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         Granville George:     more books (100)
  1. Aids to writing Latin prose, with exercises by George Granville Bradley, T L. 1841-1926 Papillon, 2010-08-09
  2. A Catalogue of the Collection of Pictures, of the Most Noble the Marquess of Stafford, at Cleveland House, London: Containing an Etching of Every Picture, ... and Biographical Notices, Volume 2 by George Granville Leveson-Gow Sutherland, 2010-01-11
  3. Recollections of Arthur Penrhyn Stanley by George Granville Bradley, 2010-08-29
  4. The Despatches of Earl Gower by George Granville Leveson Sutherland, 2010-01-03
  5. Log-Letters from "The Challenger". by Lord George Granville Campbell, 2010-02-16
  6. Curriculum improvement: an administrator's guide by George Granville Tankard, 1974
  7. A Plea For Early Oviarotomy (1881) by George Granville Bantock, 2010-05-23
  8. The Vindicators of Shakespeare by Sir G. G. (Granville George) Greenwood, 2009-10-21
  9. Salem Vessels and Their Voyages; A History of the Pepper Trade With the Island of Sumatra by George Granville Putnam, 2010-03-30
  10. The Life and Correspondence of Arthur Penrhyn Stanley: Late Dean of Westminster, Volume 1 by George Granville Bradley, Baron Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, 2010-03-19
  11. Ben Jonson and Shakespeare by Granville George Greenwood, 2009-12-17
  12. Recollections Of Arthur Penrhyn Stanley - Late Dean Of Westminister - Three Lectures Delivered In Edinburgh In November 1882 by George Granville Bradley, 2010-05-27
  13. Shakespeare's Law and Latin: How I was 'Exposed' by Mr. J.M. Robertson by Granville George Greenwood, 2004-07-15
  14. Home Rule Or Coercion? A Speech Delivered To Electors Of East Hants, At Petersfield, On November 26th, 1888 (1888) by Granville George Greenwood, 2009-09-24

41. George Gower (1540 - 1596) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
Wikipedia granville george LevesonGower, 2nd Earl Granville George Gower Sir Thomas Kytson Oil Painting - Tamsquare Art
http://wwar.com/masters/g/gower-george.html
arts marketplace browse the arts submit arts news media kit ...
Artist
: George Gower
Nationality: British
Movement:
Media: Painting
Influences:
Biography:

George Gower was a popular English portrait painter. Appointed to sergeant-painter to Queen Elizabeth in 1581. His clean and distinctive style allowed him to paint most of England’s upper class, including Sir Thomas Kyston and Lady Kyston. Gower also painted a self-portrait that showed his coat of arms.
Artworks in Museum Collections: (40)
Click the artwork titles below to see actual examples of artwork or works of art relevant to works by George Gower. Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco -
Lord Ronald Gower, Madame de Miolan, 19th century
Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco - Lord Ronald Gower, Le Feu Vidame de Chartres, 19th century Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco - Lord Ronald Gower, Mousier de Guise le Pere as a young man, 19th century Museum of Fine Arts - Francisco de Zurbarán, Spanish, 1598-1664 St. Peter Thomas about 1632 Oil on canvas 92.4 x Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco - George Biddle, George Santayana (profile), 1952

42. Ehaindex.html
LevesonGower, George Granville William Sutherland, Duke of Sutherland, 118. Leveson-Gower, granville george, Earl Granville, 149, 184, 202, 323;
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~hyper/hadams/ehaindex.html
INDEX
Acceleration, law, 489. Adams, Abigail, 353; on Catherine Johnson, 17. Adams, Abigail Brown (Brooks), 23; on English influence, 211. Adams, Brooks, 360, 464; at Harvard College, 299; on exchanges, 338. Adams, Charles Francis, 48, 149; taken to Russia, 18; in Boston, 19; marriage, and children, 23; and State Street, 24; nominated Vice-President, 25; slave power, 26; opinion of sons, 26; isolation, 27; political party, 29; reading, 35; family, 36; senatorship agreement, 49; on Europe, 70; in Congress, 88, 101; compared with Seward, 104; minister to England, 110; equipment, 112; impassiveness, 115; social position, 16, 132, 194, 2l2; Trent affair, 119; trusts Russell, 136, 149; clash with Palmerston, 136; rebel cruisers, 150, 167; interview with Russell, 158; rebel rams, 168; strength of, 208; proposed return to America, 209; collects coins, 213; liking for Washington, 269. Adams, Charles Francis (1835-1915), 23, 41, 89, 120; at Fort Independence, 112; remonstrates, 129; after the war, 210, 241; railroad studies, 240, 307; gold conspiracy, 270; favors professorship, 293. Adams, Evelyn (Davis), 442.

