Daisy : an opera in two acts. Overture / [music by] Julia Smith ; libretto by Bertita Harding. [1973?].

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Daisy : an opera in two acts. Overture / [music by] Julia Smith ; libretto by Bertita Harding. [1973?].

score (17 p.) + parts

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

Girl Scouts of the United States of America

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6wr0t0d (corporateBody)

The Girl Scouts were founded by Juliette Gordon Low on March 12, 1912 when Low organized the first Girl Guide troop meeting of 18 girls at her home in Savannah, Georgia. By the next year they became the Girl Scouts of the United States. By the 1920s troops were forming overseas as well. Low was inspired to start the Girl Scouts after she met Robert Lord Baden-Powell, the founder of the Boy Scouts, in 1911. Beginning with Lou Henry Hoover, the incumbent First Lady has served as the Honorary Pr...

Smith, Julia, 1905-1989

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w69g691w (person)

While some sources give Julia Smith's birth date as 1911, her birth certificate confirms a date of January 25, 1905 in Caldwell, Texas, to James Willis Smith and Julia Miller Smith of 1105 Mulberry Street in Denton, Texas. She took her first piano lesson from her mother, and later studied piano with Harold von Mickwitz of Dallas while she was a student at North Texas State Teachers' College. Smith graduated in 1930 with a degree in English and went to New York to study piano performance at the ...

Low, Juliette Gordon, 1860-1927

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6r60drj (person)

Juliette Gordon Low, also known as Daisy, (b. Oct. 31, 1860, Savannah, Ga.-d Jan. 17, 1927, Savannah, Ga.) was the founder of the Girl Scouts of America. She was the daughter of William and Eleanor Gordon of Savannah. She married William Mackay Low in 1886. She founded the Girl Scouts in 1912. She died in Savannah in 1927 and is buried in Laurel Grove Cemetery....