Communications Specialist for the American Nuclear Society, as well as the editor of the ANS Nuclear Cafe.

  7. The Remarkable Career of Margaret Butler, Argonne National Laboratory, June 11, 2015. Margaret’s early career was thrilling. 1945: Statistician with the Bureau of Labor Statistics in Washington, DC. 1946-1948: U.S. Air Force Statistician in Europe. Margaret believed in taking calculated career risks and recommended it to others.