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youre-gonna-love-it · 8 months
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youchangedmedean · 1 year
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Watching Over Me - Radio Company Nashville, 19th December 2022
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justynabacajan · 4 months
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virtualdotshelf · 3 months
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alternate universe
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sporadicinked · 1 year
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robotrainblog · 4 months
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Today we did the Seven of cups! follow @balsamicgames for more witches of midnight content!
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scotianostra · 10 months
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The leading Scottish suffragette, Evelina Haverfield, was born at Inverlochy Castle on August 9th 1867.
Evelina’s birth is recorded as ‘Honourable Evilena Scarlett’, she took the name Haverfield from her husband. Her childhood was divided between London and the Inverlochy estate. In 1880 she went to school in Dusseldorf, Germany, after which she married Major Henry Haverfield at the age of 19., who was 20 years her senior. The marriage is said to have been a happy one they had two sons together, The Major however died in 1896. Evelina married again two years later, a another military man, Major John Blaguy. This was not a happy union and after some time they drifted apart. The rest of her life was informed by devotion to a cause.
She became an enthusiastic supporter of the suffragette movement and was arrested during suffragette demonstrations in London for hitting an escorting police officer. Her only regret was not hitting him hard enough, promising to bring a revolver next time. During that heady time she met Vera Holme. Their companionship was to last the rest of her days.
At the outbreak of the First World War the suffragettes supported the war effort by founding a Women’s Voluntary Emergency Corps and a Women’s Voluntary Reserve Ambulance Corps. Evelina became commandant in chief of the latter, looking, it was said, every inch a soldier in her khaki uniform, although she later left after a disagreement of an undisclosed nature.
Evelina joined the Scottish Women’s Hospitals and devoted the next two years to overseas service with them. She served in Serbia with Elsie Inglis, as a hospital administrator and was part of a small group taken prisoner when the armies of the Central Powers overran Serbia in October and November 1915.
Under appalling conditions of poverty and military oppression, Evelina and those with her, struggled heroically through the winter to provide food and basic care for their wounded Serbian patients and some of the local civilian population. In the spring of 1916, Evelina and the other 'Scottish Women’ were released through the International Red Cross and returned to England.
In August 1916 Evelina went to Romania in charge of 18 ambulance and transport vehicles as part of two units of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals. These units were in support of Serbian soldiers fighting on the eastern Allied front. The stronger enemy invading armies drove the Russian, Romanian, and Serbian defenders out of southern Romania and north of the Danube river delta.
During this two-month retreat by the Allied forces, Evelina and the transport drivers were working non-stop under constant enemy fire, in desperate situations, while rescuing wounded soldiers and driving them to safety.
By early 1917, with the fighting on the eastern front over, and unable to return to Serbia because of the enemy occupation there, Evelina returned to England, where she remained until after the Armistice of November 1918. In England she raised money for clothing and canteens for Serbian soldiers, gave public speeches on behalf of Serbian relief, and helped to found a Serbian Red Cross Society in Britain.
After the Armistice she returned to Serbia to supervise the distribution of much needed food, clothing, and medical supplies. When this was done, in 1919, she made plans to found a home for Serbian war orphans in a Serbian mountain village. It was there, in Baijna Bashta, that she contracted pneumonia, probably brought on by overwork and fatigue, and died prematurely at the age of 52, revered and honoured by the Serbs for her five years of humanitarian work on their behalf. The Serbs issued a stamp commemorating this remarkable women in 2015, a woman few Scots have even heard of…….
Buried in Serbia today, Evelina’s gravestone reads:
‘Hear lies the body of the honourable Evelina Haverfield youngest daughter of William Scarlett 3rd Baron Abinger and of Helen ne Magruder his wife of Inverloky Castle Fort William Scotland who finished her work in Bajina Bashta March 21st 1920 through the war 1914-1920 She worked for the Serbian people with untiring zeal. A straight fighter as traight rider and a most loyal friend. R.I.P’
In 2015 Evalina was one of five Scottish women and one English women, who worked as doctors, nurses and drivers feature on a series of stamps in Serbia, the others were Dr Elsie Inglis a campaigner for women's suffrage and the founder of the Scottish Women Hospitals in Serbia. Dr Inglis was one of the first female graduates at the University of Edinburgh.
