Event class: father, mother, family, moved, died, parents, school, death, age, left
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Thomas Merton | Merton and his father moved to the home of Owen's aunt and uncle in Ealing, West London. |
Florence Kate Upton | In June 1889 her family was placed in financial difficulty through the sudden death of her father, putting an end to their steady income. |
Robert E. Lee | In 1809, Harry Lee was put in debtors prison ; soon after his release the following year, Harry and Anne Lee and their five children moved to a small house on Cameron Street in Alexandria, Virginia, both because there were then high quality local schools there, and because several members of her extended family lived nearby. |
Gene Hackman | Hackman's parents divorced in 1943 and his father subsequently left the family. |
Henry White (diplomat) | After the war ended in 1865 with a Confederate defeat, White's family moved to France, where White finished his education in Paris. |
Jagjivan Ram | Young Jagjivan started going a local school in January 1914, but shortly afterward his father died prematurely, leaving him and his mother Vasanti Devi to economic hardships. |
Mehgan Heaney-Grier | When she was eleven years old her mother remarried to Nelson Grier and in the summer of 1989, Heaney-Grier, along with her sister Erin, mother and new stepfather moved to the Florida Keys. |
William Brice | Born to actress Fannie Brice and gambling addicted Nick Arnstein, April 23, 1921, he spent his early years living with his mother and his sister Frances (later the wife of producer Ray Stark), while their father was in prison on a variety of charges stemming from a history of thefts, swindles and confidence schemes. |
John William Draper | Around 1830, she was sent with her brother Daniel to live with their aunt in London. |
Hasan Arfa | Arfa's parents divorced in 1900, after Arfa and his mother had moved to Paris, but the senior Arfa al-Dowleh provided comfortable homes in Europe for them. |
James Wong Howe | After his father's death, the teenaged Howe moved to Oregon to live with his uncle and briefly considered (1915 -- 16) a career as a bantamweight boxer. |
James Sterling Tippett | In 1890, his family moved to a farm inherited from his maternal grandfather, and remained there until he was thirteen, when his family returned to Memphis. |
Ricky Williams | Growing up middle-class, his parents divorced in 1983 and Williams, at the age of 5, was taking care of his sisters by putting them to bed and even cooking for them. |
Eliza Logan | She remained a headlining actress through the 1850s, while supporting her mother and younger siblings after the death of her father in 1853. |
Bernard Adolph Schriever | His father died in an accident in 1918, leaving Schriever and his brother in foster care until his grandmother was able to come from Germany to take care of them so that their mother could work. |
Katai Tayama | Katai was sent with his elder brother and sister to Tokyo, where he entered a bookshop as an apprentice, but he lost his position and returned to Tatebayashi in 1882. |
Luiz In?cio Lula da Silva | In December 1952, when Lula was only 7 years old, his mother decided to move to São Paulo with her children to rejoin her husband. |
Scott Young (writer) | After his father went broke in 1926, the family moved to Winnipeg, but were unable to afford to stay there. |
Tamara Karsavina | It was unheard of at that time for women to begin dancing professionally before the age of eighteen, but her father had lost his teaching position at the school in 1896, leaving her family in dire straits financially. |
Henri Fauconnier | In 1901, Fauconnier's father died following a long illness, and Fauconnier left Bordeaux for England, where he taught French music for two years in the small college of Wells House. |
Padraic Fiacc | In 1952, upon the death of his mother, Fiacc returned to New York to look after his alcoholic father and younger siblings. |
Plantagenet Somerset Fry | In 1952 he inherited some money from his grandmother, left his job and married, against his parents' wishes, Audrey Russell whom he had known at medical school. |
George Burton Drake | Raised as an only child (his older brother William had died in 1872), George was relied upon heavily by his mother to help his father, who had been severely wounded by a Confederate sniper during the Civil War and left without the use of his right arm. |
Ye Fei | In 1919 Ye Fei, then four years old, and his older brother Ye Qicun (叶启存), were brought by their father to his Chinese hometown for schooling. |
