Boone County Death Certificate Index 1877-1915 4/8/2014
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1911-1912 Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University
Ji UNI\fc.RSJTY OBITUARY RECORD OF YALE GRADUATES PUBLISHED By THE UNIVERSITY NEW HAVEN Eighth Series No 9 July 1912 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Entered as second-class matter, August 30, 1906, at the post- office at New Haven, Conn , under the Act of Congress of July 16, 1894. The Bulletin, which is issued monthly, includes : 1. The University tatalogue. 2 The Reports of the President, Treasurer, and Librarian 3. The Pamphlets of the Several Departments. 1 THE TU1TLE, MOREHOUSE 4 TAYI OK COMPANY, NEW HAVEN, CONN OBITUARY RECORD OF GRADUATES OF YALE MYERSITY Deceased during the year endingf JUNE 1, 1912, INCLUDING THE RECORD OF A FEW WHO DIED PREVIOUSLY HITHERTO UNREPORTED [No 2 of the Sixth Printed Series, and So 71 of the whole Record The present Series •will consist of fi\e numbers ] OBITUARY RECORD OF GRADUATES OF YALE UNIVERSITY Deceased during the year ending JUNE I, 1912, Including the Record of a few who died previously, hitherto unreported [No 2 of the Sixth Printed Series, and No 71 of the whole Record The present Series will consist of five numbers ] YALE COLLEGE (ACADEMICAL DEPARTMENT) 1838 HENRY PARSONS HEDGES, third of four sons and fourth of the six children of Zephaniah and Phebe P (Osborn) Hedges, was born at Wamscott in East Hampton, Long Island, N Y, October 13, 1817 His grandfather, Deacon David Hedges, was a member of the Colonial Congress at Kingston, N. Y, and a member of the Constitutional Con- vention of the State of New York which ratified the constitution of the United States Since the death of his classmate, Chester Dutton, July 1, 1909, he had been the oldest living graduate of the University He was the last survivor of his class He attended the Yale Commencement exercises in 1910, and made an addiess at the Alumni Meetmg, and was also an honored guest in 1911 He was fitted for college at Clinton Academy, East Hampton, and entered his class in college Sophomore year After graduation he spent a year at home and a year in the Yale Law School, and then continued his law studies I66 YALE COLLEGE with Hon David L. -
The Twelfth Decade
1911-1920 The Twelfth Decade Overview The twelfth decade was one of several significant developments and events. After 82 years as a Village, Batavia became a City. Batavia came to have its first City Hall. The police department for the first time had its own building. Also for the first time, there were full-time paid firemen. The community finally had a sewer system and sewage treatment plant. The municipal water system was upgraded and a water filtration plant added. And, as was the case with other cities across the Country, Batavia felt the impact of World War I. Batavia’s population continued to grow rapidly. The number of residents reached 13,541 in 1920 (“Genesee County Information,” Richmond Memorial Library, online, accessed 3 January 2014). This was an increase of 1,928 individuals since 1910. In the view of the author, this decade may be regarded as Batavia’s “golden age.” Main Street still had most of its mansions. A large number of the major manufacturing concerns that defined Batavia were in place. The housing in the City was still mainly single-family homes. Retail activity was almost entirely in a centralized “downtown.” A trolley ran the length of Main Street and the Tonawanda Creek was a major recreational attraction that drew crowds on summer weekends. 1: Infrastructure As indicated in the last chapter, work on constructing sewers began in December of 1909. The layout resulted in all of the sewage being conveyed to a central station at the Municipal Building at 3 West Main Street. As of July in 1911, the work on the sewers was well along. -
Highland Cemetery