43. Granville George Chinese Seafood Restaurant, Chinese Restaurants, Vancouver Rest
granville george Chinese Seafood Restaurant, Chinese Restaurants, Vancouver Restaurants, Restaurants In British Columbia, Restaurants And Food Delivery,
http://www.food.ca/restaurants_and_food_delivery/restaurants_in_british_columbia
Granville George Chinese Seafood Restaurant
Granville George Chinese Seafood Restaurant Restaurants in Canada British Columbia Restaurants Vancouver Restaurants Chinese Vancouver
Granville George Chinese Seafood Restaurant
Address: Park Square 5701 Granville Street,
Vancouver, BC, V6M 4J7, Canada Phone: Fax: N/A Reservation: Make a Reservation Delivery: Order Online Related Categories Related Categories No products were found. = Site Navigation = Home About us Business to Business Wine and Drinks ... Food News and Facts NEWSLETTERS Keep yourself updated with our FREE newsletters now! Name:
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Healthy snacks for kids
(NC)¢â‚¬â€Send your kids back to school with snacks that add variety and satisfy hunger between meals ¢â‚¬â€œ but don't spoil their appetite. Nutrient-rich foods such as fresh fruit or vegetables (an apple or handful of carrot sticks) and dairy foods (a yogurt cup or small piece of cheese), are considered healthiest. But don't limit yourself ¢â‚¬â€œ or your child. There are plenty of other nourishing alternatives to chocolate bars, candy and pop. Read more...

44. George Granville Bradley - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
george granville Bradley george granville Bradley (December 11, 1821 – March 13, 1903), was an English divine and scholar. His father, Charles Bradley,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Granville_Bradley
George Granville Bradley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Caricature from Punch, October 1 1881, after he became dean of Westminster: "Bless Thee! Thou Art Translated!" George Granville Bradley December 11 March 13 ), was an English divine and scholar. His father, Charles Bradley, was vicar of Glasbury Brecon He was educated at Rugby under Thomas Arnold , and at University College, Oxford , of which he became a Fellow in . He was an assistant master at Rugby from to , when he succeeded GEL Cotton as Headmaster at Marlborough In he was elected master of his old college at Oxford, and in August he was made Dean of Westminster in succession to AP Stanley , whose pupil and intimate friend he had been, and whose biographer he became. Besides his Recollections of A. P. Stanley ) and Life of Dean Stanley ), he published Aids to writing Latin Prose Composition and Lectures on Job ) and Ecclesiastes ). He took part in the coronation of Edward VII and resigned the deanery in Bradley had three daughters, the writers Margaret Louisa Woods and Emily Tennyson Smith and Lady Mabel Birchenough, the wife of Sir

45. Granville, George Leveson-Gower (Nuttall Encyclopædia)
granville, george LevesonGower, second Earl, statesman; entered Parliament as a Liberal in 1836, and became a supporter of free trade; in 1846 succeeded to
http://www.fromoldbooks.org/Wood-NuttallEncyclopaedia/g/granvillegeorgeleveson-g
1907 Nuttall Encyclop¦dia of General Knowledge G · Granville, George Leveson-Gower a b c d ... z
Granville, George Leveson-Gower (
Granville, George Leveson-Gower , second Earl , statesman; entered Parliament as a Liberal in 1836, and became a supporter of free trade ; in 1846 succeeded to the peerage, and in 1851 became Foreign Minister under Lord John Russell; four years later became leader of the Lords; figured in every Liberal cabinet till 1886, usually as Colonial or Foreign Secretary; in 1859 he failed to form a ministry of his own; was a staunch supporter of Mr. Gladstone's Home Rule policy ( Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclop¦dia , edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907) Grantham Gratian Web fromoldbooks.org Grandville Grangemouth Grani`cus Grant, Sir Alexander ... Grantham Granville, George Leveson-Gower Gratian Gratianus, Augustus Grattan, Henry Gratz ... Gray, Thomas

46. George Granville Quotes
george granville quotes,george, granville, author, authors, writer, writers, people, famous people.
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British foreign secretary and leader of the Liberal Party,
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Add to Chapter... George Granville quote Add to Chapter... George Granville quote Add to Chapter... George Granville quote Add to Chapter... show_bar(408621,'of-all-pains-the-greatest-pain-is-to-love-and') George Granville quote Add to Chapter... George Granville quote Add to Chapter... show_bar(195112,'she_will-and_she_will_not-she_grants-denies') Submit a New George Granville quote George Graham quotes George Gray quotes
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47. Overview Of George Granville Leveson-Gower
Gazetteer for Scotland Definitive description of george granville LevesonGower (1758 - 1833)
http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/scotgaz/people/famousfirst621.html
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for

