Extractions: A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E http://www.ainfos.ca/ 1760 - Henri Saint Simon, French utopian theorist, lives. Excellent work on Utopias, see Marie Louise Berneri's Journey through Utopia. Boston: Beacon Press. http://www.anu.edu.au/polsci/marx/contemp/pamsetc/socfrombel/sfb_2.htm http://members.aol.com/wellslake/bullet13.htm#duval http://www.s-hill.demon.co.uk/index.htm 1888 - France: French anarchist Maurice Halle lives. 1889 - Chernyshevsky, Russian radical critic, dies. He helped lay the basis for revolutionary populism. Wrote What is to be Done?, a political novel that influenced two generations of Russian intelligentsia. http://earth.ColState.edu/~apate/carolyn/
KGS Online Catalog Family Genealogy veach, Veach Family Record, Veach, Damon A, Editor Bachmyer, Chris, Louise, IA (maternal grpar raised Harry) http://www.dodgecity.net/kgs/catalog/kgsfamvz.html
Extractions: USA States/Cities: A C D F-G ... W KS Counties: A B C D ... Misc. Surnames: A-D E-H I-M N-R ... V-Z Other: Bible Intl Subject Research Aid ... Click here for more information on submitting Queries. CATEGORY TITLE AUTHOR PUBLISHER NOTES PAGES OTHER Family Genealogy - vale / walker / littler Vale, George Walker 1973 517 p index Family Genealogy - van alstyne / van alstine Van Alstyne - Van Alstine Family History Van Alstine, Lester1974 398 p index Family Genealogy - vandervort / schreiner Chart for Marjorie E (Vandervort) Schreiner Family Genealogy - van deusen Genealogy of Rev W H Van Deusen Rockford (OH) Press 1969 83 p index Family Genealogy - van deusen Benson, Charles B 182 p index Family Genealogy - van middlesworth Petrenelle VanMiddlesworth, 1726, NJ 11 p charts Family Genealogy - van natta History of the Van Natta Family Van Natta, Gwendolyn Ann, compiler 62 p index Family Genealogy - van treese - newsletter Van Treese Family Newsletter v 4:2 (1976); v 10:1 (1982) Family Genealogy - van voorhees Van Voorhees Assoc 1953 122 p Family Genealogy - van voorhees Through a Dutch Door 17th Century Origins of the Van Voorhees Family Van Voorhees Assoc Wilmington, DE 1992
African American Composers - Compiled By Gerri Gribi Floyd, Samuel A. Editor. International Dictionary of Black Composers. The project is the brainchild of Dr. Louise Toppin, and represents music from two http://creativefolk.com/blackhistory/blackcomposers.html
Extractions: Johnson Subvention Award, Society for American Music African American Studies Toolkit (Grades K-12) Contents/Home Reference Online Reference Offline FAQ ... Site Map of All CreativeFolk.com Resources (Women's Studies, Folk Music and More!) African American Composers I have grouped CDs by publisher, so you can explore their catalogs. Wherever possible, I link to Amazon.com
The Little Book Of Modern Verse - Endnotes He entered journalism and became for a short time managing Editor of The Churchman , Louise Imogen Guiney His foot was wing \ed as the mounting sun. http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/lit/poetry/TheLittleBookofModernVer
Extractions: by Jessie B. Rittenhouse Terms Contents Foreword Part I ... Endnotes Endnotes Biographical Endnotes he format of these notes has been slightly altered. Most notably, dates (hopefully correct, but not very certain for the lesser known poets) have been added when available in square brackets after each name, and the number of poems by that author in this anthology is in parentheses. These notes (first included in 1917, whereas the selections were made in 1913) combined with the searchability of electronic texts, renders the original Indexes of Authors and of First Lines obsolete, and so both have been dropped. Occasionally, further information follows in angled brackets. A. L., 1998.] Barker, Elsa. [1869-1954] Born at Leicester, Vermont. Received her early education in that State. After a short period of teaching, she became a newspaper writer and contributed to various periodicals and syndicates. Her journalistic period closed with editorial work upon "Hampton's Magazine" in 1909 and 1910. Since that date she has published several books in different fields of literature: "The Son of Mary Bethel", a novel, putting the character of Christ in modern setting; "Stories from the New Testament, for Children"; "Letters of a Living Dead Man", psychic communications which have attracted much attention; and in poetry, "The Frozen Grail, and Other Poems", 1910; "The Book of Love", 1912; and "Songs of a Vagrom Angel", 1916. Mrs. Barker's poem, "The Frozen Grail", addressed to Peary, the explorer, did much, as he has testified, to inspire him, and was upon his person when he finally achieved the North Pole.