Highland Cemetery SEC. 3 BLK. 200 LOT SIZE N INTERMENTS 6A NO. NAME DATE 7 6 8 Aug 1915 1 Picken, Dorothy Beatrice (b. 13 Oct 1911) 10 Aug 1915 2 1929 Picken, Thomas Fulton (b. 1874) 24 Mar 1929 8 5 3 4 6 Jan 1923 Ellis, Charles C. Jr. (b. ????) 8 Jan 1923 9 4 5 2 Feb 1923 Lee, Georgia Rachel (b. ????) 3 Feb 1923 W E 6 8 Mar 1923 Anglen, Nellie Laura (b. ????) 10 Mar 1923 10 3 6A 2 Sep 1946 Witham, Cecil F. Jr. (b. ????) 2 Sep 1946 7 14 Dec 1923 Chandler, Alma (b. Jun 1910) 17 Dec 1923 11 2 8 ???? Bailey, Mildred B. (b. ????) 3 Aug 1922 9 ???? Conley, W.E. (b. ????) 5 Apr 1923 12 1 10 11 S 12 OWNER Picken, T. Fulton - S 1/2 Single graves - N 1/2 Highland Cemetery SEC. 3 BLK. 201 LOT SIZE N INTERMENTS NO. NAME DATE 7 6 1 2 8 5 3 4 9 4 5 28 Jul 1970 Cale, Helen Jane (b. 27 May 1900) 1 Aug 1970 W E 6 10 3 7 1 Jul 1914 Bishop, Nettie (b. ????) 3 Jul 1914 8 11 2 9 ???? Bishop, J.E. (b. ????) 18 Jul 1939 10 15 Apr 1911 Bishop, Nancy Jane E. (b. 25 Apr 1836) 17 Apr 1911 12 1 11 12 5 Sep 1913 S Bishop, Elias (b. Apr 1831) 6 Sep 1913 OWNER Bishop, J.E. - S 1/2 Highland Cemetery SEC. 3 BLK. 202 LOT SIZE N INTERMENTS NO. NAME DATE 7 6 13 May 1942 1 Groves, Joseph A. -
The Masses Index 1911-1917
The Masses Index 1911-1917 1 Radical Magazines ofthe Twentieth Century Series THE MASSES INDEX 1911-1917 1911-1917 By Theodore F. Watts \ Forthcoming volumes in the "Radical Magazines ofthe Twentieth Century Series:" The Liberator (1918-1924) The New Masses (Monthly, 1926-1933) The New Masses (Weekly, 1934-1948) Foreword The handful ofyears leading up to America's entry into World War I was Socialism's glorious moment in America, its high-water mark ofenergy and promise. This pregnant moment in time was the result ofdecades of ferment, indeed more than 100 years of growing agitation to curb the excesses of American capitalism, beginning with Jefferson's warnings about the deleterious effects ofurbanized culture, and proceeding through the painful dislocation ofthe emerging industrial economy, the ex- cesses ofspeculation during the Civil War, the rise ofthe robber barons, the suppression oflabor unions, the exploitation of immigrant labor, through to the exposes ofthe muckrakers. By the decade ofthe ' teens, the evils ofcapitalism were widely acknowledged, even by champions ofthe system. Socialism became capitalism's logical alternative and the rallying point for the disenchanted. It was, of course, merely a vision, largely untested. But that is exactly why the socialist movement was so formidable. The artists and writers of the Masses didn't need to defend socialism when Rockefeller's henchmen were gunning down mine workers and their families in Ludlow, Colorado. Eventually, the American socialist movement would shatter on the rocks ofthe Russian revolution, when it was finally confronted with the reality ofa socialist state, but that story comes later, after the Masses was run from the stage. -
NJDARM: Collection Guide
NJDARM: Collection Guide - NEW JERSEY STATE ARCHIVES COLLECTION GUIDE Record Group: Governor Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924; served 1911-1913) Series: Correspondence, 1909-1914 Accession #: 1964.005, 2001.028, Unknown Series #: S3700001 Guide Date: 1987 (JK) Volume: 4.25 c.f. [9 boxes] Box 1 | Box 2 | Box 3 | Box 4 | Box 5 | Box 6 | Box 7 | Box 8 | Box 9 Contents Box 1 1. Item No. 1 to 3, 5 November - 20 December 1909. 2. Item No. 4 to 8, 13 - 24 January 1910. 3. Item No. 9 to 19, 25 January - 27 October 1910. 4. Item No. 20 to 28, 28 - 29 October 1910. 5. Item No. 29 to 36, 29 October - 1 November 1910. 6. Item No. 37 to 43, 1 - 12 November 1910. 7. Item No. 44 to 57, 16 November - 3 December 1910. 8. Item No. 58 to 78, November - 17 December 1910. 9. Item No. 79 to 100, 18 - 23 December 1910. 10. Item No. 101 to 116, 23 - 29 December 1910. 11. Item No. 117 to 133, 29 December 1910 - 2 January 1911. 12. Item No. 134 to 159, 2 - 9 January 1911. 13. Item No. 160 to 168, 9 - 11 January 1911. 14. Item No. 169 to 187, 12 - 13 January 1911. 15. Item No. 188 to 204, 12 - 15 January 1911. 16. Item No. 205 to 226, 16 - 17 January 1911. 17. Item No. 227 to 255, 18 - 19 January 1911. 18. Item No. 256 to 275, 18 - 20 January 1911. 19. Item No. 276 to 292, 20 - 21 January 1911. -
