October 10,1867
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Newsletter #13
Newsletter #13 Welcome to the latest edition of my irregular updates newsletter and thank you for your continued interest and support. More features this time about my latest additions, items I'd like, auctions and other interesting sites. As ever, clicking on the picture or highlighted text in each item below will take you to a more detailed site, either mine or the relevant one. Also, if you know of anyone else who might be interested in receiving this newsletter please ask them to get in touch with me via the site or perhaps YOU could provide me with their email address. Another highlight from my website Perhaps it's an oddity, but I don't care and I'm going to include this here. It's the earliest item that I have of anything resembling HTAFC memorabilia - a sadly incomplete newspaper report of Town's 6-1 West Riding Cup 2nd Round tie against Clayton West on 20th March, 1909 at a time when Town was only a Midland League team. Of interest here is the mention in the third paragraph of 'The Redskins' which MUST be Town because Howard - who kicks clear - is a Town player; so does this prove that Town played in red at this time? All Town fans know that we were at one time known as 'The Scarlet Runners' due to playing in red shirts - later to become pink as the colour ran after all too-frequent washes! - and this would appear to be the evidence that was required. This brilliant piece of history is glued to the back of the telegram that I have announcing Town's acceptance into the Football League soon after in 1910. -
Portland Daily Press: December 25, 1877
PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. ESTABLISHED JUNE 23, 1862 VOL. 15. PORTLAND, TUESDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 25, 1877. TERMS $8.00 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE THE PORTLAND DAILY PRESS, BUSINESS CARDS. MISCELLANEOUS. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. EDUCATIONAL. THE PEESS. The anti-Mongolian excitement seems to be on the and there are those who Published the increase, every day (Sundays excepted) by believe Horse Shoeing, Otis Place School, TUESDAY MORNING, DEC. 25. that we ought to give up, at the de- PORTLAND PUBLISHING CO. ELRRIDGR by N. YOUNG & CO.. Practical Horae mand of the hoodlum statesmen of the GERM, JR., Shoera* 70 Pearl St. Price $1*50 per set B O STON• Pacific At 103 Exchange St., Portland. Bona-fide of We do not read anonymous etters and communi- slope, the advantageous commercial Slaughter cations. Tbe name and address of the writer are in relations we Booksellers and Stationers. 4 SCHOOL of the character for sustain with and turn Terms: Eight Dollars a Year in advance. To highest yonng China, ** ladies. The course of for the all cases not for mail subscribers Seven Dollars a Year if paid in ad- at HOYT a- FOGG, No. 91 Middle Street, study prepares indispensable, necessarily publication over the trade to merchants. Bat Law, Harvard Examinations tor Women. European vance. but as a guaranty of faith. Attorney A home is good oar merchants do not pleasant under careful supervision take that view of the ST. We com- 49 1-2 EXCHANGE Book Binders. provided for hoarding cannot undertake to return or preserve nov29 dtf pupils. matter. THE MAINE STATE PRESS WJI. -
Maine Crusades and Crusaders, 1830-1850 and Addenda
Maine History Volume 17 Number 4 Article 3 4-1978 Maine Crusades and Crusaders, 1830-1850 and Addenda Richard P. Mallett University of Maine Farmington Roger Ray Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistoryjournal Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Mallett, Richard P., and Roger Ray. "Maine Crusades and Crusaders, 1830-1850 and Addenda." Maine History 17, 4 (1978): 183-214. