Atypical women in the typical world Many people know who the announcers are. It may not be the case. Ann Spencer was actually a Harlem Renaissance poet who actually lived in Lynchburg, Virginia. She likes to work at Edankraal, her garden cottage who worked in her garden and wrote most of the poems. Ann is a diligent worker, but she is definitely not a typical woman in the early twentieth century. Ann and her husband, Edward did a lot of things that were not typical in the early 20th century, but these "atypical" features made the couple very unique.
Spencer, Annie Bethel Scale (1882-1975) poet, educator, social activist, one of the most innovative poet of Harlem Renaissance, Ann Spencer less than 30 poems. Many of the works published since the Harlem Renaissance period appeared in many African American poetry collections. Her unique style and artistic vision has become a national concern for poets with considerable depth and even causes comparison with the famous American poet Emily Dickinson. Spencer was born on February 6, 1882 at Annie Bethel Scale Banister in Henry County, Virginia. Her father, Joel Cephus Bannister, is an African American and indigenous American, her mother, Sarah Louise Scales is a former slave and her white master's daughter.
A 16 - year - old girl, Brenda Ann Spencer (born April 3, 1962), was convicted of shooting because he lived in a house opposite the school. She was tried as an adult and admitted guilty of two murders and attacks by a deadly weapon. She was sentenced to life imprisonment and still in prison. During shooting, the reporter called a house near the school and found information on what is going on. He arrived at Spencer and Spencer freely admitted that she was the person taking. One of the things she said when she was asked why she was doing what she was doing was "I dislike Monday", the so-called comment was widely made public.