Girl Scouts and Girl Guides!
Juliette Gordon Low also loved to travel. She loved animals and rode horses. She loved to sculpt and some of her sculptures are located at the Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace in Savannah, Georgia. She loved family.
Juliette Gordon Low enjoyed many things: travel, animals, writing poems and plays, tennis, swimming, painting and sculpting, and family. But she had trouble completing projects because she would lose interest in them, until she met Lord Baden-Powell!
Once Juliette became involved in Girl Guides, she had found the thing she loved the most!
The Girl Scout organization was probably her favorite thing later in life.
As a girl, she had a horse named Fire, which was one of her favorite things.
Talented: Juliette Gordon Low sculpted and painted and was active in the arts.Resourceful: Juliette found many ways to get the people and the funds needed to support Girl Scouting in the USA.Strong: Juliette continued on, even through all the tragedy in her life. She used her experiences when designing the Girl Scout program and wanted to show girls that they could do things for themselves.
The Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace is a national Girl Scout center located in Savannah, Georgia and is the home where Juliette Low was born. Girl Scout troops travel to the Birthplace and participate in fun programs and learn about Juliette. The house was built for Savannah's mayor, James Moore Wayne in 1818. The Gordon family bought the house in 1831. Because of this, the house is known as "The Wayne Gordon House". In 1942 the house was made into apartments. In 1953, the house was purchased by the Girl Scouts of the USA, restored, and opened to the public in 1956.
Juliette Gordon Low was hearing impaired. Before her marriage, Juliette had suffered from chronic ear infections. She had lost most of her hearing in one ear because of improper treatment. At her wedding, when she was 26, she lost hearing in her other ear after a grain of good-luck rice thrown at the event lodged in her ear, puncturing the eardrum and resulting in an infection and total loss of hearing in that ear.
you never know sometimes celebs might have little crushes but for the most of it they where just acting. Alto celebs might be acting they could really love the person. Just like Zachary Gordon loves Peyton List
There was little that breast cancer treatment, at that time, could do to help her. Undergoing treatment would have most likely made her unable to continue her exhausting work with Girl Scouts. In order to devote herself to her work with the Girl Scout movement, she hid her illness from others who might have pressured her to seek treatment.
There are many books about Juliette Gordon Low. The most recent one, written for the 100th Anniversary of Girl Scouts of the USA, is Juliette Gordon Low: The Remarkable Founder of the Girl Scouts by Stacy Cordery.Other books about Juliette Gordon Low include:Here Come the Girl Scouts! The Amazing All-True Story of Juliette 'Daisy' Gordon Low and Her Great Adventure by Shana CoreyFirst Girl Scout, The Life of Juliette Gordon Low by Ginger Wadsworth
Talented: Juliette Gordon Low sculpted and painted and was active in the arts.Resourceful: Juliette found many ways to get the people and the funds needed to support Girl Scouting in the USA.Strong: Juliette continued on, even through all the tragedy in her life. She used her experiences when designing the Girl Scout program and wanted to show girls that they could do things for themselves.
Juliette Gordon Low lived in Savannah, Georgia for most of her childhood. Towards the end of the US Civil War, Juliette lived in Chicago, Illinois in the home of her Magill grandparents for many months.
Yes, Juliette Gordon Low had Scots ancestry. Juliette's mother, Eleanor Kinzie Gordon, had Scots ancestry. Eleanor's great-great grandfather emigrated from Scotland to Canada, where Eleanor's great-grandfather, John Kinzie, was born in 1763. Juliette's father, William Washington Gordon II, also had Scots ancestry. Notes found online indicate that William's great-great grandfather most likely emigrated from Scotland to America in the early 1700's.
Juliette Gordon Low suffered from ear infections. At one time, a doctor tried an experimental treatment for an ear infection which caused Juliette to lose most of the hearing in that ear. During Juliette's wedding to Willy Low, a piece of rice became lodged in her other ear. When the rice was removed, her ear drum was punctured and she lost almost all of the hearing in that ear. Juliette Gordon Low developed breast cancer in 1923, but she kept it hidden so that she could keep working for Girl Scouts. Juliette died of breast cancer in 1927.
After Juliette Gordon Low completed her formal education in 1880, she was presented to society. She spent the next several years caring for her younger siblings, traveling, and pursuing her interest in art. Juliette was friends with the sisters of William Mackay Low and most likely met him during her travels. At the age of 26, on December 21, 1886, Juliette married William Mackay Low.
Juliette Gordon Low had many experiences in her early life. One experience Juliette had was that she suffered from frequent ear infections. Due to improper treatment of the ear infections, she lost most of the hearing in one ear. During the US Civil War, Juliette's family continued to live in Savannah while her father became an officer in the Confederate Army. Food and other items became harder and harder to get but Juliette's father refused her mother's requests to allow them to join her family in Chicago. It was only when General Sherman ordered the removal of the families of Confederate officers from Savannah in 1865 that Juliette's mother, Eleanor, took her children to Chicago. Juliette was so malnourished that she came down with "brain fever" and was ill for several weeks.
Juliette Gordon Low helped people most of her life. She helped her mother organize a convalescent home during the Spanish-American War. She helped organize Girl Guide troops in Scotland and London before starting Girl Scouts in the USA. She continued helping the Girl Scout movement grow until her death.
Juliette Gordon Low's residence was Savannah, Georgia. Her parents lived in Savannah. For most of the 19 years of their marriage, Juliette and William lived in Great Britain. However, Juliette spent time in both Great Britain and the US. When William died, Juliette spent many years traveling through Europe and India. She returned to the US in 1912 to establish Girl Guides (later changed to Girl Scouts).
The Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace is a national Girl Scout center located in Savannah, Georgia and is the home where Juliette Low was born. Girl Scout troops travel to the Birthplace and participate in fun programs and learn about Juliette. The house was built for Savannah's mayor, James Moore Wayne in 1818. The Gordon family bought the house in 1831. Because of this, the house is known as "The Wayne Gordon House". In 1942 the house was made into apartments. In 1953, the house was purchased by the Girl Scouts of the USA, restored, and opened to the public in 1956.
Juliette's mother, Eleanor Kinzie Gordon, had Scots ancestry. Eleanor's great-great grandfather emigrated from Scotland to Canada, where Eleanor's great-grandfather, John Kinzie, was born in 1763. Juliette's father, William Washington Gordon II, also had Scots ancestry. Notes found online indicate that William's great-great grandfather most likely emigrated from Scotland to America in the early 1700's.
Juliette Gordon Low had hearing problems. Sometimes she would use her hearing problems to pretend that she did not hear someone when they tried to tell her "no" when she was asking them to do something for Girl Scouts. Otherwise she would ask people to talk into her "good ear", the one with the most hearing.