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  1. Rawson Warren was born in Pennsylvania, and graduated with an A.B. from the Leland Stanford Junior University of California in 1894. He graduated with an A.M. from the New York City University in New York City, New York, in 1896. During the Spanish American War, Rawson enlisted as a Private in Battery E of the 3rd United States Artillery ...

    • Oil City, Pennsylvania
    • Catharine Warren, Amelia Sprigg Warren
    • Pennsylvania
    • December 2, 1872
  2. She met her husband, Rawson D. Warren, in 1907. Thirty five years old, he was the commanding officer of the Fifth US Cavalry stationed at Fort Wingate, near Gallup, New Mexico. [2] Nina, who was 26 at the time, married Warren on June 25, 1908 becoming Nina Otero-Warren. After their Santa Fe wedding, Nina and Rawson moved back to Fort Wingate.

  3. Rawson D. Warren. . . ( m. 1908; div. 1910) . María Adelina Isabel Emilia " Nina " Otero-Warren (October 23, 1881 – January 3, 1965) was an American woman's suffragist, educator, and politician. Otero-Warren created a legacy of civil service through her work in education, politics, and public health. She became one of New Mexico 's first ...

    • American
    • María Adelina Isabel Emilia Otero, October 23, 1881, near Los Lunas, New Mexico, U.S.
  4. In 1908, Otero-Warren married Lt. Rawson D. Warren, a cavalry officer and commander at Ft. Wingate near Gallup, New Mexico. Two years later she returned to Santa Fe. There are several rumors regarding the reason for the end of the marriage, but it appears that Otero-Warren did not like to strictures of married and Army life.

  5. En 1907, Otero conoció a Rawson D. Warren, un oficial de la Quinta Caballería de Estados Unidos apostado en Fort Wingate. Otero y Warren se casaron al año siguiente y se mudaron a Fort Wingate, pero dos años más tarde Otero-Warren se divorció de su esposo y regresó a Santa Fe.

  6. Aug 8, 2021 · Otero-Warren married Rawson D. Warren in 1907. She was unhappy and they divorced two years later. It was at this point in her life that she became active in politics. Her work towards women’s suffrage caught the eye of Alice Paul. Paul asked Otero-Warren to head the New Mexico chapter of the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage (later the ...

  7. She met her husband, Rawson D. Warren, in 1907. They married on June 25, 1908, and Nina became Nina Otero-Warren. Unhappy in her marriage, Nina divorced her husband after only two years. Since divorce was strongly frowned upon in both Anglo and Hispano cultures, Nina described herself as a widow, and kept Otero-Warren as her last name.

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