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  1. Emily Hall Tremaine Exhibition Award Guidelines & Eligibility. Applications are accepted on a triennial basis from any curator, or curatorial team, applying in partnership with an established non-profit exhibition space, whether a traditional gallery or museum, or an alternative non-profit venue. The curator can be on staff at the partnering ...

  2. Current Grantees. $70,000 for Structured Literacy Summit & Supports and $20,000 for the 2nd Philadelphia Principals SoR pilot. $200,000 for general operating support to the collective impact literacy initiative in Philadelphia that engages families, neighborhoods, and systems leaders in protecting every child’s right to read.

  3. Announcing the 2022 Emily Hall Tremaine Exhibition Award & Research Grant Recipients! Applications are accepted on a triennial basis from any curator, or curatorial team, applying in partnership with an established 501c3 non-profit (grants cannot be issued to individual curators but can be distributed through fiscal agents).

  4. Created by: Stories Of The Gilded Age. Added: Dec 6, 2018. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 195190270. Source citation. Mrs. Tremaine was born in Butte, Mont., in the first decade of the century, to a mining executive, William Hubbard Hall, and his wife. She was tutored privately at home. Her first marriage, to Baron Maximilian von Romberg in 1928 ...

  5. 1901: Burton Gad Tremaine was born on August 31 in Cleveland, OH, to Burton Gad Tremaine, known as B.G., and Maude Tremaine.That year B.G. founded the National Electric Lamp Association (NELA). 1908: Emily Hall was born on January 31 in Butte, MT to William Hubbard Hall and Purdon Smith Hall.

  6. Janet Tremaine Stanley, and Sarah C. Tremaine provided a clear picture of what it was like to be Emily's step-grandchildren growing up in the turbulent 1960s. Catherine Tremaine's recollections increased the scope of the chapters dealing with the 1970s and 1980s. Sally Bowles, president of the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation in Meriden,

  7. Aug 2, 2021 · Left: Wire service photo of Emily Hall Tremaine (previously Spreckels) wearing in today’s value from USD$14.5-220m in diamonds, and stealing the press at the Beaux Arts Ball in New York, probably partly a piss-take and signalling her move up the society ladder (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 30 January 1940, p. 22.) Six months earlier, she was cash ...

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