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The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Donovan, Grace E. "The Caton Sisters: The Carrolls of Carrollton Two Generations Later." U.S. Catholic Historian 5, Issue 3-4 (1986): 291-303.

Dorsey, James R., Sr. "Cornelia F. Ruff." Harford Historical Bulletin 35 (Winter 1988): 1-2.

Dudley, David. "Elizabeth Platt Jenkins." Baltimore 92 (February 1999): 46-47.

Dupont, Dolores L. "Madam Sewall - Lady Baltimore." Maryland Genealogical Society Bulletin 18 (Winter 1977): 1-8.

Edmunds, Lavinia. "Patron with Panache." Johns Hopkins Magazine 45 (February 1993): 47-51.
Notes: Alice Garrett.

Ewalt, Claire S. "Caroline Duke Little Kerney: Her Life." Calvert Historian 4 (Spring 1989): 21-31.

Fresco, Margaret King Myers. "Caroline R. Martin, M.D. (1874-1958)." Chronicles of St. Mary's 38 (Spring 1990): 300-3.

Friedman, Marion. "Celeste Lauve Woodward, M.D." Maryland Medical Journal 46 (September 1997): 441-44.

Friedman, Marion. "Helen Brooke Taussig, M.d.: The Original Pediatric Oncologist." Maryland Medical Journal 46 (September 1997): 445-47.

Friend, Helen. "Unsung Heroines of Garrett County." Glades Star 5 (March 1985): 642-648.

Funk, Corinne. "Anne Tyler: A Voice of Contemporary Baltimore." Maryland Humanities (September 1998): 5-7.

Gatewood, Gloria. "The Case of the Missing Likeness." Calvert Historian 5 (Spring 1990): 46-47.
Notes: Margaret Mackall Smith Taylor.

Gatewood, Gloria. "Searching for Knox." Calvert Historian 7 (Spring 1992): 1-3.

Glick, Susan. "Mary Ann Jung: Living History Interpreter." Maryland 26 (April 1994): 80.

Glickman, Gena Debra. A Study of the Role of Women in the Transformation of the Curriculum at the Maryland Institute for the Promotion of Mechanic Arts from 1825-1875. Ph.D. diss., University of Maryland at College Park, 1992.

Glover, Lorri M. "Between Two Cultures: The Worlds of Rosalie Stier Calvert." Maryland Historical Magazine 91 (Spring 1996): 84-94.

Gottlieb, Agnes Hooper. "Malloy of the American: Baltimore's Pioneer Woman Journalist." Maryland Historical Magazine 91 (Spring 1996): 28-46.
Notes: Story of Baltimore's first woman journalist. Malloy extended the boundary of the woman's sphere by defining the home as including the city in which women lived. Thus, she focused her writing on municipal reforms, which led to major changes in Baltimore's juvenile justice system and overhauled the city's fire department.

Griggs, Catherine Mary. Beyond Boundaries: The Adventurous Life of Marguerite Harrison. Ph.D. diss., George Washington University, 1996.

Grindle, Jenifer. "'My Dear Nannie': Society and the Role of Women in 19th Century Maryland and Washington D.C." Old Kent 9 (Summer 1992): 1, 3-4.

Haag, Pamela Susan. "'Commerce in Souls': Vice, Virtue, and Women's Wage Work in Baltimore, 1900-1915." Maryland Historical Magazine 86 (Fall 1991): 292-308.

Hammett, Regina Combs. "A Tribute...Loretta Combs Wise." Chronicles of St. Mary's 45 (Fall 1997): 254-55.

Harman, Susan E. "Marcia Noyes' Correspondence: a Life and Profession Reflected in Letters." Maryland Medical Journal 45 (July 1996): 571-75.

Hardy, Beatriz Betancourt. "Women and the Catholic Church in Maryland, 1689-1776." Maryland Historical Magazine 94 (Winter 1999): 396-418.
Notes: A comparison of the experiences of two Catholic colonial women - Jane Doyne, an elite woman from the lower Western Shore, and Jenny, an enslaved woman on the Eastern Shore. Roman Catholicism was a significant part of their lives, and as women they served an important role in maintaining and transmitting the Catholic faith. However, their different status had an impact on their religious experiences.

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