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistoryjournal/vol17/ iss4/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine History by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. RICHARD P. MALLETT Maine Crusades and Crusaders, 1830-1850 Soon after John Winthrop disembarked from the Arbella in 1630, he expressed the desire to see the Massachusetts Bay Colony build a city upon a hill that would promote the greater glory of God, and serve as a model for all mankind. Emphasizing as it would the sovereignty of God and a pious approach to community problems, this transplanted religious group was envisioned as develop ing an unprecedented sobriety of manners and purity o f morals. Some two hundred years later, it was obvious that Winthrop’s hopes had been somewhat excessive, but some descendants of the early Massachusetts settlers showed the same burning desire to know the will o f God as had the early colonists. The main difference was that in the nineteenth century the moral and religious zeal of the Puritans frequently took the form o f social reform and utopianism. -
Making Blacks Foreigners: the Legal Construction of Former Slaves in Post-Revolutionary Massachusetts Kunal Parker
University of Miami Law School University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository Articles Faculty and Deans 2001 Making Blacks Foreigners: The Legal Construction of Former Slaves in Post-Revolutionary Massachusetts Kunal Parker Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.miami.edu/fac_articles Part of the Legal History Commons Making Blacks Foreigners: The Legal Construction of Former Slaves in Post-Revolutionary Massachusetts Kunal M Parker* I. INTRODUCTION How might one conceive of African-American history as U.S. immigration history, and with what implications for our understanding of immigration itself? The historiography of U.S. immigration has been heavily invested in producing an idea of immigrants as individuals who move from "there" to "here," with both "there" and "here" taken to be actually existing territorial entities. Even a cursory inspection of the titles of vastly different immigration histories--Oscar Handlin's The Uprooted: The Epic Story of the Great Migrations that Made the American People, Ronald Takaki's Strangersfrom a Different Shore: A History ofAsian Americans, and Roger Daniels' Coming to America: A History of Immigration and Ethnicity in American Life-testifies to the centrality of spatial movement in historians' understanding of immigration. Over the years, African-Americans have been represented differently depending upon the kinds of spatial movement that immigration historians have elected to valorize Until recently, African-Americans tended to fare poorly within the historiography of U.S. immigration because of the weight immigration historians placed on voluntarism in spatial movement. As it emerged in the 1920s, the "Whiggish" historiography of U.S. immigration celebrated the figure of the immigrant as an individual who "chose" to move from "there" (the Old World) to "here" (the New World) in search of freedom, opportu- *Associate-Professor of Law, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Cleveland State University. -
Edward Parry B. December 9Th, 1892 Colwyn Bay D. November 18Th, 1976, Colwyn Bay
Edward Parry b. December 9th, 1892 Colwyn Bay d. November 18th, 1976, Colwyn Bay Edward was the son of Hugh Parry and Margaret Foulkes. Born December 9th, 1892, he was the third of six siblings, the others being Thomas (1888), Hugh (1890), Maggie (1896), John (1898) and Fred (1902). Hugh and Margaret lived with Margaret's widowed mother at 13 Park Road, Llandrilo ym Rhos, Colwyn Bay, a two story 6 bedroomed house, in the 1891 census. Edward was born the following year and by 1901 they had moved to, they were living at Oswell Villa, Bryn Asaph, Llandrillo ym Rhos, Colwyn Bay. By 1911, Edward and his family were at Rhiw Bank Avenue in Colwyn Bay. Edward was working as a Painter (presumably Painter and Decorator) and the family had 6 boaeders, all Painters, from different parts of the country. Edward had an ability at and a love for football, and joined Colwyn Bay Colts in 1910 and played with them for 11 years. During that time Ted beame acknowledged as one of the best full baks in the region and was rewarded with an Amateur International call up for Wales as the archives tell. Welsh Football Data Archives The North Wales Coast League Season 1920-21 was probably the best season the League ever experienced. There were 12 clubs in Division 1, and 14 in Division II. Division I.— Holyhead. Holywell, Denbigh, Bangor, Blaenau Festiniog, Llandudno, Colwyn Bay, Conway, Caernarvon, Llanrwst, Portmadoc, Ogwen Valley. Division II.— Llechid Celts, Glasinfryn Swifts, Abergele, Pemnaenmnwr, Holyhead R.I. Reserves, Bangor Athletic Reserves, Llanfairfechan, Caernarvon Athletic Res., Nantlle Vale, Menai Bridge, Llanberis Com-rades, Dolgarrog. -
