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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Ellen Bryan Moore (April 13, 1912 February 20, 1999) was a pioneer of women in Louisiana politics, having served in the formerly elected office of "Register of State Lands" from 1952 1956 and 1960- 1976. She served during World War II as a captain in the Women's Army Corps. A Baton Rouge native, Moore was the granddaughter of Benjamin Franklin Bryan, a former Baton Rouge mayor, who served during the 1880s. Her father was the warden of the Louisiana State Penitentiary until he was dismissed in a dispute with then Governor Huey P. Long, Jr. Moore spent…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Ellen Bryan Moore (April 13, 1912 February 20, 1999) was a pioneer of women in Louisiana politics, having served in the formerly elected office of "Register of State Lands" from 1952 1956 and 1960- 1976. She served during World War II as a captain in the Women's Army Corps. A Baton Rouge native, Moore was the granddaughter of Benjamin Franklin Bryan, a former Baton Rouge mayor, who served during the 1880s. Her father was the warden of the Louisiana State Penitentiary until he was dismissed in a dispute with then Governor Huey P. Long, Jr. Moore spent her early years growing up at the manager's residence when the penitentiary was in Baton Rouge, instead of the present site at rural Angola in West Feliciana Parish near St. Francisville. She was frequently in contact with prisoners, who grew the food required to operate the penitentiary.