Michael Meeropol | She placed them in a children's shelter, the Hebrew Children's Home, in the Bronx during the trial (until June 1951). |
Emily Bront? | After the death of their mother in September 1821 from cancer, when Emily was three years old, the older sisters Maria, Elizabeth and Charlotte were sent to the Clergy Daughters' School at Cowan Bridge, where they encountered abuse and privations later described by Charlotte in Jane Eyre. |
Otelia B. Mahone | Later in 1855, they escaped the yellow fever epidemic which decimated a third of the population of the Norfolk - Portsmouth area by staying with his mother in Jerusalem (later renamed Courtland) in Southampton County. |
John Ricus Couperus | When Couperus was three years old he and his brothers Henry (5 years old) and Piet (4 years old) were send to the Netherlands, accompanied by friends of their parents (October 20, 1819). |
Otto Felix Kanitz | After his parents divorced in 1902, the three sons stayed with the father whilst the daughter was adjudged to the mother. |
Peter Parker (British businessman) | The family were evacuated from China in 1937, and while his father went to work in Africa, his mother and the rest of the family settled in Bedford, England, where he attended Bedford School. |
Stand Watie | He arranged for his brother Elias' children to be sent for their safety and education to their mother's family in Connecticut ; their mother Harriet had died in 1836 before the migration. |
Bobby Royle | His mother, along with her four children, moved to Australia in 1880. |
St. George Littledale | His father died, he attended Rugby School briefly, his mother remarried, and in 1866 he was enrolled at Shrewsbury School. |
Byron Kilbourn | In 1803, he moved with his family to Worthington, Ohio, which his father had helped found that year. |
James Mitchell (actor) | In 1923, Mitchell's mother, Edith, left his father and returned to England with Mitchell's brother and sister ; she and Mitchell had no further contact. |
Jack Unterweger | In 1953, his mother was again arrested and he was sent to Carinthia in southern Austria to live with his grandfather, whom he described as a violent alcoholic. |
Medard Mulangala | He did, however, return each summer to his family in DRC to the various provinces where his father was assigned, and later, to Kinshasa after his family's relocation there in 1970. |
Brandon Teena | As young children, Teena and Tammy were sexually abused by their uncle for several years, and Teena and his mother JoAnn sought counseling for this in 1991. |
Ayuo | In 1975, Ayuo's mother and step-father separated, while Ayuo was visiting his father in Japan, forcing him to live there. |
Rudy Kennedy | Rudy's whole family, which consisted of his father (Ewalt), mother and a younger sister (Kaitie), were moved to the ghetto in Breslau in 1939. |
Alan Bond (businessman) | In 1950, when he was 12, he emigrated to Australia with his parents and his sister Geraldine, 18 months his senior. |
Dominguinhos | Dominguinhos went in 1954, at age thirteen, together with his father and his two brothers, moving to the town of Nilópolis, near Rio de Janeiro. |
John Robert Morrison | They returned to Macau on 23 August 1820, but less than two years later his mother died and he was sent back to England to receive an education. |
Silvana Armenuli? | Silvana moved to Sarajevo at the age of sixteen in 1955, where she lived with her aunt and sang in local kafanas for money. |
Sherwood Anderson | Anderson had signed up with the Ohio National Guard for a five-year term in March 1895, was going steady with an attractive girl (Bertha Baynes, possibly the inspiration for Helen White in Winesburg, Ohio), and working a secure job at the bicycle factory, but it was his mother's death that precipitated the young man's leaving Clyde. |
William Mahone | In 1840, when William was 14 years old, the family moved to Jerusalem, where Fielding Mahone purchased and operated a tavern known as Mahone's Tavern. |
Joseph F. Smith | Even with the support of his older half-brother John Smith, Joseph assumed primary responsibility for his young sister, Martha Ann, and subsequently left school in 1854. |
Gordon Ramsay | Ramsay's father Gordon (died 1997) was, at various times, a swimming pool manager, a welder, and a shopkeeper ; his mother, Helen Cosgrove, and Yvonne Ramsay has described his early life as'' hopelessly itinerant'', as his family moved constantly due to the aspirations and failures of his father, who was violent. |
Ray Charles | Ray Charles left school after his mother died in 1946, when he was 15 years old. |
