df_f_writers_2_para_w_chatgpt: 7
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rowid | first_name | last_name | gender | career_sec | personal_sec | info | seed_first_name | seed_last_name | occupation | chatgpt_gen |
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7 | Heike | Tinney | f | Armstrong founded and ran an orphanage in Platte County, Nebraska, as a young doctor. She became a medical missionary in India as a single woman in 1886, serving with her sister Willimina L. Armstrong, and later with her husband, Methodist clergyman George Armstrong-Hopkins. She founded and directed a hospital and a nurses' training school at Khetwadi from 1887 to 1889. She was physician in charge at Lady Atchison Hospital in Lahore and a hospital in Hyderabad, Sindh from 1889 to 1893. From 1893 to 1895, she was on the staff of a hospital in Omaha. She sponsored several Indian students to attend college in the United States. The Armstrong-Hopkinses went to Bombay in 1912; she retired from the mission field after her husband's death in 1918. In 1899, Armstrong-Hopkins sued her superior, Methodist bishop James Mills Thoburn, for slander. She sued him again in 1907 for libel, and won an award of $500. Thoburn had claimed that Armstrong-Hopkins was spending lavishly on dresses, stockings, shoes, and hats for her Indian patients. She held a medical license in Nebraska from 1894, but was refused a license to practice in Washington, D. C. in 1903, when the district's board of medical supervisors questioned her credentials and asked her to sit for an examination. Books by Armstrong-Hopkins included Within the Purdah (1898), Fruit of Suffering (a book of poems), Pork and Mustard, and Khetwadi Castle (1900). She gave lectures on her experiences in India to women's groups and at church events. | In 1893, Saleni Armstrong married George Franklin Hopkins (1855-1918), as his second wife. They both used the surname Armstrong-Hopkins after they married, and their legal change to the hyphenated surname made headlines in 1905. In 1926, she was on a list of "Lost Alumnae" of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania; her alumnae association had lost track of her address. Her younger sister WIllimina Leonora Armstrong was known later in life as Zamin Ki Dost, a physician, writer, and lecturer on Eastern mysticism, based in Los Angeles. | Armstrong founded and ran an orphanage in Platte County, Nebraska, as a young doctor. She became a medical missionary in India as a single woman in 1886, serving with her sister Willimina L. Armstrong, and later with her husband, Methodist clergyman George Tinney. She founded and directed a hospital and a nurses' training school at Khetwadi from 1887 to 1889. She was physician in charge at Lady Atchison Hospital in Lahore and a hospital in Hyderabad, Sindh from 1889 to 1893. From 1893 to 1895, she was on the staff of a hospital in Omaha. She sponsored several Indian students to attend college in the United States. The Tinneyes went to Bombay in 1912; she retired from the mission field after her husband's death in 1918. In 1899, Tinney sued her superior, Methodist bishop James Mills Thoburn, for slander. She sued him again in 1907 for libel, and won an award of $500. Thoburn had claimed that Tinney was spending lavishly on dresses, stockings, shoes, and hats for her Indian patients. She held a medical license in Nebraska from 1894, but was refused a license to practice in Washington, D. C. in 1903, when the district's board of medical supervisors questioned her credentials and asked her to sit for an examination. Books by Tinney included Within the Purdah (1898), Fruit of Suffering (a book of poems), Pork and Mustard, and Khetwadi Castle (1900). She gave lectures on her experiences in India to women's groups and at church events.In 1893, Heike Armstrong married George Franklin Hopkins (1855-1918), as his second wife. They both used the surname Tinney after they married, and their legal change to the hyphenated surname made headlines in 1905. In 1926, she was on a list of "Lost Alumnae" of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania; her alumnae association had lost track of her address. Her younger sister WIllimina Leonora Armstrong was known later in life as Zamin Ki Dost, a physician, writer, and lecturer on Eastern mysticism, based in Los Angeles. | Saleni | Armstrong-Hopkins | writers | To Whom It May Concern,<return><return>I am writing to recommend Heike Tinney for any position or opportunity that may require a person of great skill and determination. I have had the privilege of learning about Heike's life and accomplishments, and I wholeheartedly support her as a valuable asset to any organization.<return><return>Heike Tinney was a woman ahead of her time. As a medical missionary in India in the late 1800s and early 1900s, she faced many challenges and obstacles, but she persevered and made an impact on the communities she served. She founded and directed hospitals and trained nurses, and sponsored Indian students to attend college in the United States. Her dedication to service and her compassion for those in need are truly inspiring.<return><return>In addition to her medical work, Heike was also a talented writer and lecturer. Her books and lectures on her experiences in India were widely respected and admired. She was not afraid to speak out against injustice and fought for her own rights when she was slandered and libeled by her superiors.<return><return>Heike's story is one of strength, resilience, and perseverance in the face of daunting challenges. She has left a legacy of service, compassion, and leadership that should inspire us all. I wholeheartedly recommend Heike Tinney for any opportunity that may come her way.<return><return>Sincerely,<return><return>[Your Name] |