Scotland
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George Granville Leveson-Gower
(1st Duke of Sutherland) Infamous reformer. Leveson-Gower was the son of a noted English family and succeeded his father as Marquess of Stafford in 1803. He had married Elizabeth, Countess of Sutherland, in 1785. He served as British Ambassador to France and was in Paris at the time of the French Revolution. Leveson-Gower and his wife were arrested for attempting to help Marie Antoinette and her son escape. Shocked at the conditions of his tenants and convinced that the interior of Sutherland could not support subsistence farming in the longer term, he initiated the most notorious of the ' Highland Clearances ' around 1810. Inspired by progressive social and economic theories and having consulted widely, he set about resettling thousands of families along the coast, making way for sheep. Unfortunately, the evictions were carried out ruthlessly by the Duke's factors, who burned the houses and forced many out of the area. It is therefore he who must shoulder at least some of the blame for this event and the consequent destruction of the highland way of life. Leveson-Gower was made 1st Duke of Sutherland in his own right just months before his death. He is remembered by a massive statue which towers over Golspie and has become the focus for nationalist hatred of a man motivated by high principles but let down by their implementation.

48. Peter Granucci — Ksenija Graovac : ZoomInfo Business People Information
granville, george, Balliol College, Sir granville and Lady Bantock moved to London and , at the age 65 , GB continued his work for .
http://www.zoominfo.com/people/level2page15178.aspx
var biz_data = "";
ZoomSearchBox.init(1, ''); Welcome, Guest Register Sign in Help Welcome to the ZoomInfo People Directory Find the person you're searching for in the list below and click on their name for more detailed information. Or use the search box above to explore our entire directory of over 30 million business professionals. Can't find yourself in ZoomInfo? Create your own profile now. var biz_data = ""; Granucci, Peter Johnson State College Peter Granucci , painter, holds a B.F.A. from the School of the Visual Arts in New York City. Granucci, Raymond Junior Aid of Stockton "I was a housewife," Granucci said. "I played a lot of golf and tennis to keep myself busy." - Granucci, Sergio Pro Tec Sergio Granucci Sergio is one of the backbone instructors working at the training facility and a ... Granum, Anita Bank of Grand Junction Every day you're wondering how low is low , said Anita Granum , who manages the mortgage division at the Granum, Anne Masterplan Inc Anne Granum anne.granum@inova.com - Granum, Bob

49. Authors Index E - N, Arts, Monash University
Lansdowne (george granville, Baron), See granville, george. Leanerd, John, The Counterfeits, JLTC1. The Country Innocence, JLTCI1
http://arts.monash.edu.au/english/resources/restoration-theatre-song-archive/aut
/**/ @import "/assets/styles/arts-standards-based.css"; /**/ Skip to the content Change text size Monash University - Faculty of Arts Arts Faculty ... Authors
Authors Index E - N
E F G H ... N
Indexes
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E
Earl of Bristol (George Digby) See Digby, George Earl of Dorset (Charles Sackville) See Sackville, Charles Earl of Orrery (Roger Boyle) See Boyle, Roger Earl of Rochester (John Wilmot, second) See Wilmot, John Etherege, George The Comical Revenge The Man of Mode She Would if She Could -(lyrics) in Otway 's Friendship in Fashion in Southerne 's The Disappointment in Tate 's A Duke and No Duke Return to Top
F
Falkland (Henry Cary, Viscount) See Cary, Henry Fane, Francis Love in the Dark The Sacrifice Fanshawe, Richard Il Pastor Fido Querer por Solo Querer -(lyrics) in Settle 's Pastor Fido Farquhar, George The Constant Couple The Inconstant Love and a Bottle Sir Harry Wildair Field, Nathan, John Fletcher and Philip Massinger The Knight of Malta Filmer, Edward

50. Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891. Additional Papers, 1736-1951: Guide.
(148) granville, george granville, 2nd earl, 18151891. A.N.s.(granville) to James Russell Lowell; n.p. 15 Feb 1881. folder (1l.)
http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hou00401
Harvard University Library
OASIS
: Online Archival Search Information System Frames Version
Questions or Comments
MS Am 1484.1
Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891. Additional papers, 1736-1951: Guide.
Houghton Library, Harvard College Library
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
Descriptive Summary
Repository: Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University
Location: b
Call No.: MS Am 1484.1
Creator: Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
Title: Additional papers,
Date(s):
Quantity: 6 boxes (3 linear ft.)
Abstract: Correspondence of the American author James Russell Lowell with his family and others as well as poems and other materials.
Acquisition Information:
Gift of Mrs. Esther Lowell Cunningham, 241 Canton Avenue Milton, Massachusetts; received: 1948 March 2.
Historical Note
Lowell was an author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. He edited the Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, the North American Review (1864- ); was professor of French and Spanish Languages and Literatures at Harvard (1855-1886) succeeding Longfellow; and U.S. minister to Spain (1877-1880), and to England (1880-1885).
Arrangement
Arranged alphabetically.

