opfdowntown.blogg.se

Juliette Gordon Low by Stacy A. Cordery
Juliette Gordon Low by Stacy A. Cordery






Juliette Gordon Low by Stacy A. Cordery

Cordery wisely fleshes out Low’s nontraditional, pre-Scouting life so that the woman who emerges as the honorary troop leader of today’s 2.3 million Girl Scouts is a fully realized heroine. Cordery, 2012, Viking edition, Hardcover in English Juliette Gordon Low (2012 edition) Open Library It looks like you're offline. With her relentless enthusiasm and dedication, she helped the fledgling organization grow from a handful of Savannah girls to more than 90,000 Girl Scouts a few years before her death in 1927.

Juliette Gordon Low by Stacy A. Cordery Juliette Gordon Low by Stacy A. Cordery

Drawn to Baden-Powell’s conviction that scouting should be fun, Low formed her own group of “Girl Guides”-Girl Scouts’ original name-near her Scotland home, the precursor for the phenomenon she’d bring to America in 1912. Sir Robert Baden-Powell, the British Army hero who founded the Boy Scouts in England. She was instantly fascinated by the woman, who founded the Girl Scouts in 1912, and by the fact that she was. Yearning for a purpose in life, she found one in 1911 after meeting Gen. Cordery was a Brownie the first time she heard the name Juliette Gordon Low. When unattached older women were expected to either remarry or fade away, Low remained visible in both London and Savannah society. During that time, Low’s chronic ear problems also led to botched treatment that resulted in partial deafness. After an unsuccessful marriage to the wealthy but philandering Englishman William “Willy” Mackay Low, she took the brave step of divorcing him in 1905. Cordery, including Alice: Alice Roosevelt Longworth, from White House Princess to Washington Power Broker, and Juliette Gordon Low. Born in Savannah, Ga., in 1860, Low was known throughout her life as “Daisy.” Headstrong, with an eccentric streak-her family nicknamed her “Crazy Daisy”-she had a lifelong sense of compassion for the underdog. Historian Cordery (Alice: Alice Roosevelt Longworth) celebrates the unique life of the woman who introduced the Girl Scouts in America in this robust biography.








Juliette Gordon Low by Stacy A. Cordery