ZIOCK EDWARD J. ZIOCK,SR. was born 12 June 1866 in St. Louis, Missouri. In Novemberof 1881 Heinrich married Louise Therese Hoehne of Kleinwelka. http://www.carrollscorner.net/Ziock.htm
Extractions: When we lived in Shrewsbury I walked several blocks to kindergarten every morning all by myself. When I was about five or six we moved to Chesterfield, St. Louis County. There I went to Chesterfield Elementarty school. I went to Crestview Junior High School at Glencoe. I was in the second graduating class to go through all four grades at the new Lafayette High School, Ellisville graduating in 1966. In June 1969 I married GENE CARROLL at Antioch Baptist Church. I lived behind the church cemetery and Gene lived just down the road from the church. After we were married Gene and I then moved into a house across the street from Chesterfield Elemetery school where we lived for five years. Then we lived in Franklin County, Missouri for seven years before moving to Washington County in 1981 where we still reside. Jobs I have held in my lifetime: First job was when I was still in high school - I worked for the Ellisville Theatre. Other jobs were at Pet Milk Company in St. Louis, Community Press Newspaper in Ellisville, Zayre Department Store in Ballwin, Central Hardware in Ballwin, Sears Department Store at Chesterfield Mall, Six Flags over Mid-America at Allenton, and teaching Continuing Education classes in genealogy at
Pottawatomie County, Part 5 John O Flanagan is the present Editor and proprietor. In January, 1878, HG Evans Was married July 28, 1866, at Dayton, Ohio, to Miss Clara B. Graham. http://www.kancoll.org/books/cutler/pottawatomie/pottawatomie-co-p5.html
Extractions: KANSAS COLLECTION BOOKS William G. Cutler's History of the State of Kansas The beautiful town of St. Mary's is on the Kansas River, in the township of the same name. This township is in the extreme southeast of the county, and comprises an area of thirty-five square miles. The present site of St. Mary's marks the earliest point settled by white men in the county. In 1848, the Jesuit fathers, chief among whom were Rev. Morris Sailland, Rev. J. B. Hoeken and Rev. Father Va Wright, established a mission at what is now the town of St. Mary's, for the purpose of educating the Indians, so as to bring them into a knowledge of Christianity. Outside this little band of devoted priests, James Graham was probably the first white man who settled in the county. His term of office as sheriff commenced in January, 1882. He came from St. Louis with these founders of the mission, June 17, 1848, landing from the steamer Excel, at what is now St. Mary's. Dr. Luther R. Palmer came in 1850, as a physican (sic) St. Mary's was laid out as a town by B. H. Bertrand, August 8, 1866. Another addition was made by Mr. Bertrand, Dr. Luther R. Palmer and Dr. H. C. Linn, September 20, 1869. Another addition was made January 31, 1870, by Dr. Palmer, Adelaide Bertrand and John D. Lasley. June 27, 1870, an addition was also made. The town is located on the northwest quarter of Section 10, Town 10, Range 12. The bulk of the business done in the town is on Bertrand street, which is south of the railroad. This is an active growing town, and is doing a good amount of business.
CONRAD AIKEN: UNITARIAN PRODIGY POET He was a contributing Editor to Dial, which led to a friendship with Ezra Pound . In 1866 the idea of a spiritual antislavery society occurred to William http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/aiken.html
Extractions: Pamela H. Simpson is Ernest Williams II Professor of Art History at Washington and Lee University and a 1996-97 Fellow of the National Humanities Center. This article derives from a talk she presented in the Center's fall public lecture series and from essays she has published in Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture, III (University of Missouri Press, 1989) and in Gender, Class, and Shelter: Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture V (University of Tennessee Press, 1995). rchitectural critic Ada Louise Huxtable once wrote that the popularity of what she called "substitute gimcrackery" in the latter half of the nineteenth century was "fueled by the . . . American desire to find ways of doing things that were 'cheap, quick, and easy.'" For a number of years, I have been studying various types of "substitute gimcrackery"imitative building and decorative materials that became all the rage at the turn of the twentieth century. Made possible by technological advances, these products could be readily distributed by an improved system of mass transportation, and their demand was sparked, at least to some extent, by the emergence of large-scale advertising. Among these many materials, four in particularconcrete block, pressed metal ceilings, linoleum, and an embossed wall covering called Lincrustaillustrate this intersection of new technology with popular culture. oncrete is by no means a twentieth-century innovation. A mixture of cement, sand, water, and stone aggregates, it has been around since classical times, and a number of patented procedures for casting it into "artificial stone" emerged in the nineteenth century. Not until 1900, however, was the widespread production of concrete block possible. In that year, Harmon S. Palmer obtained a United States patent for his durable and practical cast-iron machine, with removable core and adjustable sides, that spelled the beginning of the modern concrete block industry.
