Prince Georoe's Countu, Md. COTICO FAMILY NAME DIRECTORY

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Prince Georoe's Countu, Md. COTICO FAMILY NAME DIRECTORY General Index to Equitg Records — From 1942 thru June 1984 — Prince Georoe's Countu, Md. COTICO FAMILY NAME DIRECTORY COTI DATA PROCESSED INDEXES *' MADE BY THE COTT INDEX COMPANY, COLUMBUS, OHIO PACE 1 ( 028 001 001 E AP CODES H-HUSBAND W-WIFE O-OTHER DR-DOMESTIC RECORD DEC-DECREE RECORD CH-CHANCERY RECORD #-ADOPTION & GUARDIANSHIP DOCKETS DATE FILED DEFENDANTS AP CASE Month Day Year GIVEN NAMES GIVEN NAMES PLAINTIFFS AP OBJECT OF BILL SURNAME A - K L - Z NUMBER SEP 17 1970 N A flOWIE REFUSE AKA MO DEPT EMPLOY SEC 0-4 686 INJUNCTION CO JUN 25 1982 N A C AGENCY INC GLACIER GENERAL ASSURANCE E-82-0 966 DECLARATORY JUDGMENT MAR 19 1980 N A C CREDIT CORP ESTELLE BOURNE E 83 18 DECL JUDGMT JUN 26 1981 N C R CORP JEFFERSON BANK & TRUST CO E 10987 EX PARTE INJUNCTION MAY 18 1982 NLA CORP W ROBERT WOLFE TRUSTEE £-82-0772 FORCE D/T 5288 229 JUN 24 1982 N L A CORP THOMAS E MARTIN £-82-0 958 EX PARTE INJUNCTION AUG 13 1964 N 0 L HOUSING ASSN INC THEODORE L MIAZGA TRS 0 C-4145 INTERPLEADER JUN 22 1982|N SIT BANK JOSEPHINE S SILVESTER £-10*350 APPT OF TRUSTEE JUN 22 1982 N S & T BANK JOSEPHINE S SILVESTER £-10*485 APPT OF TRS ; MAY 13 1980 N S C CONTRACTORS INC SHOPCO LAUREL CO E 8278 THIRD PARTY CLAIM JAN 14 1964 N S STAVROU INC J P GUP TON SPRINKLER CO C-2610 RELEASE MECH LN JAN 14 1964 N S STAVROU INC J P GUPTON SPRINKLER CO C-2610 RELEASE MECH LN SEP 29 1965 N S STAVROU INC KIDWELL 4 KIDWELL INC C-5413 ENFORCE MECH LIEN SEP 29 1965 N S STAVROU INC KID WELL 4 KIDWELL INC C-5413 ENFORCE MECH LIEN FEB 28 1969 NA8INETT ARTHUR cUCINDA QUATTLEBAUM DR-69-427 NON SUPPORT OEC 1 1982 NA8INETT MICHAEL 0 BETTY J NABINETT DR82-4897 NON-SUPPORT PATRICIA A MAR 12 t984|NABINETT PAUL M WILFRED M DYER JR SUB TRS E-84-0382 FORCE D/T 5441 551 JUN 4 1984 NABINETT VIONIC A N IN RE E-84-0885 CHG OF NAME NOV 14 1974 NABORS VIRGINIA P FLOYD WILSON NABORS DR74-3475 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE OCT 7 1964 NAB02NY WILLIAM JOHN NABOZNY C-4539 NON SUPPORT MAR 12 1952 NACCARATE ADELINE VINCENZO NACCARATE A-50 36 DIVORCE JUN 24 1952 NACCARATO ADELINE VINCENZO NACCARATO A-5344 DIVORCE MAY 27 1954 NACHT EDWARD A IN RE A-7755 ADOPTION 4 CHG OF NAME JAN 7 1958 NAG ION ARTHUR C MYRTLE NACION 8-2434 ALIMONY SEP 26 196 6 NAD AK DEVELOPMENT CORP MD DEPT OF EMPL SECURITY D-86 INJUNCTION BONNIE G MARK AUG 10 1979 NAD80RNE ANNETTE MARVIN IN RE E-7060 CHANGE/NAME AUG 10 1979 NADBORNE SUSAN T IN RE £-7060 CHANGE/NAME 'mfw General Index to Equitg Records - From 1942 thru June 1984 - Prince Georges ^oun^Md COLUMBUS, OHIO PAGE COTICO FAMILY NAME DIRECTORY COTT DATA PROCESSED INDEXES D E ( 028 002 001 R .^ZITno. ) AP CODES H-HUSBAND W-WIFE O-OTHER CH-CHANCERY RECORD #^D 0 PTI0N & GUARDIANSHIP DOCKETS DEFENDANTS CASE OBJECT OF BILL DATE FILED API PLAINTIFFS AP GIVEN NAMES GIVEN NAMES NUMBER Month Day Year SURNAME A - K L - Z 0|0-2194 FORCL D OF TRS JUN 23 1987 NADEAU DORIS J RICHARD J j NATHANIEL J TAUBE TRS |DONNA S IRETON SUB TRS D”3551 iFORCL D OF TRS FEB 28 1969 NADEAU DORIS J RICHARD J KATHLEEN NADEAU DR73-1355 1 NON SUPPORT HAY 18 1973 NADEAU JOSEPH A 8-6566 LIMITED DIVORCE OCT 28 1960 NADEL HARVEY BARBARA NADEL ELIZABETH 0R82-0822 CUSTODY FEB 26 1982 NADELL ANN TIMOTHY S NADELL ANN E NADELL DR82-3057 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE JUL 23 1982 NADELI TIMOTHY