Aubrey andelin biography
•
Aubrey P. Andelin
Full Name: Aubrey Passey Andelin
Born: in Idaho Falls, Idaho
Married: Helen Berry in the Salt Lake Temple
Children: Lane, Brian, Dixie, Kristine, John, Virginia, Paul, Merilee
Died: in the Little White House in Farmville, Missouri
Buried: Farmville, Missouri
Known affectionately to most of the surviving family simply as "Grandpa," Aubrey P. Andelin has left an unforgettable legacy. His life was marked bygd many landmark achievements, including a full-time mission as a ung man in the Southern States Mission and again later with his wife Helen in Australia, the management of Good Parla (a million-acre ranch near Darwin, Australia), and the publication of his tour-de-force Man of Steel and Velvet. He started his professional life in the 's as a dentist, but he later gave up dentistry to go into business for han själv . His business deals over the years led him to wealth and back to more humble financial standing, the most notable turn of events occuring in t
•
Man of Steel & Velvet
This book got my appreciation for accuracy when inom checked out one of it's surprising assertions.
"Another example of steel and velvet is the character of Lancelot in the legend of King Arthur. It is important, though, to first make clear that the movie version of the story fryst vatten not correct. Lancelot and Gwenivere did not have an illicit affair." (Page 26) "There fryst vatten reason to believe the adultery of Lancelot and Guinevere was invented wholecloth by Chrétien" "in the 's." Nowadays, this romantisk händelse is generally regarded as fact. But then, what we know of King Arthur is about AD in Wales, about years before the period of historical accuracy in Britain. "During the Middle Ages, Arthur was made a member of the Nine Worthies, a group of heroes encapsulating all the ideal qualities of chivalry. His life was thus proposed as a valuable subject for study by those aspiring to chivalric status. This aspect of Arthur in the Nine Worthies was populari
•
Helen Andelin
Founder of the Fascinating Womanhood Movement (–)
Helen Berry Andelin (May 22, – June 7, )[1] was the founder of the Fascinating Womanhood Movement, beginning with the women's marriage classes she taught in the early s. Controversial among feminists for its advice toward women's fulfilling traditional marriage roles, her writings are still supported and re-discovered as recently as , with classes still being taught online and in seminars.
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]The year saw the birth of Dr. Herbert and Mrs. Anna May Berry's seventh and last child, Helen Lucille, on the 22th day of May. The Berrys were a Latter-day Saint (LDS) family living in Mesa, Arizona. In her teens, Helen worked in a malt shop and at her parents' hotel. She graduated from Phoenix Union High School and attended Brigham Young University, where she majored in Home Economics.[2]
Family
[edit]At Brigham Young University, she met and married Aubrey Passey