Holte, in a series of text messages with Clout, claimed the suspension was due to his support for Trump. Twitter then suspended the The Purdy account, which is owned by William Holte, a nephew to famed Philly singer Patti LaBelle. “Dean accidentally posted somehow and that’s the end of the story," Purdy said in the video.
The owner of that account, under the name Dan Purdy, posted a video, insisting that he was a real person and that Browning’s tweet was a message Purdy had sent to Browning. There were suspicions that Browning’s tweet sounded similar to the thoughts of another Twitter account, whose owner identified himself as a gay Black man and Trump fan. Several people suggested Browning accidentally posted the message from his real Twitter account, thinking he was logged on to a “burner” account - a fake persona tactic some people use to pretend to be others. I feel respected - which I never do when democrats are involved.” Everything is so much better under Trump though. “I’m a black gay guy and I can personally say that Obama did nothing for me, my life only changed a little bit and it was for the worse. So it came as something of a surprise when he tweeted this message Tuesday morning: This text is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article it is used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.The Republican former Lehigh County commissioner, who lost a congressional primary this year, bills himself on Twitter as “a proud pro-life & pro-2A Christian conservative dedicated to enacting common sense solutions to Keep America Great.” He never remarried and was proud of his achievement in rearing four sons single handed. His sympathies lay with the workers and he had little time for the 'Establishment'. He had opinions on politicians, the Irish, deserted wives, the clergy, education, child rearing and many other subjects. William wrote many poems during his time in the Colonies. His eldest son, John Wesley, appears to have settled there. His last few years were spent in the Armidale area of NSW where he still indulged in some prospecting and plenty of political comment. There is evidence to suggest that William spent some time in Gippsland, perhaps as a contractor for the railways. It would appear that the family stayed around the Ballarat area for some years. During this time William made a trip back to Hobart to collect Silas. They worked claims at Golden Point and other fields for some years and were present at the meeting at Bakery Hill when the diggers burnt their licenses in defiance of the authorities, an act which preceded the Eureka Rebellion. Most of the debate was conducted in the form of poetry.īy the end of 1851 William was lured by the stories of the Gold Rush and on 2 December 1851 he set off in the company of his boys and three other men he set off for Ballarat where they arrived nine days later. He worked there for another five months during which time he took part in a spirited political debate in the Portland Guardian. For five months he scrounged work in Melbourne and then set sail for Portland in "Red Rover". William left Hobart early in 1851, taking with him his three oldest boys and leaving the youngest, Silas, with his late wife's parents in Hobart.
Eleven months after the last birth, on 13 August 1848, Mary died having never really recovered from the birth. Mary gave birth to 5 sons, the last one being stillborn. He was married to Maria, daughter of Elizabeth Cole, a First Fleeter, and James Tucker, a Second Fleeter, and hangman on Norfolk Island. Mary Ann Elizabeth Mansfield was a daughter of William Mansfield, a convict who came out on the convict ship "Calcutta" which provided the settlers and convicts to establish the settlement at Sorrento, Victoria in 1803 and then Hobart in 1804. So William settled for a local girl and on he married Mary Ann Elizabeth Mansfield at St John's Newtown, Tasmania. He had tried to convince his girlfriend in England to come to Australia and marry him but her father would not allow it. For the next eighteen months he stayed with the ship as it plied between Sydney and Hobart, eventually leaving the ship in Hobart on 26 January 1836. In 1834 he joined the crew of "Medway" as a carpenter and worked his way to Hobart where he arrived 21 July 1835. William Gay was born in Bratton, Devonshire on. All analyses The themes William Gay wrote about