Full Editorial From Past Issue Courbets The Origin of the World (1866) is the most blunt, inyour-face expression Louise Bourgeois is another artist who is ingenious in the way she http://www.artnewsonline.com/pastarticle.cfm?art_id=1455
Extractions: Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part II Later Historians ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Hail The Broadway Queen! Along with the family dynamics and genderbending of Boy Louise, Gypsy, spectacle of 1866, is generally considered the first Broadway musical. http://mnl_1221.tripod.com/bwayqueen.html
Extractions: setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Star Wars Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next H a i l t h e B r o a d w a y Q u e e n G a y C o m m u n i t y a n d M u s i c a l T h e a t e r Introduction Why do gay men like musical theater? mnl_1221@yahoo.com Hail the Broadway Queen! Gay Community and Musical Theater Without Jews, fags, and gypsies, there is no theater. Mel Brooks, To Be or Not To Be (1983 film remake) The difference between a fag and a queer: a fag was a guy who wouldnt go downtown with you beating up queers. Probably that Irish street macho of the era. George Carlin, White Harlem Occupation: Foole (1973 LP) Musical theatre queens (noun, plural): gay men enlightened enough to realize that stage and screen musicals are the be all and end all, the ultimate cultural flowering of the human race. John B. Kenrick, Our Love is Here to Stay: Gays and Musicals Why do gay men love musical theater? Why does love of musical theater seem to indicate that a man wants to go to bed with another man? In the satiric film (1997), high school English teacher Howard Bracketts love for
Untitled Irene Anvira5 Ruggles, born March 12, 1866; died October 28, 1867. Louise Ruggles,born July 04, 1879 in Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia; http://www.webspawner.com/users/ruggles/mcpherson.html
Swarthmore In The News: October 19, 2000 He was born in 1866 and grew up, the son of a prominent lawyer, Louise Tarbleof Los Angeles, Calif., will donate $2 million for an addition to http://www.swarthmore.edu/news/inthenews/00/00.10.19.html
Extractions: Return to News Clippings Clippings collected October 19, 2000 Published by the Office of News and Information HEADLINE: Colleges feel a squeeze October 23, 2000 SECTION: SCIENCE AND IDEAS; EDUCATION; Vol. 129 , No. 16 LENGTH: 533 words BYLINE: By David L. Marcus BODY: Every fall, Lafayette College in Easton, Pa., woos several hundred bright, creative high school seniors. And every spring dozens call back with disappointing news. "They say the same thing: 'I love your small classes and your campus, but I got more aid from another school,' " says enrollment dean Barry McCarty. He is frustrated because Lafayette offers what it considers generous financial aid, but other schools can entice these students with thousands of dollars more. It's one of the great ironies of higher education: Even as they are inundated with record numbers of applications, many schools are sweetening aid packages for the most coveted students. The enticements come from all sides: enormous scholarships from Ivy League universities awash in money; research grants from state schools that don't want star students to move away; and tuition-free packages from obscure colleges desperate to raise average SAT scores. Harvard, with a $ 19 billion endowment, lets applicants know it can match rivals' financial aid offers, but schools with less money can't afford that approach. A typical case is
S. Berliner S DUDGEON Automobile Continuation Page 1 1866 Dudgeon at the Smithsonian {Frontispiece courtesy of T. Kuehhas, Directorof the Oyster Bay Historical Society and Editor of its magazine, http://home.att.net/~Berliner-Ultrasonics/dudgn-1.html
Extractions: Light-weight Linguist, Lay Minister, and Putative Philosopher This page has now been visited times since the counter was installed. If you love history , you might wish to visit my HISTORY page. The Dudgeon Story, continued from the main Dudgeon page ; this page is unindexed, except for Richard Dudgeon Genealogy Richard Dudgeon, Inc. (the firm) and DUDGEON HELP!
A Civil War Text Set - 4th Grade The Civil War, 18601866. New York Benchmark Books/Marshall Cavendish, 2000 . Robertson, James I. Standing Like a Stone Wall The Life of General http://curry.edschool.virginia.edu/go/tempo/VCCB/TextSets2/Textsets45.html
Extractions: By Matt McElroy December 6, 2001 Non-Fiction Collier, Christopher and James Lincoln Collier. The Civil War, 1860-1866 New York : Benchmark Books/Marshall Cavendish, 2000. Egger-Bovet, Howard and Marlene Smith-Baranzini; James J. Rawls, consulting editor; illustrated by D.J. Simison. USKids history : Book of the American Civil War Boston : Little, Brown: 1998 Fritz, Jean; illustrated by Charles Robinson Just a few words, Mr. Lincoln: The Story of the Gettysburg Address Hakim, Joy. War, Terrible War New York : Oxford University Press, 1999. Kantor, MacKinlay.
Timeline Of Frederick Douglass And Family 1866. Attends convention of Equal Rights Association and clashes with women srights leaders Mary Louise was the daughter of Charles Resmond Douglass. http://www.math.buffalo.edu/~sww/0history/hwny-douglass-family.html
Extractions: His mother, Harriet Bailey, was a field slave from whom he was separated during his infancy. Douglass only saw his mother four or five times thereafter and for only a few hours each time. She had been sold to a man who lived twelve miles from where Douglass lived, and to see her son required that after her day's work in the field she walk the twelve miles, visit with him for a short time during the night, walk the twelve miles back to her home, and work a second day in the fields without rest. She died when Douglass was about seven. . Sent to live with Hugh Auld family in Baltimore. . Asks Sophia Auld to teach him his letters. Hugh Auld stops the lessons because he feels that learning makes slaves discontented and rebellious. . Hired Out to Edward Covey, a "slave breaker", to break his spirit and make him accept slavery.
