Mary Goodell Grant (sister) Joel Aldrich Matteson (grandfather) James Benton Grant (brother-in-law)
Jennie Goodell Blow (née Matteson Goodell) (1860 – January 26, 1935) was a prominent American-born socialite. Blow resided in a number of different locations during her life. Hailing from a prominent family, married to a wealthy man, and reputed for her beauty, Blow established herself as a leading society figure in several different cities. While residing in the United Kingdom, she was a leader in the successful effort to convert the Maine into a hospital ship during the Boer War. The idea for this effort had been Blow's. She worked with Lady Randolph Churchill and Fanny Ronalds to lead this effort and was recognized for it by Queen Victoria and later Edward VII.
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JennieGoodellBlow (née Matteson Goodell) (1860 – January 26, 1935) was a prominent American-born socialite. Blow resided in a number of different locations...
partnership with two American-born socialites residing in London: JennieGoodellBlow and Fanny Ronalds. For this work, Churchill was awarded the decoration...
Grant married into the Goodell family, esteemed in Colorado, by marrying the young Mary Goodell, the daughter of Roswell Eaton Goodell and granddaughter of...
(née Mary Jane Goodell). In addition to her sisters, Annie, Clara, Olive, and Jennie, her parents also had a son named Roswell Eaton Goodell Jr. Her maternal...
Goodell's family tree would later gain a connection to a third U.S. governor, as Goodell's grandson Allmand Matteson Blow (son of daughter Jennie) married...
prédio de sua propriedade, causa 9 mortes e está preso" [Santa Catarina man blows up his own building, causes 9 deaths, is imprisoned]. Jornal do Brasil (in...
Oscar-nominated composer Jane Skinner, TV journalist, wife of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell Samuel K. Skinner, U.S. Secretary of Transportation and White House Chief...