BY OUTRAM BANGS Andrews.' Lished an Article (Novitates Zoologicie
59.82(5) Article XX.-THE BIRDS OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY'S ASIATIC ZOOLOGICAL EXPEDITION OF 1916-1917 BY OUTRAM BANGS The birds collected by Roy Chapman Andrews and Edmund Heller in Burma, Yunnan and Fokien during the course of The American Mu- seum of Natural History's Asiatic Zoological Expedition of 1916-1917, were very kindly placed in my hands for identification by Dr. Frank M. Chapman, and I now take pleasure in submitting the following annotated list. The collecting of mammals was the primary object of the expedi- tion and birds were to some extent a secondary consideration, which accounts for the short series, many of the species being represented by only a single specimen. The shortness of the series renders subspecific identification in a few instances a matter of some uncertainty. The Expedition traveled along the border of Burma and Yunnan, and in western Yunnan to the Snow Mountains, and made one trip east- ward to Yunnan Fu. An interesting detailed account of the wanderings and experience of the members of the party, with descriptions of all sta- tions at which specimens were collected, and illustrated by many photo- graphs and a sketch map of the route, has been published by Mr. Andrews.' The collection of birds made in Fokien was supplemented by a series of skins received on the spot from Rev. Harry R. Caldwell. This collection is included here with the others. I have kept the birds from Fokien apart from those of Burma and Yunnan, giving two separate lists. This has caused very little repeti- tion of names and has made no faunal confusion, which would have been the case had all been listed together. -
The Muscatine Button Workers' Strike of 1911-12
The Annals of Iowa Volume 46 Number 4 (Spring 1982) pps. 243-262 The Muscatine Button Workers' Strike of 1911-12 Kate Rousmaniere ISSN 0003-4827 No known copyright restrictions. Recommended Citation Rousmaniere, Kate. "The Muscatine Button Workers' Strike of 1911-12." The Annals of Iowa 46 (1982), 243-262. Available at: https://doi.org/10.17077/0003-4827.8857 Hosted by Iowa Research Online The Muscatine Button Workers' Strike of 1911-12 An Iowa Community in Conflict KATE ROUSMANIERE IHE PASTORAL BACKDROP of an Iowa river town might not seem a likely setting for industrial strife. Labor uprisings at the turn of the century are more frequently envisioned in urban slums with overcrowded sweat shops and tenements jammed with immigrant workers. Muscatine, Iowa was never so unfortunate. The small city on the bluffs of the Mississippi River was sur- rounded by the agrarian culture and economy of Iowa and Illinois. But lodged in this rural environment was a booming button industry that all but monopolized the city and the local labor force. The strike of the Muscatine button workers' union in 1911-12 is a significant example of the chaos inflicted on a rural community in the process of industrialization. The history of the strike includes the story of community dynamics as well as industrial conflict. On February 25, 1911 a majority of the forty-three fresh- water pearl button factories in Muscatine shut down produc- tion. The manufacturers claimed that the shutdown was due to overproduction. The 2,500 laid-off workers declared it was a threat against their newly organized union. -
Pennsylvania House of Representatives - 1911-1912 119 Republican- 162; Democrat - 44; Socialist - 1