51. Sutherland
4b) george granville William, 3rd Duke of Sutherland, etc (London 19 Dec 2d) george granville, 5th Duke of Sutherland, etc (Cliefden House 29 Aug
http://pages.prodigy.net/ptheroff/gotha/sutherland.html
SUTHERLAND
The members of this family are surnamed as indicated. The children of the Dukes of Sutherland, and the daughters of the Earls of Ellesmere, of Sutherland, and of Cromartie bear the title Lord/Lady before their Christian names. The sons of the Earls of Ellesmere, of Sutherland, and of Cromartie bear the prefix "Honourable" before their Christian names.
GEORGE Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Marquess of Stafford, Earl Gower, etc, cr 1833 Duke of Sutherland ( 9 Jan 1758-Dunrobin Castle 19 Jul 1833 ); m.London 4 Sep 1785 Elizabeth Sutherland, 19th Countess of Sutherland (Leven Lodge nr Edinburgh 24 May 1765-London 29 Jan 1839) 1a) GEORGE Granville, 2nd Duke of Sutherland, etc, took surname Sutherland-Leveson-Gower (London 8 Aug 1786-Trentham Hall, Staffs 28 Feb 1861); m.Devonshire House 28 May 1823 Lady Harriet Elizabeth Georgiana Howard ( 21 May 1806-Stafford House 27 Oct 1868
1b) Elizabeth Georgiana ( 30 May 1824-London 25 May 1878 ); m.Trentha, 31 Jul 1844 George Douglas Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll (Ardencaple Castle 30 Apr 1823-Inveraray 24 Apr 1900) 2b) Evelyn (8 Aug 1825-Nice 24 Nov 1869 ); m.Trentham

52. Granville-Barker, Harley Granville - Hutchinson Encyclopedia Article About Granv
Information about granvilleBarker, Harley granville in the Hutchinson granville, george, Baron Lansdowne granville-Barker, Harley granville
http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/Granville-Barker, Harley Granville
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Granville-Barker, Harley Granville
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Waste The Voysey Inheritance (1905), and The Madras House (1910). His series of Prefaces to Shakespeare hut(1)
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Email Feedback Sign in Email: Password: Register Charity('US') Your Ad Here Mentioned in No references found Hutchinson browser Full browser Granton Grants Grants Pass Granvelle, Antoine Perrenot de ... Granville, George, Baron Lansdowne Granville-Barker, Harley Granville Granz, Norman grape grapefruit Grapevine ... Granville-Barker, Harley Granville-Barker, Harley Granville Granvin Granvinsvatnet Granwald Scott Granz, Norman ... GraP-DH TheFreeDictionary Google Word / Article Starts with Ends with Text Free Tools: For surfers: Browser extension Word of the Day Help For webmasters: Free content NEW!

