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  1. Daisy Bates was a pioneer in the observation, over a period of 35 years, of the Aboriginal people living in the desert around the Great Australian Bight. Born in County Tipperary, Ireland as Daisy May O’Dwyer, she arrived in Australia in 1883 and worked as a governess to the Bates family near Nowra, NSW. In 1885 she married the eldest son ...

  2. Daisy Bates was not born to make history. The product of a segregated Arkansas sawmill town, she was black, illegitimate and self-taught after the eighth grade. Bates’s early life was scarred ...

  3. Daisy Lee Gatson Bates (November 11, 1914 – November 4, 1999) was an American civil rights leader, journalist, publisher, and author. Born in Arkansas, she became well-known for her work as a journalist in her husband's newspaper, reporting instances of racism in the community. She was active with the NAACP, working tirelessly for civil rights.

  4. 22. Jan. 2007 · Newspaper publisher and civil rights activist Daisy Lee Gatson Bates was influential in the integration of the Little Rock Nine into Little Rock, Arkansas’s Central High School in 1957. She was born Daisy Lee Gatson on November 11, 1914, in Huttih, Arkansas. Her mother, Millie Riley, was killed by three white men when she was an infant.

  5. DAISY BATES 79 Daisy Bates was aware of that history of struggle and exemplified key elements of it.6 Blacks' twentieth-century struggle relied on a tra-dition (an evolving heritage) of inner strength, or what is generally re-ferred to as initiative and courage-qualities that even her critics granted that Daisy Bates possessed in abundance ...

  6. Daisy Bates (auteur) Daisy May Bates CBE (née Margaret Dwyer, Roscrea, 16 oktober 1859 - Adelaide, 18 april 1951) was een Ierse journaliste, antropologe en welzijnswerkster bij de Aborigines van Australië. Haar werk heeft enorm bijgedragen aan het begrijpen van hun cultuur en het teruggeven van grondgebied middels native title -eisen.

  7. Daisy Bates (1859–1951) is a contentious and eccentric figure in Australian history who spent many years conducting ethnographic and welfare work in outback Australia. The National Museum’s collection includes a black skirt and ribbed-sleeve top owned by Bates and a signed first edition copy of her 1938 book, The Passing of the Aborigines ...