S DR 71-49 j LIMITED DIVORCE JAN 15 1971 NADER ROBERT A MARIE H NADER DR73-2523 |LIHITEO DIVORCE AUG 29 1973 NADER OEHITRI J \ DORIS J NADER OR77-1097 I ABSOLUTE DIVORCE ETC MAR 29 1977 NADER DEMITRI E DORIS J NADER HERMAN F ROEBUCK] JOYCE ROEBUCK £-5869 I SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE FEB 6 1979 NADER GERMAN H MARY € GLORIA A NADERI 0R79-2939 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE JUL 9 1979 NADER! ALI A 15561 (ADOPTION l CHG OF NAME DEC 27 i946 NADITCH JUDITH A | IN THE MATTER OF SUB TRS 0|E-82-1162 I FORCL R R AUG 3 1982 NAQITCH RONALD M THEODORE J SCHEVE PARVIZ NADJMA8A0I 0R78-3646 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE SEP 18 1978 NADJH ABADI PARVIN R A-2558 [DIVORCE SEP 13 1949 NAECKER MARGARET H I [WILLIAM NAECKER A-2963 I FORECLOSE R OF REDEMP DEC 16 1958 NAECKER FREDERICK D BO CO CCHMRS PR GEO CO OR77“1196 I ABSOLUTE DIVORCE APR 7 1977 NAECKER DOREEN JOSEPH W NAECKER E-84-0650 CHG OF NAME APR 18 1984 NAEEM MOHAMMAD IN RE DR78-3903 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE OCT 10 1978 NAEFE STUART C BARBARA N NAEFE DR79-1863 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE NAY 1 1979 NAEHR RICHARD A MARY E NAEHR DR78-278 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE JAN 27 1976 NAFTAL'.' SANDRA K IRVING F NAFTALY REBECCA C E-4962 FORECLOSE D T AUG. 25 1976 NAGALES PEDRO T WILFRED M OYER JR E 9465 CHANGE OF NAME OCT 7 1980 NAGARAJAN RAMAMURTY IN RE £-586 7 CHANGE/NAME FEB 5 1979 NAGAT A MAXINE S IN RE B NATHANIEL 0|£-5847 (FORECLOSE D T B 2 1979 NAGBE DONNA M JOSEPH F ZEGOWITZ W 0 CS80-006? (NON SUPPORT 30 1980 NAGBE B NATHANIEL 0(DONNA NAGBE i C-1969 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE ,63 NAGEL JOHN W WILMA LARUE TAYLOR NAGEL C-9857 |NON SUPPORT 1966 NAGEL KENNETH 8 EVA L VARNADORE JOSEPH L CQNTR D-7275 ENFORCE MECH LIEN 14 1972 NAGEL CHARLOTTE L ALTON P BURGESS ELEC PAGE General Index to Equihj Records - From 1942 thru June 1984 - Prince Georges Conn^ Md. X COTT DAT* PROCESSED INDEXES MADE BY THE COTT INDEX COMPANY, COLUMBUS, OHIO COTTCO FAMILY NAME DIRECTORY (_ ~ ~ „ _ E»Hy ShMt \ AP CODES H-HUSBAND W-WIFE O-OTHER SfcSSKi r“°0«0 SSSIS “IuaSoianship dockets 028 003 001 E Mmllficatlon No. ) CASE DEFENDANTS p OBJECT OF BILL DATE FILED AP PLAINTIFFS * NUMBER GIVEN NAMES GIVEN NAMES Month Day Year SURNAME A - K L - Z ROBERT E NAGEL 0R72-3274 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE DEC 14 1972 NAGEL JUANITA E #7776 ADOPT & CHG/NAME MARY T IN RE APR 5 1973 NAGEL CUSTODY ETC 8 PEARL NAGEL 0R78-2IQ6 MAY 31 1978 NAGEL JOHN B LIMITED DIVORCE ETC JOHN B NAGEL DR78-2106 JUL 5 1978 NAGEL B PEARL DR79-1585 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE ROBERT E ELIZABETH L NAGEL APR 11 1979 NAGEL RICHARD W NAGEL DR79-2732 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE JUN 21 1979 NAGEL CONNIE L ELMER DR80-4388 NON SUPPORT ROBERT ELIZABETH LYNN NAGEL OCT 23 1980 NAGEL PATRICIA NAGEL DR83-0685 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE FEB 14 1983 NAGEL HUGH E KAREN E NAGEL DR83-0830 NON-SUPPORT FEB 22 1983 NAGEL KENNETH LEE GORDON L HUGHES JR 0R72-1844 LIMITED DIVORCE JUL 18 1972 NAGELI JEAN THOMAS J CHEN SUB IRS D-37 05 FORCL D OF TRS MAY 19 1969 I NAGEOTTE JOAN L VINCENT C A-5641 DIVORCE MENSA ET THORO THOMAS J AOELE NAGLE SEP 16 1952 NAGLE 0R-69-2234 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE ROBT J NANCY L NAGLE NOV 10 1969 NAGLE ANN I NAGLE DR71-12 NON SUPPORT