An alternate story is told by Helen W. Atwater in her work titled Bread and the Principles of Bread Making.
Helen Mirren | Helen Keller | Helen | Helen of Troy | Helen Hayes | Helen Clark | Helen Reddy | Helen Frankenthaler | Helen Hunt | Helen Humes | Helen Razer | Helen Fielding | Helen Allingham | Helen Storrow | Helen Shaver | Helen Caldicott | Helen Sjöholm | Helen Sharman | Helen Nicol | Helen Morgan | Helen Merrill | Helen Hay Whitney | Helen Hanft | Helen Fein | Helen Dunmore | Helen Callaghan | Helen Baylor | Helen Thomas | Helen Reimensnyder Martin | Helen Lewis |
In the Boxer Rebellion, Jennie's husband, the Rev. Ernest R. Atwater (1865-1900), her four children, Ernestine (born 1889), Mary (b. 1892), Celia (b. circa 1894), and Bertha (b. 1896), and Ernest's second wife, Elizabeth Graham Atwater were all killed.
He was married to Jennie Pond Atwater (1865–96), who died while in the China mission with her husband.
She was a lecturer at the International Legal Center of the United States Agency for International Development, in Seoul, South Korea from 1969 to 1970, returning to private practice in Camden, Maine in 1970, and in Honolulu, Hawaii from 1971 to 1972, 1974 to 1977, and 1985 to 1994.
Atwater is the son of noted avalanche control pioneer and author Montgomery Atwater; the grandson of Maxwell Atwater, the first mining engineer to employ flotation hydrometallurgy in North America; and the grandson of Mary Meigs Atwater, the ‘Dean of American Hand Weaving’.
2006 James R. Akse, James E. Atwater, Roger Dahl, John W. Fisher, Frank C. Garmon, Neal M. Hadley, Richard R. Wheeler Jr, Thomas W. Williams: Development and Testing of a Microwave Powered Solid Waste Stabilization and Water Recovery System