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Louisa Mason Lockett 1900 - 1998

Louisa Mason Lockett of Ballarat, City of Ballarat County, VIC Australia was born on January 29, 1900 in Learmonth to Esther Bertha (Mason) Lockett and Howard Lockett. She had siblings Harold Gordon Lockett, Elsie May Lockett, Millicent Coutts Lockett, Eveline Mary Lockett, Alma Annie Lockett, Rita Rosamond Lockett, Victor Howard Lockett, Russell Gordon Lockett, Esther Bertha Lockett, Kenneth Norman Lockett, Charles Joseph Lockett, Herbert Raymond Lockett, and Stella Gardiner Lockett. Louisa Lockett married Roy Gordon Ross in 1927, and died at age 98 years old in 1998 in Ballarat.
Louisa Mason Lockett
Ballarat, City of Ballarat County, VIC Australia
January 29, 1900
Learmonth, City of Ballarat County, VIC, 3352, Australia
1998
Ballarat, City of Ballarat County, VIC, Australia
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Louisa Mason Lockett's History: 1900 - 1998

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  • 01/29
    1900

    Birthday

    January 29, 1900
    Birthdate
    Learmonth, City of Ballarat County, VIC 3352, Australia
    Birthplace
  • mm/4
    1998

    Death

    1998
    Death date
    Unknown
    Cause of death
    Ballarat, City of Ballarat County, VIC Australia
    Death location
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  • Did you know?
    Louisa Mason Lockett lived 28 years longer than the average family member when died at the age of 97.
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In 1900, in the year that Louisa Mason Lockett was born, artist Henri Matisse, born in 1869 in France, began the fauvist movement. Only lasting a few years in popularity (ending around 1904), fauvism was in many ways the beginning of modern art. Matisse was fond of bright, vibrant colors and used them in his paintings - contrary to the muted use of color previously. While the fauvist movement declined in popularity, Matisse did not and he went on to create many more works of art and even a museum for his work, 2 years before his death in 1954. (In French, les Fauves means "the wild beasts". Matisse and those who followed his example were called "beasts" because of the bold colors that they used in their artwork.)
Did you know?
In 1925, she was 25 years old when in July, the Scopes Trial - often called the Scopes Monkey Trial - took place, prosecuting a substitute teacher for teaching evolution in school. Tennessee had enacted a law that said it was "unlawful to teach human evolution in any state-funded school". William Jennings Bryan headed the prosecution and Clarence Darrow headed the defense. The teacher was found guilty and fined $100. An appeal to the Supreme Court of Tennessee upheld the law but overturned the guilty verdict.
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