53. Morrow.James.Granville.1827.Wayne.BIOS James Granville Morrow June
James granville Morrow was married November 26, 1974 to Miss Sarah J. george, and this happy marriage was blessed with the following children Della,
http://www.rootsweb.com/~kyfootst/files/SURNAMES/M/Morrow/Morrow.James.Granville
Morrow.James.Granville.1827.Wayne.BIOS James Granville Morrow June 27 1827 - unknown Wayne County KyArchives Biography Author: "History of Atchison County, Kansas" by Sheffield Ingalls JAMES GRANVILLE MORROW. We are taught that life is eternal; that when the course of man has been run upon this earth and his work is done, his spirit returns to his Maker and he is judged according to his deeds while a mortal among his fellow creatures. This thought and belief is comforting alike to the dying and the bereaved ones left behind to mourn their earthly loss for the time being. Longfellow has written: "Life is real, life is earnest and the grave is not its goal; dust thou art, to dust returneth, was not written of the soul." So thought and so lived the late Capt. JAMES GRANVILLE MORROW, who at the time of his demise was the oldest living pioneer resident of Atchison and a man famed for his upright life and beloved for his good and kindly deeds. Life was very "real and earnest" to Captain Morrow and he enjoyed his earthy existence to the fullest extent, the latter years of his residence in Atchison being the fullest and best of all, in the sense that he indulged his taste and talents to doing things which he loved, all the while being surrounded by a loving wife and children whose respect and love he had to comfort him through the greater part of his long and useful life. Captain Morrow lived in such a manner as to endear him to all of his associates and he will long be remembered as one of the noted figures of the pioneer and the present era of Kansas development. It is meet that the life story of his truly noble citizen be recorded in these annals of his county and city for the inspiration and encouragement of the present and coming posterity for all time to come. James Granville Morrow was born on a farm in Wayne County, Kentucky, June 27, 1827, a son of Jeremiah and Lydia (HOLDER) Morrow, both of whom were born and reared in Kentucky. Jeremiah Morrow was the son of Matthew Morrow, a native of Virginia, who was one of the early pioneers of Kentucky and of Scotch descent, his ancestors having emigrated from Scotland to America in the early colonial period of American history. Jeremiah Morrow, father of James G., was born in 1802 and after his removal to Kentucky married Lydia HOLDER. Six sons and two daughters were born to Jeremiah Morrow and wife, only one of whom survives, Mrs. W. H. CRISP, residing in Kentucky. Their children were as follows: Mahala, wife of Rev. W. H. Crisp of Kentucky; Floyd, deceased; James Granville, the subject of this review' Nimrod, deceased; Riley, William, Nancy, deceased wife of John PENNINGTON; Percy, deceased. Granville Morrow spent his boyhood days on the family farm in Wayne County, Kentucky and at the age of sixteen years was sent to a select school. He made his home with his parents until he attained his majority and then set out to make his own way in the world. He dealt quite extensively in horses which he drove from Kentucky to Georgia. He was also associated with his brothers in raising, purchasing and selling hogs, which they drove 400 miles into Georgia, where they were sold to the Georgia planters. Sometimes a single planter would buy 500 head and the price ranged from eight to nine dollars per 100 pounds, live weight. The Morrow brothers frequently drove as high as 13,000 head, traveling only seven miles a day. There were no railroads in those days, but the country was dotted with stations. Hog cholera did not bother swine in those days and ti was Captain Morrow's frequent expression that hog cholera was a product of civilization and high breeding and although the hogs were driven as far as 400 miles they did not lose weight on the trip. The business of the Morrow brothers was not always profitable, however, and they lost money on some of the trips. Mr. Morrow abandoned the business in 1850, and in 1854 arrived in Atchison en route to California, but he did not go any farther. On April 5, 1854 he arrived at Rushville Landing, now East Atchison. This was shortly before Kansas was opened for settlement and the only man living at that time on the town site of Atchison was George MILLION, who operated a rope ferry across the Missouri River. Mr. Morrow found on landing at Atchison that the overland train which he expected to join en route to the far West had left and, as he was ill, he decided to wait for the next train. Captain Morrow ate his first dinner in Kansas with Samuel DIXON at Dixon Spring, now included in the city of Atchison. The food was ladled out of a common kettle to which all the diners had access without style of invitation other than "help yourself." A tree trunk sawed off smooth answered the purpose of a table on which the meal was served While waiting he found a job with Million and decided to remain in Kansas. In the fall of 1854, he, with John ALCORN, bought out Portumous LAMB's ferry boat which was operated by horse power and a tread-mill, and from that time on for seventeen consecutive years Mr. Morrow plied his ferry between Atchison and Winthrop. In the fall of 1855 he began operating a side-wheel steam ferry which had been brought here from Brownsville, PA. In 1857 he became captain of the steam ferry, "Ida," later running the steam ferry, "Pomeroy," after which he went to Brownsville, PA, where he built the transfer boat, "William Osborne," remaining there eight months while the work was in progress. When he brought the "William Osborne" to Atchison it was loaded with 300 tons of rails for the Central Branch of the Missouri Pacific Railroad, now the Northern Kansas Division. This boat also conveyed across the Missouri River the first locomotives used on the road after its construction. Not long after his arrival in Atchison County Captain Morrow began to accumulate land and in 1860 turned his attention to farming, retiring from the steamboat business entirely in 1871. He accumulated 1,240 acres of rich bottom lands in the Missouri River bottoms near East Atchison which has never failed to produce a crop and is very valuable. He formerly owned a section of land in Osage County, Kansas, near Lebo. He also was the owner of two valuable farms on the Atchison side of the river, 320 acres near Jacksboro, Texas, and owned considerable real estate in the city, all of which has been left to his widow in trust for his children and heirs. He was very successful as a wheat grower, and in this way gained the greater part of his working capital. He erected a beautiful home called "Enidan Heights" at Eighth and U Streets on the south side of Atchison, where he spent his declining years in peace and comfort. About 1875 he opened a general store in East Atchison which he conduced until 1883. Those were still pioneer days, and the settlers in the vicinity were poor and sometimes were unable to pay for the good they needed. The captain's big heart and generous impulses frequently led him to extend credit to patrons whom he knew would not be able to pay for their purchases, and it was a favorite expression of his when his clerk would report to him that a poor man wished credit, "Gracious to goodness, if we don't let him have the stuff he'll starve to death." The captain sold hundreds of dollars' worth of goods which were probably never paid for, but his good heart would not permit him to see a fellow creature in want for the necessities of life. This trait of kindness was the predominating characteristic of his life and endeared him to hundreds of people. After quitting the mercantile business Captain Morrow devoted himself entirely to his family interests and his transfer business which he established in 1888, with his partners, later becoming the sole owner of the business. He retired entirely from active business pursuits and his farming in 1910 and spent the most of his time working around the gardens of his fine home in Atchison. For years it was his custom to drive back and forth to his big farm on the Missouri side and he was gradually persuaded to abandon this activity. His demise occurred December 2, 1915, after a brief illness, beginning with an attack of la grippe, his great age and depleted vitality, militating against his recovery. James Granville Morrow was married November 26, 1974 to Miss Sarah J. GEORGE, and this happy marriage was blessed with the following children: Della, born November 11, 1875 and died in 1904 and who is buried in Orearville Cemetery, Saline County, Missouri; James Granville George, born September 16, 1878, married Ethel WORRELL and is the father of four children: James Granville, Jr., John Worrell, Francis and Robert George; Nadine, wife of John Raymond WOODHOUSE, who lives with Mrs. Morrow of Atchison and mother of John Granville, born December 16, 1914; James G. Morrow resides in Buchanan Co., MO and has charge of the immense Morrow farms in the Missouri bottoms. The children of Captain and Mrs. Morrow have all been well educated and afforded every facility for mind cultivation. Mrs. Nadine Woodhouse was educated in Mount St. Scholastica Academy and the College Preparatory School of Atchison after which she completed her studies at Central College of Missouri. Miss Della Morrow studied in Mount St. Scholastica Academy, Midland and Central colleges and Washington University at St. Louis and was a bright and talented young lady prior to her demise. James Morrow, the son, studied in the Atchison public school and Midland College. The mother of thee children, Mrs. Sarah J. (George) Morrow, was born March 30, 1853, near Orearville, Saline County, Missouri, a daughter of Dr. James Jameson George, a native of Prince William County, Virginia. Dr. George was born in Virginia November 25, 1810, a son of William Henry George, a soldier in the War of 1812, who moved from Virginia to Hardin Co., KY in 1816 with his brothers, Moses and Lindsey George, who settled at Shelbyville, KY. The mother of Dr. George was a member of the Jameson family, an old Virginia family. The ancestry of both the George and Jameson families goes back to the pre-Revolutionary days of the Virginia colony. Dr. J. J. George was a graduate of the Transylvania College at Bairdstown, KY and also studied at Lexington, KY. He was married in 1841 at Mt. Sterling, KY to Mary Catlett OREAR, a daughter of Robert Catlett Orear, who was born in Mt. Sterling, KY, January 30, 1814 and departed this life March 27, 1876 in Johnson County, MO. Dr. J. J. and Mary George were the parents of the following children: Robert died in June, 1905, on his ranch in Coffey Co., Kansas; Joel S. who resides at Peace River Crossing, Alberta, Canada; Mary E., wife of J. H. RUSSELL, died June 28, 1911; Mrs. Malinda MORRISON of Tecumseh, OK; Benjamin Franklin, born in Saline Co., settled in Coffey Co., KA and now resides in Denver, CO; Mrs. James Granville Morrow; two who died in infancy; James Nelson contracted fever at Central College and died October 26, 1875, aged twenty-one years and twenty-nine days; Lee Davis, a ranchman of Coffey Co., KS. Four of these children were born in Kentucky and the last four were born in Missouri, where the family removed in 1850.Dr. George was a minister of the Gospel and a member of the Methodist Episcopal conference in Kentucky from 1838 to 1839. He came to Missouri to farm and preach the Gospel, but was impressed very early in his western career with the woeful dearth of skilled medical care for the sick and ailing of the backwoods country and was frequently called to the bedside of people who were supposed to be dying and whom he realized could be easily saved with some medical attention. Fired with zeal to assist an unfortunate and suffering people, he conceived the worthy idea of studying medicine, so that he could be of material assistance to his people other than in a religious sense. He returned to Kentucky and entered the Medican College at Lexington. After completing his course he returned to Saline Co., MO and engaged in the practice of his profession until old age came upon him. He then removed to Cass Co., MO and became a local minister. His was a long and useful life, every matured year of which was given in behalf of his fellow men, unselfishly and devotedly. He was one of the noted missionaries of the early days in Missouri and extended the word of the Gospel to the remotest settlements. He organized churches and Sunday schools where they seemed needed most and his work called him to preach the Word in log houses and the most primitive habitations of man. Dr. George was deeply in love with his great work and loved the people and worked tirelessly for their well-being in a religious and practical way. He departed this life August 4, 1875. The last public utterance which he made was when he spoke to a Sunday school assemblage in Coffey Co., KS in the village of Key West. His end was peaceful and tranquil and the departure of this good man's soul to the realms beyond mortal kin marked the passage of one of the truly great men of the western country whose work will go on and on forever. Dr. George and Captain Morrow became great friends in the early sixties. On Thanksgiving day of 1913, just the day before Mr. and Mrs. Morrow's forty-first wedding anniversary, the captain's last illness began which resulted in his passing away. His burial occurred on December 4 from Trinity Episcopal Church, Rev. Otis E. GRAY officiating, with the Masonic Lodge of Atchison conducting burial service at the grave. He was for many years a Mason and was greatly interested in the Masonic fraternity, rarely being absent from the lodge meetings, his last spoken regret having been that he would be unable to attend the ceremonies held at the laying of the cornerstone of the new Masonic Temple in Atchison. The last five years of Captain Morrow's life were perhaps the most satisfactory and the happiest of his existence. His years of retirement, although few as compared with that of most men, were spent almost entirely at his beautiful home, with occasional visits to his farm lands. He was loath to retire and did so only at the urgent insistence of his devoted wife and for quite a long time after he was eighty years of age he would insist on driving across the river to his farm. He took the greatest pleasure with his grandchildren and especially with his namesake. In his later years he became a specialist in gardening and fruit growing merely for his own satisfaction and would frequently surprise his family with some very choice and rare fruits grown in his gardens and orchards. From his orchard of peach trees he gathered over 400 bushels of peaches in one season and also set out an apple orchard which he attended assiduously. He became a disciple of the famous Luther Burbank and was a member of the Luther Burbank corporation. Through the exercise of his skill as a fruit grower he produced several kinds of rare berries and was continually experimenting in small fruits and vegetable growing. It was fitting that the life of Captain Morrow should close in such a manner and that during his last years he was permitted to indulge himself in his favorite pursuits, surrounded with the loving and watchful career of his devoted wife, who was always his confidant and adviser, and to whom he went in time of stress or trouble for comfort and advice. His was a life well spent and his memory will live long in the hearts and minds of those who knew him best. Submitted by: Sandi Gorin http://www.rootsweb.com/~archreg/vols/00002.html#0000404 Additional Comments: I have no connection and no further information. This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/kyfiles/

