Lillian Massey Treble
Lillian Massey Treble (born Lillian Frances Massey at Newcastle, Ontario, 2 March 1854; died at Santa Barbara, California, 3 November 1915) was a Canadian philanthropist and educator who was a member of the prominent Massey family.[1]
![](../I/m/Lillian_Massey_Treble.png)
Lillian Massey Treble
Biography
Her parents were Hart Massey, an industrialist, and Eliza Ann Phelps. She became interested in mission work and organized classes in domestic science, which led to her founding The Lillian Massey School of Household Science and Art.
Similar results were secured at the University of Toronto and other universities. She gave the University of Toronto the Lillian Massey Building, which was opened in 1913.
Notes
gollark: Okay, that is more worrying than anticipated.
gollark: Ah, yes, RSA-3072 and whatever are 3072 *bits*.
gollark: * which fits into 1KiB and for which internal state for bruteforcing fits into the remaining space.
gollark: How would you take over the world with it? You can bruteforce anything which fits into 1KB (are we assuming 1KiB here, not 1000 bytes exactly?), which is not that much.
gollark: "None are safe" is correct as an approximation, not *strictly*.
References
- David Roberts (2000). "Massey, Lillian Frances (Treble)". Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. Retrieved 8 March 2012.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). . Encyclopedia Americana.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.