Feb 2010 to 2000 Staff AccountantAFLAC Ventura, CA Jan 2008 to Dec 2009 Independent AgentFacts About Modern Manufacturing Washington, DC May 2004 to Sep 2007 Research Analyst
Education:
California State University Sacramento 2013 Masters of Science in AccountingGeorge Mason University Fairfax, VA 2006 Bachelor of Science in Business Management
Dr. Slade graduated from the West Virginia College of Osteopathic Medicine in 2009. He works in Wakefield, RI and specializes in Internal Medicine. Dr. Slade is affiliated with South County Health.
Lafayettte, ColoradoPresident at Waldo Home Inspections Worked for the State Highway Dept. for 30 years and have retired... I now have a home inspection and home repair business.
magnificent brain of his). We see how earthy he was and how much he cared about average folk, since he grew up among them. We see him whittling during cabinet meetings and shining his own boots as the butler, William Slade, looks on in exasperation. (Lincoln cared little for ceremony or formalities.e one in which Lincoln discusses Euclid with two stalwarts of the telegraph office. One of the last scenes, in which William Slade watches Lincoln walk down the hall toward a waiting carriage and his assassination, has to be one of the most perfect, and heart-rending, scenes in cinematic history.
The two black White House servants, shown primarily in the film as helpmates and companions to the president and Mary Todd Lincoln, were so much more: the man, William Slade, a leader in a black civil rights organization and confidante to Lincoln, and the woman, Elizabeth Keckley, a community organ
Date: Nov 30, 2012
Category: Entertainment
Source: Google
In Spielberg's 'Lincoln,' Passive Black Characters
In fact, the capital was also home to an organized and highly politicized community of free African-Americans, in which the White House servants Elizabeth Keckley and William Slade were leaders. Keckley, who published a memoir in 1868, organized other black women to raise money and donations of clot