When Lottie Lenore Leach was born on 7 October 1903, in Missouri, United States, her father, Edward Rodgers Leach, was 48 and her mother, Julia Anna Clover, was 32. She married Easter McKinley Hansard on 22 November 1920, in Butler, Missouri, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons. She lived in Poplar Bluff, Butler, Missouri, United States in 1920 and St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States for about 10 years. She died on 23 June 2000, in Jennings, St. Louis, Missouri, United States, at the age of 96, and was buried in Jennings, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.
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St. Louis, Missouri, United States hosts Summer Olympic Games.
The first of many consumer protection laws which ban foreign and interstate traffic in mislabeled food and drugs. It requires that ingredients be placed on the label.
13 million people become unemployed after the Wall Street stock market crash of 1929 triggers what becomes known as the Great Depression. President Herbert Hoover rejects direct federal relief.
English: occupational name for a physician, from Middle English leche, lache ‘physician’ (Old English lǣce ‘leech; physician, blood-letter, surgeon’). The name refers to the medieval medical practice of bleeding, typically by applying leeches to a patient. The surname is recorded in the late 14th-century Poll Tax Returns for men whose occupation is stated as medicus ‘physician’, or occasionally spicer (spicers acted as apothecaries), but some men named le Leche have unrelated occupations including cultor ‘cultivator, farm laborer’, which suggests that leche could refer to an amateur ‘medicine man’ who supplied folk remedies.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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