JAN 7 1971 NAGLE JAMES PATRICIA A NAGLE DR72-1276 NON SUPPORT MAY 12 1972 NAGLE LEE V SR ABSOLUTE DIVORCE THOMAS F NAGLE DR75-2506 AUG 1 1975| NAGLE ANNE C LIMITED DIVORCE ETC BETH A NAGLE DR77-2096 JUN 16 1977 NAGLE JQHtf S VICTORIA L NAGLE DR78-747 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE MAR 8 1978 NAGLE DAVID A ABSOLUTE DIVORCE BETH A NAGLE 0R78-2634 JUL 11 1978 NAGLE JOHN S PAULA M CHANGE/NAME \ IN RE E-5539 DEC 5 1978 NAGLE GEORGETTE PETER P NON-SUPPORT RITA NAGLE CS82-0511 AUG 18 19821 NAGLE JEFFREY T DR83-0991 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE RITA K JEFFREY T NAGLE MAR 1 1983 NAGLE DR83-3077 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE P MICHAEL CHERYL A NAGLE JUL 14 19831 NAGLE CLUB INC| INJUNCTION HYATTSVILLE DOG TRAINING £-642 MAR 4 1976 NAGLER KENNETH D 87 6 “7 8 2 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE RAJDEVIOER S MRY ANN NAGRA MAR 12 1976 NAGFA ABSOLUTE DIVORCE DAVID J NAGY DR83-4092 SEP 26 1983 NAGY CECILIA A OR 7 4 “7 46 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE LOTFOLLAH GISELA NAHAI MAR 11 1974 NAM AI PANSY HIRST NAHAS 8-59 4 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE AUG 6 1956 NAHAS JOSEPH A DR79-828 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE ETC YOUNG T CHOONG-GUEN NAHM MAR 5 1979 NAHM IN RE E-82-0867 CHG OF NAME |JUN 8 1982 NAHM CHARLIE Y YUNSOO CHANGE/NAME IN RE £-5454 NOV 17 1978 NAHM! AS IRENA v ADOPTION 1 CHANGE OF NAME IN RE #3640 AUG 17 1966 NAHFMOLD ELAINE G ABSOLUTE DIVORCE RONALD WILLIAM NAHRW0LO C-6856 AUG 10 1965 NAHFWOL 0 ELAINE H UGllblui iuuwa J processed indexes ^MADE BY --DccTHE COTT DRPnnnINDEX COMPANY. COLUMBUS, OHIO General Index to Equity Records - From C0TICOTI1942 DATA PROCESSED thru INDEXES June 1984 - Prince Georges nCoun^Md. PAGE ^ COSTCO FAMILY NAME DIRECTORY ncpnon DFP—DECREE RECORD ^ . Emy ShMi \ AP CODES H-HUSBAND W-W1FE O-OTHER SfcSSSv RECORD SSromo" ITuaroiahshir dockets 028 0 0 A 001 £ ld«ltllicallon No. / CASE OBJECT OF BILL DEFENDANTS AP DATE FILED I API PLAINTIFFS NUMBER UIVEH NAMES GIVEN NAMES l - Z Month Day Year SURNAME A - K #6 705 | ADOPTION MICHAEL J | IN RE I APR 29 1971 NAHRWflLO 0R-&9-2194 J NON SUPPORT HOWARD R LINDA GAY NAIL InOV a 1969 NAIL DR77«557 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE SAMUEL F Ilucille NAIL (FEB 18 1977 NAIL D-2230 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE RAYMOND 0 | ESTHER D NAILS JUN 28 1967 NAILS *5544 GUARDIANSHIP IN RE BABY GIRL JUL JO 1969 NAILS OR 70*1 A45 LIMITED DIVORCE LEWIS [MAE I NAILS JUL 28 1970 NAILS GEORGE C HELDER JR MAE I D-6900 (FORECLOSE 0 T LEWIS | GEORGE F RIOGELY % APR 21 1972 NAILS DR74*1667 (ANNULMENT RAYMOND 0 ELIZABETH MARY W NAILS HAY 29 197A NAILS D-9161 * jcONSTRUE WILL LILLIAN C Iralph A COZZENS NOV 7 1 97A NAILS E* 82-0125 |CHG OF NAME INTISAR R II N RE I JAN 29 1 982 NAIM 0R75-1960 LIMITED DIVORCE MAHMOQD T MARY R NAIMI [JUN 17 1975 NAIMI DR72-2859 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE DIANE E NAIR DONALD T lOCT 31 1972 NAIR DR81“4447 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE [CATHERINE ANNE NAIR JOHN OTIS | NOV A 1981 NAIR 12476 TAX SALE H 1 C OF HYATTSVILLE FRANCES I ROLAND E NOV 10 19A2 NAIRN 14293 [DIVORCE JOHN JR DORIS NAIRN I SEP 20 19A5 NAIRN 14522 DIVORCE MARIE 8 (GEORGE E NAIRN | JAN 11 i 9A6 NAIRN 15111 (DIVORCE BRANSON K BETTY JANE NAIRN |JUL 16 19A6 NAIRN A* 392 [DIVORCE CHARLES J DOLORES NAIRN |HAY 20 19A7 NAIRN [limited DIVORCE LAWRENCE H NAIRN 8-3665 ADAIR B |NOV 13 1958 NAIRN 8*5919 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE JOHN W JR MARY J NAIRN |JUN 6 1960 NAIRN 0| 8-8382 [FORECLOSE D T MARY J T HAMMOND WELSH JR TRS | DEC 12 1961 NAIRN JOHN H JR DR 72*998 ABSOLUTE DIVORCE BEATRICE A (LAURENCE H NAIRN APR 1A 1972