Courtney Love | Love was born to psychotherapist Linda Carroll, and writer and ex - Grateful Dead manager Hank Harrison ; she was mainly brought up in Oregon by her mother after her parents divorced in 1969. |
Emmett Till | Emmett's mother largely raised him with her mother ; she and Louis Till separated in 1942 after she found out he had been unfaithful, and later choked her to unconsciousness, to which she responded by throwing scalding water at him. |
Mikhail Gorbachev | He recalled in a memoir that'' In that terrible year -LSB- in 1933 -RSB- nearly half the population of my native village, Privolnoye, starved to death, including two sisters and one brother of my father.'' |
Lupe Pintor | Lupe Pintor was born into a poor, working-class family in Cuajimalpa, just outside of Mexico City in 1955 and is alleged to have had an extremely violent relationship with his father, eventually forcing him to run away. |
William Nelson Page | Although his father died in 1861, and notwithstanding the financial hardships which were widespread in the South brought on by the Civil War which began that year, from a family base in Rockbridge and Augusta counties, where his mother and siblings relocated, young William Nelson Page was educated at the University of Virginia as a civil engineer. |
Eug?ne Ionesco | He returned to Romania with his father and mother in 1925 after his parents divorced. |
Alexander Scourby | In February 1932, as he was beginning his second semester, his father died, and he left the university to help run the family's pie bakery in Brooklyn. |
Cam Kirby | In 1917 when Cameron Kirby was eight years old his mother died and he was sent by his father to live with relatives. |
Peter Campus | Campus was born in 1937 and brought up in New York, but his mother died when he was aged seven, an event that coloured Campus' youth and family life. |
Ezra Meeker | In 1839, the family moved from Ohio to Indiana, close to Indianapolis -- Ezra and his older brother Oliver walked behind the family wagon for. |
William Mahone | The Mahone family escaped the yellow fever epidemic that broke out in the summer of 1855 and killed almost a third of the populations of Norfolk and Portsmouth by staying with his mother some distance away in Jerusalem. |
Dan Leno | In 1866, the family home in Marylebone was demolished to make way for St Pancras railway station and, as a result, Leno's sister Frances was sent to live with an uncle, while his brother John, who performed occasionally with his parents, took full-time employment. |
Alfred Jensen | Upon his mother's death in 1910, the 7 year old was sent to Horsholm, Denmark to live with his uncle. |
Claude Matthews | His father remarried in 1858 and he returned to live with them near Danville, Kentucky. |
Fyodor Sologub | His father died of tuberculosis in 1867, and his illiterate mother was forced to become a servant in the home of the aristocratic Agapov family, where Sologub and his younger sister Olga grew up. |
Nico | In 1946, Nico and her mother relocated to downtown Berlin, where Nico worked as a seamstress. |
Arthur E. Kennelly | Afterwards, in 1863, his father retired from the navy and later Arthur and his father returned to England. |
Stanley Milgram | Milgram's father worked as a baker to provide a modest income for his family until his death in 1953 (upon which Stanley's mother took over the bakery). |
Femi Temowo | Ten years later, in 1986, Temowo's father returned to take his son to England, where they lived in Streatham, South London, with his siblings and step-mother. |
Edward Quinan | Although his mother later remarried, he was brought up and educated in Dublin by his grandparents and aunts until he went to Sandhurst in 1903. |
Lewis Hamilton | Hamilton was born on 7 January 1985 in Stevenage, Hertfordshire, England, Hamilton's mother, Carmen Larbalestier, is white British, while his father, Anthony Hamilton, is black British, making him mixed-race, Lewis Hamilton's parents separated when he was two, as a result of this he lived with his mother and half-sisters Nicola and Samantha until he was twelve, when he started living with his father, stepmother Linda and half-brother Nicolas (who has cerebral palsy). |
Lee Hays | He traveled alone to enroll at Hendrix-Henderson College (now Henderson State University) in Arkansas, the Methodist school that his father and siblings had attended, but the expense of their mother's institutionalization and the effects of the Wall Street Crash of 1929 meant that college tuition money was not available for Lee. |
