New Hampshire born socialite Brooke Astor – Grandson Alleges She Is Victim of Elder Abuse

Addendum: An update of December 5, 2006. – According to the Daily News, “Brooke Astor’s son was cleared yesterday of
abusing her – but he was forced to return $11 million in cash, jewelry
and art to his 104-year-old mom…
An October settlement stripped him of the right to care for his mother,
whose well-being is now overseen by confidante Annette de la Renta,
while JP Morgan Chase minds her millions.”

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Original Post:

The New York Daily News has reported today that socialite, Brooke Astor,
the subject of a blog article here,  who turned 104 in April, reportedly is a victim of elder abuse, and now wears torn nightgowns and sleeps on a filthy couch.

If the court documents, submitted by her grandson, Philip Marshall, are true, then this is an extremely sad situation for a lovely, frail, lady.

See my article on elderly abuse at NH.com.

Janice

P.S. An update in October of 2006 –  Philanthropist Brooke Astor’s son has been permanently removed as guardian of her multimillion-dollar estate, according to a settlement announced in court yesterday.
The agreement allows the 104-year-old Astor’s court-appointed guardians, Annette de la Renta and JPMorgan Chase, to remain in place, instead of her son, Anthony Marshall.

See articles about this topic:

-I am son kind of wonderful-

As Mrs. Astor Slips…-

Newsday.com Report

Astor’s Scary Place

Washington Post article

 

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New Hampshire’s State Flag and Seal

New Hampshire’s flag is the state seal, on a solid background of deep blue.

Although reportedly the design of the flag has been in use since 1784, this version of the official New Hampshire state flag was adopted in 1909 by our state legislature.

In 1931 changes were made to “more precisely describe the State Seal,” including the one used on the flag, at the request and prompting of the New Hampshire Historical Society.

Today, the seal symbols include the 32-gun frigate, “Raleigh,” sailing near a large gray granite rock, in front of a yellow sun rising over blue water. The “Raleigh” was a ship built at Portsmouth in 1776, as one of the first 13 warships sponsored by the Continental Congress to fight the British during the Revolutionary War. It was also the first to carry the American flag into sea battle.

The scene is surrounded by the words, “SEAL OF THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE 1776,” and yellow laurel leaves are interpersed between nine yellow stars, to symbolize that New Hampshire is the ninth state to become part of the United States.

New Hampshire State Flag & State Seal Tidbits

1. In preparation of the 1776 state constitution, the First Provincial Congress designed a seal comprised an upright fish and pine tree on each side of a bundle of five arrows. (The five arrows symbolizing the then 5 counties of New Hampshire). It bore the inscription: COLONY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE * VIS UNITA FORTUNA, the latin part translates as “Strength United is Stronger.”  The seal was never officially proclaimed, but it was used during the American Revolution until 1784.

2. In 1784 the New Hampshire State Seal, depicted a ship on stocks, (the Raleigh) with a rising sun in the background, to reflect Portsmouth as a major shipbuilding center during the war years, with items ready for shipment on a dock in the front.

3. In 1919 New Hampshire Historical Society director, Otis G. Hammond, urged improvements to the official seal, which over time had been altered by various artists to include rum barrels on the dock, and sometimes human beings beside them.

4. In 1931, in a response to the above, the state legislature deemed that any future replicas of the seal would not include ANYTHING in the water other than the ship already mentioned, and the granite boulder also mentioned. And the The old Latin phrase “Neo Hantoniensis 1784 Sigillum Republica” around the circular seal was replaced with the English words, “Seal of the state of New Hampshire 1776.”

Janice

For more history on the seal of New Hampshire

About the Seals of New Hampshire (from History of New Hampshire)

Also Read: “NH Missing Places: When New Hampshire is Really Maine

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New Hampshire Seals of the Past

See 1776 & 1784Seals

History of the seal and flag of the state of New Hampshire, by Otis G. Hammond, 1916.  [includes examples of the seals].


1850 Version of the Seal of New Hampshire [see Photographs > Misc for a larger version]

 

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New Hampshire’s Endicott Rock: Our Oldest Public Monument?

Endicott Rock dates back to August 1, 1652, and is a New Hampshire historic site.

In an attempt to settle the boundary line between New Hampshire and Massachusetts, in 1652, a party of adventurers was sent on a mission by Massachusetts to seek the northern source of the Merrimack River. Continue reading

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Bartlett New Hampshire’s Author, Lady Blanche Elizabeth Mary Annunciata (Noel) Murphy (1845-1881)

Lady Blanche Elizabeth Mary Annunciata Noel was born 25 March 1845 at Exton Hall in lady blanche murphy home watermarkEngland, daughter of Charles George Noel, 2nd Earl of Gainsborough and Lady Ida Harriet Augusta Hay, and godchild of Queen Victoria. She died 21 March 1881. She married 6 March 1870 to Thomas P. Murphy.  Although one source says he was “an Irishman,” Thomas Murphy was probably born about 1847 in England and died 11 Oct 1890 (the census states his parents were also born in England). Continue reading

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New Hampshire Glossary: Coos (Please Don’t Say Cooz)

Coös County, New Hampshire– (pronounced “CO-ahss” with two syllables)… is a county in New Hampshire, established December 24, 1803. It was taken from Grafton County, one of the five original counties of the State. is the only place name in the US that is officially spelled with a printer’s diacritical mark.  Due to the limitations of typewriters and some early keyboards that lacked the ability to create this mark, many spell Coos without.

At the time of establishment, it contained the original towns of Dalton, Whitefield, Bretton Woods, Bartlett, Adams, Chatham, Shelburne Addition, Durand, Kilkenny, Jefferson, Lancaster, Millsfield, Northumberland, Stratford, Wales’ Gore, Cockburne, Colebrook, Stewartstown, Piercy, Paulsburg, Mainsborough, Dummer, Errol, Cambridge and Success. It had a population of about 3,000 in 1803. Continue reading

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