Recommended publications
  • Saskatchewan Bound: Migration to a New Canadian Frontier
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Great Plains Quarterly Great Plains Studies, Center for 1992 Saskatchewan Bound: Migration to a New Canadian Frontier Randy William Widds University of Regina Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly Part of the Other International and Area Studies Commons Widds, Randy William, "Saskatchewan Bound: Migration to a New Canadian Frontier" (1992). Great Plains Quarterly. 649. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly/649 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Great Plains Studies, Center for at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Great Plains Quarterly by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. SASKATCHEWAN BOUND MIGRATION TO A NEW CANADIAN FRONTIER RANDY WILLIAM WIDDIS Almost forty years ago, Roland Berthoff used Europeans resident in the United States. Yet the published census to construct a map of En­ despite these numbers, there has been little de­ glish Canadian settlement in the United States tailed examination of this and other intracon­ for the year 1900 (Map 1).1 Migration among tinental movements, as scholars have been this group was generally short distance in na­ frustrated by their inability to operate beyond ture, yet a closer examination of Berthoff's map the narrowly defined geographical and temporal reveals that considerable numbers of migrants boundaries determined by sources
    [Show full text]
  • Canadian Journal
    Canadian Paper Money Society Journal Official publication of the Canadian Paper Money Society VOLUME 53, NUMBER 154 SEPTEMBER 2017 Seal of the Eastern Townships Bank The design is comparable to the crest on the backs of the 1906 $5 and $10 notes. See page 87. Robert J. Graham presents the next part of a history and register of The Eastern Townships Bank. Above is illustrated some interesting ephemera associated with the bank. The article begins on page 78. In this issue: Hitesh Doshi’s column takes a closer look at the window designs of the Frontier Note series . Page 74 Bernard Wilde describes how Bank of Toronto notes were altered from notes of the Colonial Bank of Canada . Page 90 Barry Uman tells us about the Scrip of Eustache Brunet dit Letang 1837 . Page 94 …and much more! Canadian Paper Money Society Journal 2017 Page 67 ISSN 0045–5237 The Canadian Paper Money Journal is published quarterly by the Canadian Paper Money Society, P.O. Box 562, Pickering, Ontario L1V 2R7. Annual dues are for the calendar year and are payable in Canadian dollars for Canadian addresses and in United States dollars for all other addresses. Membership is now available in two forms. When you sign up online, you are enrolled with a digital membership that provides access to your quarterly Journal in digital format via Honorary President our website in lieu of a printed Journal. If you President Walter D. Allan, FCNRS would prefer a printed Journal, that option is available for an additional fee. Regular Digital Ronald Greene c/o Dick Dunn Honorary Vice Presidents Annual Membership is $20.00, while Regular Robert J.
