Constance "Connie" Enos, neé McGillicuddy was the wife of George Enos, Jr.. She was a Catholic and pressured George to convert. Her parents were Patrick and Margaret McGillicuddy. She lived in Boston, Massachusetts with her and George's two sons, Stan and Leo. At the end of the Second Great War, Connie contacted Joseph P. Kennedy, a former political ally of her late mother-in-law, and convinced him to secure George's discharge from the Navy.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| |
rdfs:comment
| - Constance "Connie" Enos, neé McGillicuddy was the wife of George Enos, Jr.. She was a Catholic and pressured George to convert. Her parents were Patrick and Margaret McGillicuddy. She lived in Boston, Massachusetts with her and George's two sons, Stan and Leo. At the end of the Second Great War, Connie contacted Joseph P. Kennedy, a former political ally of her late mother-in-law, and convinced him to secure George's discharge from the Navy.
|
dcterms:subject
| |
type of appearance
| |
dbkwik:turtledove/...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
Appearance
| - through
- In at the Death
- The Center Cannot Hold
|
Spouse
| |
Name
| |
Religion
| |
Children
| |
Occupation
| |
Family
| |
Parents
| - Patrick and Margaret McGillicuddy
|
Nationality
| |
abstract
| - Constance "Connie" Enos, neé McGillicuddy was the wife of George Enos, Jr.. She was a Catholic and pressured George to convert. Her parents were Patrick and Margaret McGillicuddy. She lived in Boston, Massachusetts with her and George's two sons, Stan and Leo. At the end of the Second Great War, Connie contacted Joseph P. Kennedy, a former political ally of her late mother-in-law, and convinced him to secure George's discharge from the Navy.
|
is Spouse
of | |
is Children
of | |
is Parents
of | |