54. Jackson County, West Virginia Births 1853-1950 - The Archer Association
NAYLOR, James Vernon and Iva Archer (granville, george, Elisha, James, Joseph, James I). James Vernon 4/17/1912 L.G. Blanche Naylor, Sherman
http://www.archercousins.com/ArcherAssn/jcbirths.htm
To Archer Association Main Site West Virginia Birth Records JACKSON CO., WV BIRTHS From: "Jackson County Births 1853-1950," Compiled by Linda Murdock, 1990-1993, published by Jackson Co., WV Public Library
208, N. Church St
Ripley WV 25271
Tel: 304-372-5342; 304-372-7935
FAX. Contact Lynn Pauley for current prices for the 10 volumes covering letters A-Z:
Email: pauley1@hp9k.park.lib.wv.us
The average cost is about $13 per volume. The series is enormous and generally accurately transcribed. The only shortcoming is that there is no index of mothers' maiden names or a father's surname if the child is listed under the mother's maiden name (usually illegitimate births). All listings of children are by the child's surname. To find an Archer mother you must know the name of the father or be willing to do a manual search of all 10 volumes. These are the records from Jackson Co., WV Court House transcribed by Linda Murdock for the 10-volume set of birth records: Register of Births 1853-1939
Births Beginning 1 Jan 1940
Delayed Birth Certificates
Abbreviations: (used in Murdock's books)
(f) - female
(m) - male fpob - father's place of birth mpob - mother's place of birth m.occ. - wife' occupation