Small Manuscript Collection Donated by Mrs. Louise Wall (RD) Pyron, Bryson City, NC. November 28, 1866.Conveys to Sarah E. Smith one acre + of land in city of Athens for $2025. http://library.gcsu.edu/~sc/collections/small/smallmz11.htm
Extractions: McGee from Griffith's District, Jones County. Land grant to Robert McGee; April 14, 1837; 490 acres of land, Lot 131 in 7th dist., in Irwin County; signed by William Schley. Descriptive plat signed by John G. Park, T. Haynes, Masefield Holmes, J. Brewton(?), Mark Smith, Pendant seal. Mutilated. Surveyed Dec. 3, 1819 by N. Dobson, Surveyor. William Schley, Gov., J. Brewster, Surv. Gen., T. Haynes, Trs., John G. Park, Comp. Gen., B. H. Robinson SED, Masefield Holmes, Mark Smith, C.C.
Manuscript Guide "T-V", Special Collections, Virginia Tech Materials include Wall panels, structural gridwork, Wall base channels, columns, Virginia poet, Editor and lecturer. Correspondence, clippings, poems http://spec.lib.vt.edu/specgen/msguide/mgtuv.htm
Extractions: Reading Room will be opening on October 4, 2005. Browse the Guide: A B C D-F ... W-Z Search Manuscript Guides The Internet for TALBOT, RICHARD B. (1933-1994). PAPERS, 1967-94. 1.4 cu. ft. Educated at Kansas State University (B.S., 1954; D.V.M., 1958), Baylor University (NIH postdoctoral), and Iowa State University (Ph.D., 1963). Professor Biomedical Sciences and Veterinary Medical Informatics at Virginia Tech and founding dean of the Virginia Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech. Director of the Office of New Animal Drug Evaluation at the U. S. Food and Drug Administration. Editor-in-chief of the Journal of Veterinary Medical Education and editor of Veterinary Pharmaceuticals and Biologicals . Pioneering work with computers in the field of veterinary medicine. Collections consists primarily of speeches, speech resource and research materials, administrative notes, departmental program planning and budgeting materials. Inventory available online.
Women Of Achievement B. 0226-1859, Louise de Koven Bowen - US philanthropist and prominent B.02-26-1919, Casey Geddes Miller - US writer and Editor who was among the first http://www.undelete.org/woa/woa02-26.html
Extractions: istuber@undelete.org 02-26 TABLE of CONTENTS: Go Directly to DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and EVENTS Women in the Air Force KHUVTYT, THE MUSICIAN (C. 1950 B. C.) Women Gag and Cough While the Men Laughed ... QUOTES by Carol Hymowitze and Michaele Weissman, and Voltaraine de Cleyre. Women in the Air Force In 1944, Liberty Field, Camp Stewart, the Women of the Air Service Pilots (WASPS) who flew military aircraft during World War II, were ordered out on ground maneuvers with the regular male Army troops. Although the women were not military (without military benefits such as insurance, housing, free meals, health care, or uniforms, etc.), they were often ordered by misogynistic C.O.'s to perform as if they were military personnel. Out in the field without military equipment (the women often didn't even get shoe rations!) the men were busily showing the women up when the officers rang an alarm. The WASPs had no idea what the alarm meant until GI's whipped out gas masks and put them on. Not the WASPs. They had no gas masks! As the acrid smoke drifts over everyone, the women gag and cough while the men laughed and the officers smirked.
