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Ann B Hollen 1913 - 2009
Ann B Hollen of Princeton, Colusa County, CA was born on December 8, 1913, and died at age 95 years old on April 27, 2009.
Ann B Hollen
Princeton, Colusa County, CA 95970
December 8, 1913
April 27, 2009
Female
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Ann B Hollen's History: 1913 - 2009
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12/81913
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04/272009April 27, 2009Death dateUnknownCause of deathUnknownDeath locationADVERTISEMENT BY ANCESTRY.COMView death records
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Did you know?Ann B Hollen lived 22 years longer than the average Hollen family member when she died at the age of 95.The average age of a Hollen family member is 73.
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Did you know?
In 1913, in the year that Ann B Hollen was born, Henry Ford installed the first moving assembly line for the mass production of an entire automobile. It had previously taken 12 hours to assemble a whole vehicle - now it took only two hours and 30 minutes! Inspired by the production lines at flour mills, breweries, canneries and industrial bakeries, along with the disassembly of animal carcasses in Chicago’s meat-packing plants, Ford created moving belts for parts and the assembly line was born.
Did you know?
In 1930, when she was 17 years old, as head of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, William Hays established a code of decency that outlined what was acceptable in films. The public - and government - had felt that films in the '20's had become increasingly risque and that the behavior of its stars was becoming scandalous. Laws were being passed. In response, the heads of the movie studios adopted a voluntary "code", hoping to head off legislation. The first part of the code prohibited "lowering the moral standards of those who see it", called for depictions of the "correct standards of life", and forbade a picture from showing any sort of ridicule towards a law or "creating sympathy for its violation". The second part dealt with particular behavior in film such as homosexuality, the use of specific curse words, and miscegenation.
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Source(s): Social Security Death Index
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Other Biographies
Other Ann Hollen Biographies
Other Hollen Family Biographies
Hollen, Colleen (Jul 19, 1929 - Sep 19, 2003)
Hollen, Olive (Nov 16, 1888 - Mar 1973)
Hollen, Martin (Jul 22, 1906 - Nov 1980)
Hollen, William (May 30, 1891 - Aug 1962)
Hollen, Lori (May 9, 1958 - May 27, 2010)
Hollen, Harry (Aug 26, 1918 - Mar 2, 1997)
Hollen, William (May 7, 1929 - Nov 6, 2003)
Hollen, Robert (Apr 21, 1928 - Aug 26, 1989)
Hollen, Maybelle (Aug 20, 1902 - Jun 1982)
Hollen, Lillian (Mar 23, 1915 - Nov 1979)
Hollen, Herbert (Dec 13, 1918 - Feb 26, 2000)
Hollen, Jerry (Jan 4, 1961 - Nov 29, 1993)
Hollen, Julia (Jul 22, 1886 - Sep 1968)
Hollen, Lillian (Mar 16, 1921 - Sep 5, 2001)
Hollen, Edwin (Apr 24, 1904 - Jul 1, 1996)
Hollen, Elsie (Mar 8, 1901 - Apr 1980)
Hollen, William (Mar 29, 1913 - Oct 1980)
Hollen, Marie (Apr 2, 1906 - Mar 1978)
Hollen, Lila (Dec 5, 1911 - Jul 1987)
Hollen, Leroy (Mar 9, 1924 - Dec 16, 2003)
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There is a lot of controversy about statues on public land that honor those on the Confederacy side of the U.S. Civil War. Many of these statues and monuments - in fact the majority - were erected decades after the Civil War from about 1900 through 1920 (after the Plessy v. Ferguson trial which upheld racial segregation laws) and during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960's. Who were these men to whom a majority of these statues are dedicated? Perhaps the most interesting perspective comes from Robert E. Lee, one of the men who has the most memorials: "I think it wiser,” he wrote about a proposed Gettysburg memorial in 1869, “…not to keep open the sores of war but to follow the examples of those nations who endeavored to obliterate the marks of civil strife, to commit to oblivion the feelings engendered.”