Dr Elizabeth Ross, one of the first women to obtain a medical degree at the University of Glasgow. She travelled to Serbia as a volunteer and tragically passed away during the typhoid epidemic in 1915.
Dr Katherine MacPhail OBE, involved in humanitarian work in Serbia throughout WW1. She is remembered for opening the first paediatric ward in Belgrade in 1921.
Dr Isabel Emslie Galloway Hutton who joined the Scottish Women Hospitals as a volunteer in 1915 after she was turned away by the War Office in London. She served in France, Greece and Serbia until 1920.
The sixth was English woman, Captain Flora Sandes, who was the only known British female to bear arms during WW1
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jue-jack · 2 years
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wib and wom <333
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eynoxart · 1 year
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Waterpixel Art #89
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transbeeduo · 1 year
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God i fucking love women shout out to women
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katz-eyes · 1 month
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> https://www.patreon.com/KatzEyes
>https://katzeyes.fanbox.cc/
Other Socials >https://katzeyes.carrd.co/
✨ (This project is part of term 1 reward sign up from april)
✦ This is a preview, full uncensored 4K rewards will be send out if you subscribe for this month :
Tier 1: Early access to my High-Res 4K JPG Finished work
Tier2 : Tier 1 rewards + Photoshop files of the most detailled illustrations of the month + Some variations (depending on illustrations) + Exclusive Polls
Tier 3 : Tier 1 rewards + Tier 2 rewards + Poster or Prints
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moodbroads · 1 month
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wom
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schraubd · 1 year
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Things People Blame the Jews For, Volume LXII: Women Attending College
You might have heard the (latest) terrible news from Afghanistan, where the Taliban has enacted a ban on women attending college.
Now, I say "terrible news". But if you're Tyler Russell -- a White supremacist sporting an "America First" cap (ironic, given that he's Canadian!) -- you call it a "step in the right direction." Why? Since women only attend college because they're being "tricked by Jews".
Female education: a Jewish plot! Once again, our enemies sometimes seem to say far nicer things about us than our friends do!
(Dear readers: not only did my wife go to college, that's where I met her! Does that make me an apex trickster?)
via The Debate Link https://ift.tt/Ry9TCz0
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virtualdotshelf · 4 months
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but i still
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sepalina · 1 year
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Listen.
Listen to me.
One of my first anime was Gundam Wing. I've seen a few of the other ones; War in a Pocket, 008th MS Team, Unicorn, Thunderbolt, some of Iron Blooded Orphans, Hathaway's Flash, probably some I'm forgetting.
You grow up playing videogames as a little girl, and you're playing male protagonists, and you don't really care because you're having fun. And then a game comes along that either stars a female protag or gives you the option and your mind is BLOWN.
Back when Breath of the Wild was first teased and people thought Link might be a girl, my sister and I were FREAKING OUT.
All that digression to say that seeing Witch of Mercury star a female protag, open with her pilot mom and her female engineer co workers, and an awesome looking, stately female professor who's running the science. (And of course her sweet Dad.)
It's just.
I CRIED. Okay?
That little middle schooler who was obsessed with Gundam- this is a gift to her. I am hugging her and we are jumping up and down and squealing.
(And the of course Mama pilot introducing the gundam prototype to her daughter as her "sister." I was already sold, but they went there.)
I am so, so happy.
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nauticonfashionstore9 · 5 months
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Cozy Crop Hoodies-Women Clothing Store In India-NAUTICON WEARABLES
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Adjustable Fit: Features a drawstring hood for a customizable look and added warmth.
Tailored Design: Ribbed cuffs and hem ensure a snug fit, sealing out the cold and maximizing comfort.
Contemporary Colors: Choose from a range of winter-inspired hues to match your unique style. women clothing store in India
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