The Colonial Agent: Imperial Lobbyist
VO L. 1 THE CLEMENTS LIBRARY ASSO C IATES N O .1 THE QVARTO, wealth of new material available to interest to the British governm ent. them, and to encourage those who have Some were Americans living in NEW SERlES not yet visited the Library to come and London, others were Englishmen who explore. We take advantage of this had neve r seen the colonies, many were With the hope that friend s and col occasion, this renewal, to greet old lawyers, some were Members of leagues will enjoy hearing news of our friends and welcome new ones to the Parliament, but all of them were activities, the Cleme nts Library proudly Clements Library. familiar with government politics, resumes publication of The Quarto. In acco mplished in the art of "dancing 1942 Library Director attendance" on the Randolph Adams officials who made began The Qua rto as colonial policy. an occasional publica They frequented the tion aimed at the rare coffeehouses of book and manuscript Westminister and collector. Five years the City, where later, when the politicians, bankers, Clements Library and merchants Associates was trading with the founded, it became colonies gathered to the newsletter of this talk and read the first "friends" latest Lond on news organization at The or American Universi ty of Michi dispatches. Regu gan, occup ying this larly attending the role until the 1980s. House of Commons, Much has changed they followed the since then, and we Charle ston was a thriving port in the /7605. Exports of rice and indigo, both crops debates from the want to reflect those cultivated by slave lahor, brought annual profi ts ofhalfa million pounds sterling visitors' gallery and changes in The into the South 's only large colonial city. -
Calculated for the Use of the State Of
317.3M31 H41 AIICHIVM H^*' Digitized by tine Internet Arcliive in 2009 witli funding from University of IVIassacliusetts, Boston littp://www.arcliive.org/details/pocketalmanackfo1823amer : ;; J^>^\iuS^,J^n^^qg^,^T ^s^S^^^^T^i)a,r ^^^^Q^q^ ^^j;:^ ^'^ THE MASSACHUSETTS AND Unit^ed States Calendar For the Year of ouh LORD * 18^ a, aad Forty-seventh of j^msricai/ /NDBPEAfOENCE. coNTAiariwG I Civil, Judicial, Eccl'fsiastical and Military Lisfs in MASSACHUSETTS; Associations, and Corporatk Institutions for literary^ agricultural^ and charitable Purposes. A List 'if Po&T-TowNS n Massachusetts, titith f/ic| Names o^ the Post-Masters. CITY OFFICERS IIS" BOSTON. also, Catalogues of the Officers of the GENERAL GOVERNMENT, With its several Departments and Establishments Times of the Sittings of the several Courts; Governors in each State ; And a Variety of other interesting Articles. BOSTON PUBLISHED BY JAMES LORING, AND RICHARDSON^ 8c LORD. Soldwholesale and retail, at their Book-stores, Comhil ECLIPSES FOR'1823. There will be nolens than six Eclipses this year, four will be of the Suri^ and two of the Moon^ in the follow- ing order, v iz. I. Thefirstwill be of the Sun, January 12(hday,4h.l0m. morning, consequently invisible. Moon's lat. i° 24' N. II. The second will be of the Moon, January 26th day, Oh. 27m. evening, of course invisible. III. The third will be of the Sun» February 10th day, lOh. 21ni. evening-, likewise invisible. IV. The fourth will be of the Sun, July 8lh day, near 2h. morning, also invisible. V. The iiCth will be a total Eclipse of the Moon, begin- ning July 22d, and ending on the 23d, visible, as follows: Beginning, July 22d, 8h. -
The Green Jersey Journey