Pennsylvania House of Representatives - 1911-1912 119 Republican- 162; Democrat - 44; Socialist - 1 County Dist Name Party County Dist Name Party Adams Cole, James C. Dem Chester Reece, J. Coulson Dem ALLEGHENY DISTRICTS REORGANIZED IN 1911. Clarion Knight, F. H. H. Dem Key Allegheny 1 Geary, Thomas Paul Rep Clearfield Currier, Jonathan Rep Allegheny1Stein, Abraham C. Rep Clearfield Hoover, C. C. Rep Allegheny 2 McInerny, Charles A. Rep Clearfield Moulthrop, Alonzo S. Rep Allegheny 2 Rath, Herman Rep Clinton Kelsey, Oliver S. Rep Allegheny 3 Magee, William Addison Rep Columbia Shaffer, Charles A. Dem Allegheny 4 McClung, Horace A. Rep Crawford Johnson, C. Victor Rep Allegheny 5 Halferty, Frank J. Rep Crawford von Tacky, Frank B. Rep Allegheny 6 Carter, Thomas Rep Cumberland Ferguson, Thomas J. Rep Allegheny 6 Klumpp, Frank J. Rep Cumberland Steese, James A. Rep Allegheny 6 Letzkus, Ollie M. Rep Dauphin 1 Keister, Daniel L. Rep Allegheny 7 Malie, Daniel A. Rep Dauphin 1 Tunis, William S. Rep Allegheny 7 Schad, George J. Rep Dauphin 2 Cumbler, Charles C. Rep Allegheny 8 Hough, Edward M. Rep Dauphin 2 Row, Charles deVeny Rep Allegheny 8 Swan, John Rep Delaware 1 Ward, William, Jr. (9) Rep Allegheny 9 Woodward, James F Rep Delaware 2 Baldwin, Richard J. Rep Allegheny 10 Campbell, C. M. C. Rep Delaware 2 Robinson, V. Gilpin Rep Allegheny 10 Conner, William (7) Rep Elk Flynn, John M. Dem Allegheny 10 Kelly, M. Clyde Rep Erie 1 Shreve, Milton W. Rep Allegheny 11 Allen, George W. Rep Erie 2 Detzel, Frank J. Dem Allegheny 11 Cox, John F. -
Taft and Mexico: Neutrality, Intervention and Recognition, 1910-1913
Taft and Mexico: neutrality, intervention and recognition, 1910-1913 Item Type text; Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Farrier, Paul Everest, 1934- Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 06/10/2021 06:54:36 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/551865 TAFT AND MEXICO: NEUTRALITY, INTERVENTION AND RECOGNITION, 1910 - 1913 by Paul E. Farrier, Jr. A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the HISTORY DEPARTMENT In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS In the Graduate College THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA 19 6 6 STATEMENT BY AUTHOR This thesis has been submitted in partial fulfill ment of requirements for an advanced degree at the Uni versity of Arizona and is deposited in the University Library to be made available to borrowers under rules of the Library. Brief quotations from this thesis are allowable without special permission, provided that accurate acknow ledgment of source is made. Requests for permission for extended quotation from or reproduction of this manuscript in whole or in part may be granted by the head of the major department or the Dean of the Graduate College when in his judgment the proposed use of the material is in the interests of scholarship. In all other instances, however, permission must be obtained from the author. — \ / SIGNED: APPROVAL BY THESIS DIRECTOR This thesis has been approved on the date shown below: i&C. -
CHAPTER VIII the PRESENT ROSTER of PENNSYLVANIA CONFERENCE We Present Herewith a Brief Record of the Service Rendered by The
CHAPTER VIII THE PRESENT ROSTER OF PENNSYLVANIA CONFERENCE We present herewith a brief record of the service rendered by the presi ent personnel of the conference, corrected to October 7, 1937, the close. of the last conference preceding the publication of this history. Jn chapter five will be found the dates of joining the conference, ordination, etc. With but few exceptions the pictures in this chapter are recent ones, taken especially for this publication. ELDERS ANDREWS, ELMER R.-Mont Alto, 1926-1928; Rohrersville, 1928-1931; Fayetteville, 1931-1934; Chewsville, 1934-- ANKERBRAND, CHAS. M.-Biglerville, 1923-1929; Winterstown, 1929- 1933; Waynesboro, 1933- AYRES, ALEXANDER R.-Perry Circuit, 1881-1884; Duncannon Mission Station, 1884-1886; Boiling Springs Circuit, 1886-1890; Shippensburg Mission Station, 1890-1899; Presiding Elder, 1899-1902; Second Church York, 1902-1914; New Cumberland, 1914-l922; Lemoyne, 1922-1923; Local; Conference Superintendent, July 1, 1925 - October, 1925 ; Retired. BAKER, HARRY P.-Carlisle Circuit, 1916-1917; Dover, 1917-1920;.Sher . mansdale, 1920-1925; Oakville, 1925-1930; Duncannon, 1930~ BEACHLEY, R. K-Chewsville, 1921-1925; Fayetteville, 1925-1926; In structor Quincy Orphanage and ~ome, 1926-1928; local. BEATTIE, W. M.-Rohrersville, 1904-1908; Dillsburg, 1908-1910; Mt. Wolf, 1910-1914; Greencastle, 1914-1920; Keedysville, 1920-1922; York, Fifth, 1922-1925; Hanover, 1925-1927; Shiremanstown, 1927- 1930; Gettysburg, 1930-1933; Williamsport, 1933-1937; Jefferson, 1937- BLUBAUGH, B. F.-(U. B. Church, Old Constitution: Carlisle, 1910-12; Shippensburg, 1912-14; Lemasters, 1914-17; King St. Chambersburg;- 1917-26) Myersville, 1926-33; Baltimore, Franklin St., 1933- BOUGHTER, H. DIXON-Member of Oregon Conference, 1922-1930; President of Philomath College, Philomath, Oregon, 1922-1926; Greenmount, (Pa. -