    [Show full text]
  • Statement of Rodney J. Bosco Navigant Consulting, Inc. On
    STATEMENT OF RODNEY J. BOSCO NAVIGANT CONSULTING, INC. ON THE “THE FUTURE OF MONEY: COIN PRODUCTION” BEFORE THE HOUSE FINANCIAL SERVICES SUBCOMMITTEE ON DOMESTIC MONETARY POLICY & TECHNOLOGY UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES APRIL 17, 2012 Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee, my name is Rodney Bosco and I am a Director in the Disputes and Investigations practice at Navigant Consulting, Inc. (“Navigant”). I am pleased to testify today concerning our coin system, its cost drivers, and an analysis we conducted recently that identified approximately $200 million in annual cost savings if the United States moved to a steel‐based composition for our vended nickel, dime, and quarter. Navigant is an international consulting firm that provides independent, objective analysis of and opinions on accounting, financial and economic issues. Our report was commissioned by Jarden Zinc Products, North America’s leading plated coin blank producer and a licensee of the Royal Canadian Mint’s multi‐ply plated steel technology. We acknowledge the significant assistance of the Royal Canadian Mint (“RCM”) and Worthington Industries in the preparation of our analysis. As the Subcommittee examines ways to make our coins less expensively, and awaits the United States Mint’s recommendations on alternative metals later this year, our work has led us to three major conclusions which I want to share with you today. (1) Adoption of a multi‐ply plated steel composition for the vended five‐cent, dime and quarter‐dollar coins will reduce the per‐unit raw material costs of these coins by 84% to 89%, based on recent prices of copper, nickel and low‐carbon steel during the United States Mint’s 2011 fiscal year.
    [Show full text]
  • Show Me the Money!
    Show Me the Money! Number of players: two or more, with a referee (to confirm correct answers) Materials: play money (coins and bills), transaction cards, calculator and score sheet, answer key. Goal: Earn a percentage of the profits as you answer questions where you show how the money goes! One player selects a card that has a transaction described. The player must then use the cardboard money to show the transaction. If the player answers the transaction correctly, she/he receives 5% of the answer as cash-points (not necessarily the amount listed in the question). Whoever collects the greatest amount of cash points after five rounds of play is the winner. Coin and bill denominations: penny, nickel, dime, quarter, loonie, twonie; five dollar, ten dollar, twenty dollar, fifty dollar and one hundred dollar bills. To play: 1. Every Player selects a scoresheet. The sheet will track the player’s answers, the money earned with each correct answer, and the cumulative total of the money she/he has earned through five rounds of play. 2. Players are NOT permitted to use calculators to figure out the answer to a question card. Calculators CAN be used to figure out the 5% of the answer (money earned) if desired, after the question has been answered. 2. Shuffle the question cards and place them face down in front of the players. 3. Arrange the bills and coins in piles in the centre of play, for easy access. 4. Player One selects a question card. The question can be shared with all Players, but the individual player is expected to work independently to figure out the answer.