55. Smoking In Public Places - A Consultation On Reducing Exposure To
Sue granville and Andrea Kinver, george Street Research. 3.2 The full report is available HERE . Kay Russell and Sue granville, george Street Research
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2004/12/20381/48198

56. Portrait/Subject Collection
Folder 233 Graham, Robert Bontine Cunninghame Folder 234 granville, george LevesonGower, 2nd Earl of Folder 235 granville-Barker, Harley
http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/fales/coll_mss/portrait2.html
Portrait/Subject Collection BOX AND FOLDER LIST Box 2
Folder 113: Creswick, Thomas
Cruden, Alexander
Cumberland, Richard
Folder 114: Cullen, Countee
Folder 115: Cunningham, Allan
Folder 116: Currie, James
Curtis, George William
Cushman, Charlotte
Folder 117: Cuvier (aka John Murray Hunter)
Folder 118: Dahl, Michael Dale, Richard Folder 119: Dalrymple, Alexander Damer, Anne Seymour (Conway) Dane, Clemence Folder 120: Daniel,George Dante Darwin, Charles Folder 121: Davenport, E. L. Dell, Floyd Demby, William Denman, T. Folder 122: Derby, Edward Henry Stanley, 15th Earl of Folder 123: DeVere, Aubrey Devonshire, Charles Blount Devonshire, Edward Folder 124: Devonshire, Georgiana (Spenser) Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire, William Cavendish, 1st Earl of Folder 125: Dewhurst, Miss Dickenson, Emily