ART / 4 / 2DAY The Beloved aka The Bride (1866, 83x76cm; _ ZOOM by clicking on VIEW As shepasses, a gleam strikes on the Wall behind her, admitting for a moment the http://www.safran-arts.com/42day/art/art4apr/art0409.html
Extractions: [1751-1818] in Vienna, where his style was strongly influenced by English portraiture. After he studied in Paris (1807-1808) under Neoclassicism became apparent in his work. He visited Italy in 1809, 1810 and 1812 to do commissioned portraits for various patrons, among them (1809) and Joachim Murat, King of Naples Maximilian I Joseph 09 Apr 1837 In his portraits for the middle classes and for the court he devised certain peculiarities of form. He painted various members of the royal houses of Austria, Prussia and Sweden, as well as members of the nobility in the duchies of Saxe-Altenberg, Saxe-Coburg and Hesse. His sitters also included some of the most important figures in the political and intellectual life of Germany in the first half of the 19th century. He painted the pendant portraits of Franz Brentano and Antonie Brentano (both 1808)
75 Suffragists 2, 1866 Aug 8, 1948, heard Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton speakat age 12, ERNESTINE Louise SIISMONDI POTOWSKI ROSE (Russian Poland) Jan. http://www.mith2.umd.edu/WomensStudies/ReadingRoom/History/Vote/75-suffragists.h
Maine Writers: S At sixteen, she married Seba Smith, 31, a Portland newspaper Editor who is best Her husband died in 1866 but Stowe remained in Hartford, raising their http://www.waterborolibrary.org/maineaut/s.htm
Extractions: NOTE: Books available at the WATERBORO PUBLIC LIBRARY will appear in PLUM TELETYPE Please note that the Waterboro Public Library does not have most of these books! Seneca Review in 1970 with James Crenner. He's got a website at Colby with his c.v. as well as information on his books and his classes. Books include: Settling Down Palm Reading in Winter Maine: Nine Poems Uncoupling A Northern Calendar Emotional Traffic: Poems An Ira Sadoff Reader: Selected Poetry and Prose Grazing: Poems (1998), and Barter (2003). Sadoff won the Poetry Society of America George Bogin Memorial Award in 1996 and the "American Poetry Review" Jerome J. Shestack Prize in 1997. His article on neo-formalism appears in the Jan/Feb 1990 issue of "American Poetry Review;". His
Extractions: We will pay tribute to our former (and beloved) "East Coast Secretary," Joseph R. Dunlap, with a special meeting at the Grolier Club, New York on Friday evening, 9 November. Joe's title does not begin to describe himhe was the founder of what was then the "North American" branch of the Society; he has published extensively on Morris and the book arts; he has been the friend, helper, and inspirer of many of our members and others interested in Morris, his works, and his ideas. THE WILLIAM MORRIS SOCIETY reception to follow Nicolas Barker, Head of Conservation at the British Library, is also editor of The Book Collector . He is the author of numerous works of bibliographic importance, including "A Sequel to an Enquiry into Certain Nineteenth Century Pamphlets," in which he and John Collins considered the forgeries perpetrated by Thomas J. Wise and Buxton Forman, Morris's friend, editor, and first bibliographer.
IMG SRC= Http//service.bfast.com/bfast/serve?bfmid in 1866 he was moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church; David Richard Floyd Jones was born in 1812..1 He married Mary Louise http://www.genealogysf.com/Stanton-p/p357.htm
Archival Elements I am deeply saddened to report the death of our colleague, Louise Marshall, alongtime member of By 1866, she was in medical school in Florence, Italy. http://www.archivists.org/saagroups/sthc/aelements2003.html
Fondren Library: WRC Full List Of Manuscripts 33 Edward M. House Letters to Mary Louise Howze Needham, 19251934 126 CivilWar diary / WH Brooker and unknown, 1863-1866 http://www.rice.edu/fondren/woodson/mss/numericallist.html
Extractions: Note: An addendum of 42 boxes (currently known as MS 412) will be integrated with this collection in 2005. MS. 4 Certificate of Partnership between Richard J. French, William Marsh Rice and Ebenezer B. Nichols MS. 5 Jefferson Davis Letters, 1846-1888, (bulk 1854-1865) MS. 6 William Harrison Hamman Papers, 1828-1966 MS. 7 William Lockhart Clayton papers, 1897-1966 ... MS. 17 Andrew Forest Muir papers, 1763-1969, bulk 1935-1969 MS. 18 Early Fondren Manuscripts, 1700-1948 MS. 19 Clarence R. Wharton Papers, 1876-1943, (bulk 1935-1941)
Back Issues Encounter over the Chinese Wall The Secret Contacts Between Mao and Stalin,19481950 The Criminal Trial in Early British Hong Kong, 1841-1866 http://www.chinainformation.leidenuniv.nl/index.php3?c=14