All Things 'SaMANtha Cameron' & Related 🧐
Part Three 💊💊💥💥
1. 'Sutton Park was purchased in 1963 by Sir Reginald and Lady Sheffield and has been Sir Reginald's family home ever since. Sir Reginald Sheffield, 8th Baronet, is the father of Samantha Cameron – wife of former British Prime Minister David Cameron.'
4. 'Samantha was born in London and grew up on the 300-acre estate of Normanby Hall, north Lincolnshire. Her parents divorced when she was small and both remarried. Her mother, Annabel, wed William Astor, now Viscount Astor.' (Astor Family - Part One)
5. 'Much has been made of Samantha trying to shake off her aristocratic upbringing during her art student days in Bristol, where she got a dolphin tattoo on her ankle and hung out with Tricky, the trip-hop star.'
6. 'Sutton Park is an 18th-century Georgian English country house situated on the edge of the village of Sutton-on-the-Forest, North Yorkshire. It is approximately 10 miles north of York, in the ancient Forest of Galtres.'
40. 'The Queen looked wonderful as she wore a botanical printed shirt dress from Samantha Cameron's fashion brand, Cefinn. This isn't the first time the Queen has been spotted wearing clothes from this brand as she wore a Cefinn dress in March 2022..' womanandhome.com/life/royal-new…
1. Dr. John Harvey Kellogg wearing his trademark all-white suit with his pet cockatoo on his shoulder.
WILLARD LIBRARY
2. 'The Race Betterment Foundation was a eugenics and racial hygiene organization founded in 1914 at Battle Creek, Michigan by John Harvey Kellogg due to his concerns about what he perceived as "race degeneracy".
The foundation supported conferences (including three National Conferences on Race Betterment), publications (Good Health), and the formation of a eugenics registry in cooperation with the ERO (Eugenics Record Office).
The foundation also sponsored the Fitter Families Campaign from 1928 to the late 1930s and funded Battle Creek College. The foundation controlled the Battle Creek Food Company, which in turn served as the major source for Kellogg's eugenics programs, conferences, and Battle Creek College.
In his will, Kellogg left his entire estate to the foundation.
In 1947, the foundation had over $687,000 in assets. By 1967, the foundation's accounts were a mere $492.87. In 1967, the state of Michigan indicted the trustees for squandering the foundation's funds and the foundation closed.
2. 'Corn flakes, or cornflakes, are a breakfast cereal made from toasting flakes of corn (maize). Originally invented as a breakfast food to counter indigestion, it has become a popular food item in the American diet and in the United Kingdom where over 6 million households consume them.' Wikipedia