    [Show full text]
  • U.S. & Canadian
    U.S. & Canadian Coin Inserts In this free coin insert pack, you'll find: •U.S. coin amount inserts •U.S. coin name inserts •U.S. coins {front and back} with names for penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, the Sacagawea dollar •U.S. coins {front and back} without names •Canadian coin amount inserts for penny, nickel, dime, quarter, Loonie, and Toonie •Canadian coin name inserts •Canadian coins {fronts} with names •Canadian coins {fronts} without names Make learning about money more HANDS-ON by inserting the coin inserts into your pocket cubes. You can roll and match the coins, names, or amounts! Fun! Be sure to visit This Reading Mama! Terms of Use: This printable pack was created for you to use at home with your child/students or with multiple children in a classroom/tutoring setting. Please do not sell, host, reproduce, giveaway, or store on any other site (including a blog, Facebook, 4Shared, Dropbox, etc.). Thank you! You May Also Like Let’s Connect! Blog: www.thisreadingmama.com Subscribe to my Newsletter: HERE TpT: /This-Reading-Mama Facebook: /thisreadingmama Pinterest: /thisreadingmama Twitter: @thisreadingmama Email: [email protected] U.S. Coin Pocket Cube Inserts www.thisreadingmama.com 1¢ 5¢ Mama Reading ©This www.thisreadingmama.com www.thisreadingmama.com 10¢ 25¢ www.thisreadingmama.com www.thisreadingmama.com 50¢ $1.00 www.thisreadingmama.com www.thisreadingmama.com U.S. Coins Inserts Nickel Penny Mama Reading ©This www.thisreadingmama.com www.thisreadingmama.com Dime Quarter www.thisreadingmama.com www.thisreadingmama.com Half Sacagawea Name Inserts Name - Dollar Dollar www.thisreadingmama.com www.thisreadingmama.com U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • The Landscape of Ukrainian Settlement in the Canadian West
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Great Plains Quarterly Great Plains Studies, Center for Spring 1982 The Landscape Of Ukrainian Settlement In The Canadian West John C. Lehr University of Winnipeg Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly Part of the Other International and Area Studies Commons Lehr, John C., "The Landscape Of Ukrainian Settlement In The Canadian West" (1982). Great Plains Quarterly. 1655. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly/1655 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Great Plains Studies, Center for at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Great Plains Quarterly by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. THE LANDSCAPE OF UKRAINIAN SETTLEMENT IN THE CANADIAN WEST JOHN C. LEHR To journey through parts of the western in­ belt where wood, water, and meadowland were terior of Canada at the turn of the century was available in abundance. Their uniformity in to experience the cultural landscapes of the appraising the resources of the land and their peasant heartland of Europe. Nowhere was this strong desire to settle close to compatriots, more true than on the northerly fringes of the friends, and kinfolk led to the formation of a parkland belt and across the. southern reaches series of large ethnically homogenous block of the boreal forest pioneered by Ukrainian settlements that eventually spanned the West immigrants from the Austrian provinces of from southeastern Manitoba to central Alberta Galicia and Bukovyna. (Fig. 1).2 Between 1892, when the fIrst small group of seven Ukrainian families settled in Alberta, THE ESTABLISHED FRAMEWORK and 1914, when the outbreak of war in Europe FOR SETTLEMENT terminated immigration from Austria-Hungary, more than 120,000 Ukrainians settled in Since the great majority of Ukrainian immi­ Canada.