Typhus in Mexico City in 1915
Gaceta Médica de México. 2016;152 Contents available at PubMed www.anmm.org.mx PERMANYER Gac Med Mex. 2016;152:226-30 www.permanyer.com GACETA MÉDICA DE MÉXICO SYMPOSIUM Typhus in Mexico City in 1915 Martha Eugenia-Rodríguez* Department of History and Philosophy of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, UNAM, Mexico City, Mexico Abstract The year 1915 was particularly difficult; it was characterized by droughts, famines, and outbreaks of diseases including typhus. This text exposes its spread in Mexico City as well as the measures implemented to combat it, carried out before knowing the etiology of the illness, focused on cleaning up the environment and the measures undertaken afterwards with the aim of delousing people. (Gac Med Mex. 2016;152:226-30) Corresponding author: Eugenia Rodríguez, [email protected] KEY WORDS: Typhus. Epidemic. Mexico City. Huerta, since the victorious groups started competing ntroduction I with each other, Constitutionalists, Villistas and Zapa- tistas, since each one of them wanted to enforce its The Mexican Revolution was an armed conflict that authority at the national level1. started on November 20, 1910 against Porfirio Díaz After multiple armed confrontations, in October 1915, dictatorship, during which, although it is true that Mex- the Constitutionalist faction was victorious and Carran- ico experienced considerable political stability, there za’s administration gained recognition from the US were high economic and social costs to be paid by the government. Until the end of that year and during 1916, most vulnerable strata of society. After intense pro- the new leader worked to adjust his national project, tests, Díaz left power in May 1911. -
Case Histories: Fires Influencing the Life Safety Code
SUPPLEMENT 1 Case Histories: Fires Influencing the Life Safety Code Paul E. Teague, M.A. Updated by Chief Ronald R. Farr Editor’s Note: This supplement illustrates how historically significant fires have led to improvements in the Life Safety Code. Paul E. Teague, former editor of Fire Journal magazine, is a veteran award-winning engineering journalist. Currently, he is the national editor and supplements director for Design News magazine, the largest mechanical engineering magazine in the United States. Ronald Farr is the Fire Chief of Kalamazoo Township Fire Department in Kalama- zoo, Michigan. Codes and standards are living documents. Born of none has had a bigger impact than the Triangle the efforts of men and women to make their envi- Shirtwaist fire of March 25, 1911. It was the Triangle ronment safer, codes and standards grow into matu- Shirtwaist fire that prompted creation of NFPA’s rity based on fire experience and the observations Committee on Safety to Life and, ultimately, devel- and research of those responsible for them. The best opment of the Code itself. codes and standards, such as those produced by NFPA, never age, as they are continually updated TRIANGLE SHIRTWAIST FIRE with new information that allows them to adapt to an ever-changing world. Since its founding in 1896, NFPA has always placed Such is the case with NFPA 101®, Life Safety special importance on its life safety work. NFPA’s Code®. Originally known as the Building Exits Code, it original objectives, “establishing proper safeguards had its origins in the effort to make factories safer against loss of life and property by fire,” placed life for workers in the early days of the twentieth cen- safety ahead of property protection.