Sevilleta LTER : Publications : By Author Pages 19571959 in na Editor(s). Proceedings of the IEEE 2000 InternationalGeoscience and Johnson, Nancy C., Diane L. Rowland, Lea Corkidi, Louise M. http://sevilleta.unm.edu/publications/byauthor/
Extractions: document.write(""); document.write(""); document.write(""); document.write(""); document.write(""); document.write(""); document.write(""); document.write(""); document.write(""); document.write(""); Sevilleta LTER Publications : By Author This page was last modified on Thursday, 12-Feb-2004 18:35:55 MST
Nordamerikanische Wochen-Post English History In 1866, domestic bliss was in short supply at East Jefferson Avenue. When theBerlin Wall fell in November of 1989 the WochenPost published a special http://www.wochenpostusa.com/History_English.htm
Extractions: 19 July, 2005 151st YEAR - THE AMERICAN NEWSPAPER WRITTEN IN THE GERMAN LANGUAGE Stand vom Montag 1 US $ = 0,828 Euro 1 Euro = 1,208 US $ Home/Start Newsstands Sections Ads/Anzeigen Archives/Archiv Deutsche Churches/Kirchen Clubs/Vereine Radiostationen Fußball 1. Bundesliga 2. Bundesliga Reginalliga Nord Regionalliga Süd ... Fußball Services Internship/Praktikum Subscribe Wochen-Post Store Purchase 150th Anniversary Issue The Wochen-Post History The Wochen Post - A Look Back at the Development and the Never Die Past of the Nordamerikanische Wochen Post by: Marie Therese Leopold Many small stories make for quite an impressive history. It is nearly a 150 year long history, on which the Nordamerikanische Wochen Post can look back. It had an innocuous beginning. August Marxhausen, born in Kassel, on April 2 nd , 1822, followed his brother Conrad to the New World. They started their mischief at the New Yorker Handelszeitung a trade newspaper. When, one day, he spotted an ad, in which a handy, German newspaper man was wanted, to start a German speaking newspaper, in Detroit, the trained typesetter packed his belongings and together with Dr. Peter Klein he conjured the Michigan Demokrat from nothing. But soon the brothers Marxhausen squabbled with their boss, and things turned crazy, when the subject of slavery had to be dealt with.
Extractions: and College Archives Mary Ann Wodrow Archbald (1762-1841), Scottish immigrant who lived on a pioneer farm in western New York from 1807 until her death in 1841. Journals and commonplace books (circa 1785-1840). Helen Tufts Bailie (1874-1962), Massachusetts editor and author, best-known for her opposition to blacklisting by the Daughters of the American Revolution in the 1920s. Journals (1886-1959).
Old Avoyelles Newspapers In Archives Lafargue, Editor and Proprietor THE NEW ENTERPRISE Vol. MARKSVILLE VILLAGERJune 5, 1866 A. Lafargue appointed Parish Printer by Police Jury JO Domas http://www.avoyelles.com/AvoyellesArchives/NewspaperArchives.html
Listings: September 18, 2000 - September 24, 2000 (Almanac) It s the birthday of the British writer, HG Wells, born in Kent, 1866. It s the birthday of sculptor Louise Nevelson, born Louise Berliawsky, http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/docs/00_09_18.htm
Extractions: Broadcast date: MONDAY, 18 September 2000 Poem: "The Old Story," by Louis MacNeice, from Collected Poems It's the birthday of essayist Noel Perrin , born in New York City (1927). He's best known for his essays on rural life and small-time country farming: First Person Rural: Essays of a Sometime Farmer Second Person Rural: More Essays of a Sometime Farmer (1980), and Last Person Rural It's the birthday of choreographer Agnes de Mille , born in New York City (1905). She choreographed the ballet Rodeo (1942; music by Aaron Copland), and the Broadway hit Oklahoma! It's the birthday of actress Greta Garbo , born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson, in Stockholm, Sweden (1905). Her family was poor, and at 13 she dropped out of school to care for her ailing father. She took him every week to a charity clinic where they waited hours to see the doctor; she vowed that when she was an adult she would not live in such poverty. Once she became a Hollywood star, she managed her fortune carefully and behaved unlike other starsshe granted no interviews, signed no autographs, attended no premieres, and answered no fan mail. Her films include Flesh and the Devil Anna Christie Grand Hotel Anna Karenina (1935), and