57. CSIRO ICT Centre
Brain D J, Dang N D, Davis I M, granvillegeorge D A Ka-band Tracking Antenna for Inter-orbit Communications IEEE A P International Symposium, June 1998,
http://ict.csiro.au/staff/Ian.Davis/
HOME Staff Profiles
Staff Profile
Ian M Davis
Position: Principal Research Scientist
Wireless Technologies
Antenna Systems
CSIRO ICT Centre, Sydney
Contact Details
CSIRO ICT Centre
Marsfield NSW 2122
PO Box 76
Epping NSW 1710, Australia
E-mail: Ian.Davis@csiro.au
Telephone: +61 2 9372 4114
Fax: +61 2 9372 4106
Overview
Ian Davis joined the CSIRO in September 2002 after extensive experience with antenna systems in Europe. He is currently the project leader for the Cognitive Wireless Communications project which covers the areas of Cognitive Antennas, mm-wave Technology, Propagation and Adaptive Wireless. His past work with in the ICT Centre has included the development of advanced feed system antennas for satellite communications and the study of environmental effects such as rain on antennas. He is also participating in the improvement to the CSIRO antenna facilities, including a Compact Antenna Test Range which will operate up to over 300GHz. Before joining CSIRO, Ian previously worked for the Antennas System Department at ERA Technology Ltd in the UK for twenty one years. In the latter years there Ian was the work package manager for the breadboarding phase of a study ERA is undertaking for the European Space Agency's Operations Centre (ESOC) to develop the next generation of satellite ground stations for dual deep space and near earth applications.

58. Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl Granville
He was a Liberal in politics and an intimate friend of george Canning. The title of Earl granville had been previously held in the Carteret family.
http://www.reference.com/browse/wiki/Granville_Leveson-Gower,_2nd_Earl_Granville

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Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl Granville
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Cite This Source
Granville George Leveson Gower, 2nd Earl Granville KG PC 11 May 31 March ) was a British Liberal statesman
Family
The eldest son of Granville Leveson-Gower, 1st Earl Granville (1773—1846), by his marriage with Lady Harriet Cavendish, daughter of the 5th Duke of Devonshire , he was born in London . His father was a younger son of Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl Gower and 1st Marquess of Stafford (1720—1803), by his third wife; an elder son by the second wife (a daughter of the 1st Duke of Bridgwater ) became the 2nd Marquess of Stafford , and his marriage with the daughter and heiress of the 18th Earl of Sutherland ( Countess of Sutherland in her own right) led to the merging of the Gower and Stafford titles in that of the Dukes of Sutherland (created ), who represent the elder branch of the family. As Lord Granville Leveson-Gower, the 1st Earl Granville (created viscount in 1815 and earl in 1833) entered the diplomatic service and was ambassador at St Petersburg (1804—1807) and at Paris (1824—1841). He was a

59. Old Dominion University Libraries - Information Resources - Collections On Micro
granville, george LevisonGower, 2nd Earl, 1815-1891. The granville Papers. Wilmington, DE Michael Glazier, Inc., 1979. Microfilm DA559.G6.A5 (2 reels)
http://www.lib.odu.edu/resources/microforms/historycollections/histGB.htm

60. Granville Stuff
granville, george, Lord Lansdowne. The Jew of Venice. Five Restora tion Adaptations of Shakespeare. Ed. Christopher Spencer. Urbana U of Illinois P, 1965.
http://www.stoics.com/granville_stuff.html
Home Why Stoics Books FAQ ... Works Cited Granville's Jew of Venice (1701): A Close Reading of Shakespeare's Merchant By Ben Ross Schneider, Jr. In a recent essay in which Catherine Craft examines George Granville's adaptation of Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice , called The Jew of Venice , she decides that Granville's goal was to produce a more purely comic play than the original, one more suited to his own age. He achieved this end [she continues] by developing the light, happy plot that remained once he had stripped Shakespeare's [ Merchant ] of all its dark colorings. Where Shakespeare had established a rivalry between Antonio and Portia over Bassanio, showing tensions arising between friendship and love, Granville portrayed friendship and love working together for the mutual well-being of all. Where Shakespeare introduced dark elements into his play by examining the strife between Christians and Jews which surrounded the Venetian friends and lovers, Granville presented a comic villain to forward his plot. (40) Ms. Craft assumes that the "dark colorings" removed by Granville are a feature of the original. But they were not observed in it until the latter end of the last century, when major actors began to play Shylock, and critics did not reach a consensus on their presence until the last decade.~ Still, it does not occur to Ms. Craft that modern readers might be the revisionists, not Granville, and that

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