Fernando Altamirano | By the end of 1861, at age thirteen, he had already lost his father and mother, so his education was mostly influenced by his grandfather, Manuel Altamirano, a physician and botanist, who introduced him in the botanic studies. |
Robert Bond | Bond grew up in St. John's until 1872 when his father died and left the family a good deal of money. |
Gregory Kingsley | Eventually, Gregory was reunited with his mother and two siblings ; however, his mother's drug use prevented her from parenting, and so she voluntarily put her two oldest sons into foster care in 1990. |
Nikolai Timkov | Parents died in 1924, when Nikolai was twelve years old. |
Kareena Kapoor Khan | She was then raised by her mother, who worked several jobs to support her daughters until Karisma debuted as an actress in 1991. |
Mario Capecchi | In 1946 his uncle, Edward Ramberg, an American physicist at RCA, sent his mother money to return to the United States. |
Barbara Amiel | Her mother subsequently remarried and in November, 1952, the couple emigrated with Barbara, her sister and half-brother, to Hamilton, Ontario. |
Robert F. Kennedy | In March 1938, when he was 12, Bobby sailed with his mother and his four youngest siblings to England, where his father had begun serving as ambassador. |
Gerhard Jahn | Together with four younger siblings, he stayed with his mother after his parents divorced in 1942. |
Jan Balet | 1916 after the divorce of his parents he and his mother moved to live with his mother's parents Langenargen at Lake Constance in Germany. |
Anton Boisen | When his father died in 1884, his family moved into Theophilus Wylie's home. |
Salvador Lazo Lazo | Following his mother's death during childbirth in 1926, his aunt helped raise the family. |
Jafar Jabbarly | After his father's death in 1902, Jabbarly's mother moved to Baku with her four children. |
Hubertine Auclert | Estranged from her mother, she lived with her uncle for a time but had to return to the convent a few years later, She left the convent for good in 1869 and moved to Paris. |
Peta Doodson | Doodson was born in Melbourne, Australia in 1955, her mother was a Nurse and her father was an Air Traffic Controller. |
Abdulkareem Khadr | Their father was wounded in 1992, and Abdulkareem traveled with his parents to Canada for his father's care. |
Mary J. Blige | Blige was taught to sing by her father, who later abandoned Blige and sister LaTonya following his divorce from Cora Blige in 1980. |
Joe Togher | His father died when he was very young, so in 1910 his mother moved the family into Francis Street in Galway where she opened a small hotel (see photograph) to support them. |
Khaled Hosseini | In 1976, when Hosseini was 11 years old, his father secured a job in Paris, France, and moved the family there. |
Nicole Kidman | In 1984, her mother was diagnosed with breast cancer, which caused Kidman to temporarily halt her education and help provide for the family by working as a massage therapist at age seventeen. |
Edythe Baker | After her mother died around 1910 she was sent to Kansas City, Missouri to live, and attended a convent. |
Tite Curet Alonso | He was two years old in 1928, when his parents divorced and together with his mother and sister moved to Barrio Obrero, located in the Santurce section of San Juan with his grandmother. |
Pauline Frederick | Her parents separated when she was toddler and Fredrick was raised primarily by her mother to whom she remained close for the remainder of her life (her parents divorced around 1897). |
Anton Dreher | When Franz Anton Dreher (the younger) died of marasmus in 1820, his ten year old son was too young to manage the brewing business. |
James E. West (Scouting) | West's father died around the time of his birth in Washington, D. C. His mother was hospitalized with tuberculosis in 1882 and young Jimmie was placed in the Washington City Orphan Home ; his mother died later that year. |
Eberhard von Gemmingen | His mother had been educated by jesuits, while his father later died in the Second World War in 1945 on the Eastern front. |
Walter Lewin | Many of Lewin's relatives were captured and sent to the gas chambers ; his grandfather Gustav Lewin and his grandmother Emma Lewin were gassed in Auschwitz in 1942. |
Mark Lemon | His father having died in 1817, Lemon was just 15 when he was sent to live in Boston, Lincolnshire with his mother's brother Thomas Collis. |
Joseph Pulitzer | In 1853, Fülöp Pulitzer was rich enough to retire and move his family to Budapest, where he had the children educated by private tutors, and taught French and German. |