THE GREEN JERSEY JOURNEY 1886-2021 Written & Researched by Roger Walters This document can be found on greensonscreen.co.uk, a website run as a service to fellow Plymouth Argyle supporters in all good faith and without commercial or private gain. The author and I have no wish to abuse copyright regulations and apologise unreservedly if this occurs. If you own any of the material used in this document and object to its inclusion, or if you would like to comment in general, please write to [email protected]. THE GREEN JERSEY JOURNEY Contents Argyle Football Club 1886 - 1903 ….. page 3 to 8. Faded Green ….. page 9. What Shade Of Green Is Argyle? ..... page 10 to 11. Plymouth Argyle from 1903 ….. page 12 to 21. The Green Journey from 1960 ….. page 22 to 35. The Numbered Shirt ….. page 36 to 37. The Plymouth Argyle ‘Change’ Shirt ….. page 38 to 44. The Plymouth Argyle Shirt Suppliers ….. page 45 to 46. The Plymouth Argyle Shirt Manufacturers ….. page 47 to 55. The History Of The Football Shirt/Jersey & Kit ….. page 56 to 60. The Football Shirt/Jersey & Kit Materials ….. 61 to 64. In The Dressing Room ….. page 65 to 66. Green Shirt Conclusion ….. page 67. Association Football Shirt Websites ….. page 67. Association Football Shirt Books ….. page 67. The Rise & Fall Of The Fitted Football Jersey Inventor ….. page 68 to 70. Written & Researched by Roger Walters 2 July 2020 THE GREEN JERSEY JOURNEY ARGYLE FOOTBALL CLUB 1886 – 1903. Why did Argyle choose green? For sporting teams in Devon, green was a popular football shirt choice, probably more so than elsewhere in Britain other than the clubs of Scotland and Ireland where it had religious Catholic significance. -
A History of English Goldsmiths and Plateworkers
; 6HH G r~L D A AUBIF ABBOBUM. frjtoj of <fegl:b| (Solbsimtjjs anb |1httcborko, AND THEIR MARKS STAMPED ON PLATE P COPIED IN AC-SIMILE FROM CELEBRATED EXAMPLES J AND THE EARLIEST RECORDS PRESERVED AT GOLDSMITHS' HALL, LONDON, WITH THEIR NAMES, ADDRESSES, AND DATES OF ENTRY. 2,500 ILLUSTRATIONS. ALSO HISTORICAL ACCOUNTS OF THE GOLDSMITHS' COMPANY AND THEIR HALL MARKS; THE REGALIA; THE MINT; CLOSING OF THE EXCHEQUER GOLDSMITH-BANKERS; SHOP SIGNS; A COPIOUS INDEX, ETC. PRECEDED BY AN INTRODUCTORY ESSAY ON THE GOLDSMITHS' AET. BY WILLIAM CHAFFERS, AUTHOR OF " HALL MARKS ON GOLD AND SILVER PLATE," " L'ORFEVRERIE FRANCAISE," " MARKS AND MONOGRAMS ON POTTERY AND PORCELAIN " " THE KERAMIC GALLERY " (ILLUSTRATED), " THE COLLECTOR'S HANDBOOK OF MARKS AND MONOGRAMS ON POTTERY AND PORCELAIN," " PRICED CATALOGUE OF COINS," ETC. The Companion to "HALL MARKS ON GOLD AND SILVER PLATE," by the same Author. LONDON: W. H. ALLEN & CO., 13 WATERLOO PLACE. PUBLISHERS TO THE INDIA OFFICE. clo.Io.ccc.Lxxxin. All rights reserved.) : LONDON PRINTED BY W. H. ALL EX AND CO., 13 WATERLOO PLACE. 8.W. PKEFACE. The former work of the writer, entitled " Hall Marks on Gold and Silver Plate," has been so extensively patronised by the public as to call for six editions since the date of its first appearance in I860, supplying a most important aid to Ama- teurs and Collectors of Old Plate, enabling them to ascertain the precise date of manufacture by the sign manual of the Goldsmiths' Company, stamped upon it when sent to be assayed. That it has been generally appreciated is evident from the fact that it is to be found in the hands of every leading Goldsmith in the United Kingdom, as well as Amateurs and Possessors of family plate. -
Descendants of Henry WEBB
Descendants of Henry WEBB 1-Henry WEBB1 was born on 15 May 1350 in Warwickshire, England.1 General Notes: Webb history from Virginia Webb. The WEBB family was originally from Dorset, a shire on the southern coast of Wales in England. For nearly two hundred years the WEBBs had resided in this place which is near Stratford-on-Avon before Alexander Jr with his four sons came to America. The brothers had become quite wealthy. They sold their estate in England for a large sum of money prior to their departure. This English property was inherited through their ancestor, Sir Henry Webb. A copy of the letter which Queen Catherine Parr sent her Council (Cabinet Ministers) asking them to grant her beloved friend, Henry Webb, the lands and estates that had been mentioned