    [Show full text]
  • Canadian Suburbia: from the Periphery of Empire to the Frontier of the Sub/Urban Century
    R OGER K EIL Canadian Suburbia: From the Periphery of Empire to the Frontier of the Sub/Urban Century _____________________ Abstract Canadian suburbia is part of settlement of indigenous landscapes. It was originally a product of the rapid growth of cities in the periphery of the British Empire. Working class immigrants often self-built their housing on the poorly serviced but surveyed lots of the industrializing cities; industry sometimes followed on the seemingly endless greenfields beyond. Later generations of European immigrants moved from crammed inner city quarters to post World War 2 subdivisions in the periphery, now opened up by inter- regional highways, transit, sewer and water services and soft infrastructures such as schools and universities. Many relocated to residential areas around emerging assembly plants of the Fordist period. Supported by federal housing programs, suburban single family homes became the standard of an Anglo-Saxon settler society in which landed property reigned supreme as an economic reality and ideological icon of arrival. In some places, such as Toronto, an alternative modern suburban landscape was erected in the form of tower neighbourhoods that stood out futuristically from townhomes and bun- galows below. Ostensibly built for the domestic middle class, they turned out to become the port of entry for many new immigrants that came from around the world. In extension of this trend in what is now the “inner suburbs”, in recent decades, the suburbs and exurbs of Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver have become the chief destina- tions of new generations of immigrants, mostly from non-European countries. This has changed the social composition, meaning and politics of suburbia fundamentally.
    [Show full text]
  • Crude Optimism Romanticizing Alberta’S Oil Frontier at the Calgary Stampede Kimberly Skye Richards
    Crude Optimism Romanticizing Alberta’s Oil Frontier at the Calgary Stampede Kimberly Skye Richards An immaculate young woman regally waves at a sea of enthusiastic fans. Perched on her head is a white cowboy hat embellished with a tiara that has “Calgary Stampede Queen” written on it in rhinestones. She is a vision of “westernness” in cowboy boots, a buckskin skirt and jacket, and turquoise jewels. Her express purpose this hot July afternoon is to welcome the 115,000 folks attending the “Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth,” the Calgary Exhibition and Stampede. She is a “welcome figure,”1 like those white-cowboy-hat-wearing individuals in the Calgary air- port who stand in the arrivants’ path and greet travelers. These performances of western hospi- tality amount to a performance of power: the assertion of settler rights to land.2 They are just 1. I borrow this term from Stó:lō scholar Dylan Robinson’s essay “Welcoming Sovereignty,” which examines Indigenous sovereignty and gestures of welcome that take place in spaces of transit and gathering (2016:24). 2. In using the term “settler” to describe non-Indigenous people living in western Canada, I am referring to the idea within settler colonial studies that being a settler is not an identity, but a structural position and experience of power and privilege. Settlers settle into land appropriated by imperial nations and create independent homelands for themselves. They are defined by conquest; they are “founders of political orders and carry their sovereignty TDR: The Drama Review 63:2 (T242) Summer 2019. ©2019 138 New York University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Downloaded from http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/dram_a_00839 by guest on 26 September 2021 Student Essay Contest Winner Kimberly Skye Richards is a PhD Candidate in Performance Studies at the University of California-Berkeley.
    [Show full text]
  • 2002 Calgary Homelessness Study
    2002 CALGARY HOMELESSNESS STUDY Final Report October 2002 1 Research Report to the Calgary Homeless Foundation, October 2002 Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control. Universal Declaration of Human Rights article 25, par. 1. Even the most sophisticated studies cannot determine the morally “right” way to spend public money. Barbara Dickey, Harvard University, 2000 2 Research Report to the Calgary Homeless Foundation, October 2002 Acknowledgements The Project Team would like to acknowledge all of the individuals and programs that provided assistance for this study. Both the service agencies and funders who work with homeless and relatively homeless people provided us with overwhelming support. All agencies were consistently collaborative and welcoming in this process. In particular, we are grateful to the following agencies for providing facilities and/or administrative/staff support during the project: o Avenue 15 o Calgary Urban Projects (CUPS) o Calgary Drop In Centre o Murdoch Manor o The shelters for women fleeing violence o The Golden Age Club o The Kerby Centre o The Mustard Seed (Calgary) Street Ministry o The Salvation Army o Urban Society for Aboriginal Youth (USAY) We were greatly encouraged by the number of homeless and relatively homeless people who took the time to talk to us about their experiences and to indicate the areas where service providers can work to help people avoid homelessness or get out of it sooner.