Biiographical Sketches From Men Of 1914 - Converse - Cooke He married in Chicopee Falls, Mass., 1866, Jennie P. Hayden, and they have Lecturer on educational subjects since 1870; Editor and publisher Illinois http://geneasearch.com/1914/biographies089.htm
Extractions: Page 89 Converse, Harry Elisha, Converse, John Williams, Conwell, Russell Herrman, Cook, John Williston , Normal school president; born, Oneida County, New York, April 20, 1844: son Harry DeWitt and Joanna (Hall) Cook; graduated Illinois State Normal University, 1865 (A.M., Knox, 1891; LL.D., Blackburn, 1896; U. of Illinois, 1904) ; married Lydia Farnham Spofford, of North Andover, Mass., Aug. 26, 1867. Principal public schools, Brimfield, Illinois, 1865-6; teacher Illinois State Normal U., 1866-90; president same, 1890-99; president Northern Illinois State Normal School, DeKalb, since July 1, 1899. Lecturer on educational subjects since 1870; editor and publisher Illinois Schoolmaster, 1874-76 (with E. C. Hewett); same of Illinois School Journal, 1883-86 (with R. R. Reeder). President Illinois State Teachers' Association, 1880, of Normal Department N.E.A., 1896, of N.E.A., 1904. Author: Normal series of arithmetics (with Miss N. Cropsey), 1892; History of Education in Illinois, 1912. Contributor to educational periodicals. Address: DeKalb, Ill. Cook, William Wilson
Cheshire Magazine I was most interested in reading the story from Louise Gregory. 1861 Bunbury;Llewellyn born1863 Burwardsley; William Solomon born 1866 Bunbury and http://www.cheshiremagazine.com/issue40/notesqueries.html
Extractions: Your comments about the Cheshire Magazine website are most welcome. This page is also a useful reference point for anyone seeking information about the heritage, history and culture of Cheshire. If you have a query, or you are trying to contact others with a similar interest, then send details to The Editor. The service is free, and between ourselves and our readers we feel sure that we can help. We are always pleased to hear from those searching for their roots in Cheshire, or indeed from anyone with a general query about the old county, or suggestions about the site. Searching for a friend or relative with whom you have lost contact, someone who lived in Cheshire? Then why not email us the details. Our feature entitled Your Organisation is designed to help bona fide groups and organisations in Cheshire raise awareness about their activities. It is absolutely free and the door is literally open to anyone provided the organisation concerned is connected with local/family history, heritage, the countryside etc. Contact The Editor.
Emma Goldman's Published Essays And Pamphlets: Voltairine De Cleyre 17, 1866, in the town of Leslie, Michigan. Her ancestry on her father s side Her reserve and isolation, her inability to break through the Wall raised http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Goldman/Writings/Essays/voltairine.html
Extractions: The next time I saw Voltairine was at Blackwell's Island Penitentiary. She had come to New York to deliver her masterly address, IN DEFENSE OF EMMA GOLDMAN AND FREE SPEECH, and she visited me in prison. From that time until her end our lives and work were frequently thrown together, often meeting harmoniously and sometimes drifting apart, but always with Voltairine standing out in my eyes as a forceful personality, a brilliant mind, a fervent idealist, an unflinching fighter, a devoted and loyal comrade. But her strongest characteristic was her extraordinary capacity to conquer physical disabilitya trait which won for her the respect even of her enemies and the love and admiration of her friends. A key to this power in so frail a body is to be found in Voltairine's illuminating essay, THE DOMINANT IDEA. "In everything that lives," she writes there, "if one looks searchingly, is limned to the shadow-line of an ideaan idea, dead or living, sometimes stronger when dead, with rigid, unswerving lines that mark the living embodiment with stern, immobile, cast of the non-living. Daily we move among these unyielding shadows, less pierceable, more enduring than granite, with the blackness of ages in them, dominating living, changing bodies, with dead, unchanging souls. And we meet also, living souls dominating dying bodiesliving ideas regnant over decay and death. Do not imagine that I speak of human life alone. The stamp of persistent or of shifting Will is visible in the grass-blade rooted in its clod of earth, as in the gossamer web of being that floats and swims far over our heads in the free world of air."