for him is still extant and in possession of Dr George F Webb of Astabula, Ohio to whom much of the historical data of the Webb family is credited. These lands had been confiscated by the King at the suppression of the monasteries and were located in Dorsetshire, England. In later years they became of value to the children who came to America. Henry married and had 1 child, Geofrey 2-Geofrey WEBB1 was born on 12 Apr 1372 in Warwickshire, England.1 General Notes: Charles M. Selleck, A.M. (Rev.), Norwalk, Connecticut (parts 1 & 2), (Norwalk, Co:Pub by Arthur, 1896), F/104/N9/S4/1896, in custody of New England Historic Library, Boston, Suffolk County, Mass. p398. Geofrey married and had 1 child, John 3-John WEBB1 was born in 1405 in Warwickshire, England.1 General Notes: See Selleck, Rev. -
The Webb Bulletin Name Index - Volume 1, 2010
THE WEBB BULLETIN Volume 1, 2010 Index The Webb Bulletin Name Index - Volume 1, 2010 Great Britain Issue-Page Anne Webb, Wiltshire 3-20, 3-21 Anthony Webb, Wiltshire 3-20 [2], 3-21 [2] Benedict Webb, Thornbery, Thorneborough 4-21 [3] Benjamin Webb, Harpole - Northampton 2-21 [2] Berrington Webb, Gloucestershire 4-22 Daniel Webb, Esq., Monkton Farley, Wiltshire 3-21 [2] Deborah Webb, Inkstrey, Staffordshire 1-8 Charles Webb I, Longford, Gloucester 4-24 Cicely Webb, Canterbury 2-22 Cicely Webb, Northampton 2-22 Edith Webb, Adston - Northampton 2-22 Edmund Webb, Wiltshire 3-20, 3-21 [2] Edward Webb, Lingfield, Surrey 2-23 Edward Webb, Parish of St. Michael, Pembroke 2-23 Francis Webb, Canterbury 2-23 George Webb, Old Sodbury, Castle of Gloucester 4-19 [8] George Webb/Webbe, Old Sodbury 4-18 Hannah A. Webb, Holt 3-11 Henry Webb, Leys, Gloucestershire 4-21 Henry Webb, Liminster, Somerset 2-23 Henry Webb/Webbe, Chipping Sodbury 4-19 [2], 4-20 James Webb, St. Saviour’s, Southwark Co. 3-21 Jeremy Webb, deceased abroad, Canterbury 2-23 John Webb, Northampton 2-22 John Webb, Adston – Northampton 2-22 John Webb, Beggers Thorne 4-21 John Webb, Brington Magna - Northampton 2-22 John Webb, Burton-on-Trent, Co. Stafford 3-21 John Webb, Canterbury 2-22 John Webb, Clapton, Somerset 2-23 John Webb, Gloucester 4-20 John Webb, Longford, Wotton, Gloucester 4-24 [10] John Webb, Gloucestershire 4-21, 4-22 John Webb, Green’s Norton – Northampton 2-22 John Webb, Frittenden, Kent 3-9, 3-10 John Webb, Shitlanger - Northampton 2-21 [3], 2-22 [2] John Webb, St. -
Extended Notes for Toward Democracy
NOTES TO INTRODUCTION 1 EXTENDED NOTES FOR TOWARD DEMOCRACY Note to Readers The following notes, prepared with the help of Abigail Modaff of Harvard University, contain fuller documentation for James T. Kloppenberg, Toward Democracy: The Struggle for Self-Rule in European and American Thought, published by Oxford University Press in June, 2016. Page references within these notes refer to the print version of the book. As is indicated on p. 711 of that edition, many of the notes in this document contain a greater range of references and commentary than are available in the book. Readers will, however, find that a few of the notes that are followed by an asterisk in the print version do not differ from the notes in this document; those asterisks will be removed, and typographical errors corrected, in later printings of Toward Democracy. Introduction 1. See the UNESCO report edited by Richard McKeon, Democracy in a World of Tensions (Chicago, 1951), 522. Influential assessments of the universality of democracy at the turn of the twenty-first century include Amartya Sen, “Democracy as a Universal Value,” Journal of Democracy 10 (1999): 3–17; and the widely circulated report by Freedom House, Democracy’s Century: A Survey of Political Change in the Twentieth Century (New York, 1999), which reported that the number of democratic nations had mushroomed from a mere handful in 1900 to over 60 percent by the end of the century. Although those nations contained less than 40 percent of the world’s population, the report confidently predicted that the further expansion of democracy, now praised if not NOTES TO INTRODUCTION 2 yet practiced everywhere, was only a matter of time.