    [Show full text]
  • Banknotes and the Nation
    Andrew Champagne At the Intersection of Place Branding and Political Branding: Canadian Banknote Iconography and Political Priorities Abstract In 2012, the Bank of Canada began to release a new series of banknotes into circulation. Made of polymer and expected to last 2.5 times longer than previous versions, according to the Bank, these banknotes represent leading-edge technology and will expand the frontiers of banknote security. At the same time, compared to the previous “Canadian Journey” series, the overall iconography of the “Frontier” series has been noticeably changed. Over the course of their lifespan, more international visitors will be informed and influenced by Canadian banknote iconography than will Canadians. Throughout this article, I argue that the iconography of the “Frontier” series of banknotes is as much an expression of state power over a defined territory and its people, as it is a means to promote a particular view of Canada - both at home and abroad – that corresponds with the Conservative government of Stephen Harper’s political priorities and values. Considering that the Minister of Finance has authority over the “form and material” of the final design of all banknotes, I argue that Canadian banknote iconography is being used as an explicit means of political branding. In support of this, it is demonstrated that currency is increasingly being used as a means of mass communication more generally and through a quantitative content analysis of all banknotes produced by the central banks of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa; I argue that there can be two different categories of banknote iconography, political and non-political.
    [Show full text]
  • The 1969 Large Date Ten Cents
    The 1969 Large Date Ten Cents by Jeremy Day This is the story of the incredibly rare 1969 Large Date ten cents - a coin so rare that its very existence was not confirmed until nine years after it was struck! The first hint of this coin's existence came in 1970 when a woman walked into Peter Degraaf's coin store in Ottawa and showed him a 1969 Large Date ten cent piece she had found in her change. She inquired about its rarity and possible value, but Peter, never having seen one, could not verify its worth. The woman then left without giving her name or phone number. She never returned. But. Peter recognized that the coin was important for the reason that the old 1953-1968 reverse die had been used to produce a 1969 ten cent coin, when the nor­ mal production of 1969 ten cent coins showed an entirely remodelled schooner, date and devices, all of which are significantly smaller in style than the older type. Peter reasoned that the 1968 and earlier reverse master die had had the date repunched to read 1969. In such a case, one would expect several working dies, and thus large quantities of the 1969 large date, large schooner type. So Peter started checking around to find out what had happened at the Royal Canadian Mint to produce these coins. Were they trial coins and if so, how did they get into circulation? Were they knowingly produced and released for general circulation? If so, how many dies were made and what "".il~ the mintage? Were they "back door jobs"? If so, why would the perpetrator spenc them, and where were they all? Had anyone else seen or heard of any? Peter tried to get information from the Royal Canadian Mint in vain.
    [Show full text]
  • Notes from the AI Frontier: Modeling the Impact of AI on the World Economy Globally by 2030, Or About 16 Percent Higher Cumulative GDP Compared with Today
    NOTES FROM THE AI FRONTIER MODELING THE IMPACT OF AI ON THE WORLD ECONOMY DISCUSSION PAPER SEPTEMBER 2018 Jacques Bughin | Brussels Jeongmin Seong | Shanghai James Manyika | San Francisco Michael Chui | San Francisco Raoul Joshi | Stockholm Since its founding in 1990, the McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) has sought to develop a deeper understanding of the evolving global economy. As the business and economics research arm of McKinsey & Company, MGI aims to provide leaders in the commercial, public, and social sectors with the facts and insights on which to base management and policy decisions. MGI research combines the disciplines of economics and management, employing the analytical tools of economics with the insights of business leaders. Our “micro-to-macro” methodology examines microeconomic industry trends to better understand the broad macroeconomic forces affecting business strategy and public policy. MGI’s in-depth reports have covered more than 20 countries and 30 industries. Current research focuses on six themes: productivity and growth, natural resources, labor markets, the evolution of global financial markets, the economic impact of technology and innovation, and urbanization. Recent reports have assessed the digital economy, the impact of AI and automation on employment, income inequality, the productivity puzzle, the economic benefits of tackling gender inequality, a new era of global competition, Chinese innovation, and digital and financial globalization. MGI is led by three McKinsey & Company senior partners: Jacques Bughin, Jonathan Woetzel, and James Manyika, who also serves as the chairman of MGI. Michael Chui, Susan Lund, Anu Madgavkar, Jan Mischke, Sree Ramaswamy, and Jaana Remes are MGI partners, and Mekala Krishnan and Jeongmin Seong are MGI senior fellows.
    [Show full text]