Beacon Press. Books, 1866- , BMS 1037 Books, 1866, bMS 1037, Andover-Harvard Library, Harvard Divinity School DeSalvo, Louise, Kathleen Walsh D Arcy and Katherine Hogan, eds. http://www.hds.harvard.edu/library/bms/bms01037.html
Extractions: The Beacon Press, a department of the Unitarian Universalist Association, traces its beginnings to 1854 when the American Unitarian Association raised $50,000 for a Book Fund Project. The AUA "issued an urgent call for liberal works that would meet the spiritual needs of the age." Until 1950, the strength of the Press was in history, biography, and a locus in religious thought and religious freedom. Melvin Arnold became the director of the Press in the late 1940s, and he transformed it into a widely recognized voice for liberal religious values. Since the late 1980s, the Beacon Press has taken on an increasingly independent institutional role as a publisher of works of fiction and non-fiction with contemporary or historical religious, social, and philosophical perspectives.
Nebraska History & Record Of Pioneer Days, Vol I, 7 Jean Marie Bize and Louise Bise, above; Laurent Bernard, below all of Julian,Nebraska. Mr. Cherry came to Nebraska in 1866 and Mrs. Cherry in 1854. http://www.rootsweb.com/~neresour/OLLibrary/Journals/HPR/Vol01/nhrv01p8.html
Extractions: Addition E. Sheldon, secretary of the Historical Society, is now in France, his mission being to study on the western front the part Nebraska is taking in the war. Mr. Sheldon went as a press representative, which gives him the opportunity to get near the front lines. He sailed from New York on October 4, landing at Liverpool October 18 and reaching France October 22. A number of journalists were on board the boat going to England, and an organization was there formed and a paper issued to which Mr. Sheldon was one of the contributors. It was his intention when he left Lincoln to return before the legislature convenes in January.
Extractions: Sketched by Thomas A. Ayres, June 20, 1855 dea he landscape artist, Thomas A. Ayres, was one of five men who trailed into Yosemite Valley in 1855 with the pioneer, James Mason Hutchings, who engaged the artist to make drawings for his proposed magazine, the California Monthly. El Capitan. Yosemite Domes. Cascades of the Rainbow. The High Falls, now called Yosemite Falls. The High Falls was the first Yosemite picture to be published. Copies of the lithograph taken from the original are much sought by collectors of Californiana and command high prices. In 1856 Thomas Ayres took a second trip into Yosemite, this time on his own account, and made drawings in and about the Valley. (See photographic copies in California State Library, Sacramento.) Some of these were secured by Admiral James Alden, of Boston, Coast survey appointee in 1853, who came to California to settle the boundary line between the United States and Mexico. Before his return to Boston in 1860, he visited Yosemite Valley and procured the five original drawings made by Ayres in 1855, and two other drawings made in 1856; namely:
D.C. Lund - Artists Profile Canadian Cowboy Country Magazine On the Wall behind the front desk is a reproduction of the Arrowsmith map of 1832 Sheldon, who lived from 1866 to 1928, was an American painter and http://www.canadiancowboy.ca/artistprofile/
Extractions: Ash Cooper By Terri Mason At first glance, the watercolours of southern Alberta artist D. C. Lund appear tranquil. Perhaps the soft hues washing a prairie scene lulls the viewer into complacency, believing they see the whole picture in one glance. Then their eyes catch movement or a surprising detail leaps to the forefront, bringing an "Aha!" to the mind's eye of prairie people who have lived in his landscapes all their lives. It's the detail, in a deliberately un-detailed painting, that draws the viewer in, bringing his art to life and to collectors around the globe. Lund's rough and tumble life of international all around cowboy and steer wrestling championships - mixed with a career in big animal veterinary practice is not the usual springboard to artistic endeavours, but then again, neither was his introduction to art itself. D.C. laughs when he recounts his beginning as an artist. "David Bly, the editor of the local paper, The Taber Times, had heard I'd written some stories about the old days, so he came out and read several of them and said, 'We'd like to publish these, but you'll have to illustrate them.' I had never drawn a stick man in my life, so I said, 'I can't do that.' David said, 'Well, you'll have to,' and with that he was gone. I ended up doing some sketches to illustrate these stories, and that's what got me involved in art."
Untitled Document Drew, Daniel Daniel Drew, the Wall Street financier whose gift made possible the In 1866, Drew pledged $500000 to found the Drew Theological Seminary. http://www.depts.drew.edu/lib/drew_archives_bios.html