1 MG0096 F053 In02 It01 01 [Intelligencer Journal, 12 June 1978
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Lancaster County, Pennsylvania Charter Index 1874-1973
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania Charter Index 1874-1973 Transcribed from index books within the Lancaster County Archives collection Name of Organization Book Page Office 316th Infantry Association 1 57 Prothonotary 316th Infantry Association 3 57 Prothonotary A. B. Groff & Sons 4 334 Recorder of Deeds A. B. Hess Cigar Co., Inc. 2 558 Recorder of Deeds A. Buch's Sons' & Co. 2 366 Recorder of Deeds A. H. Hoffman Inc. 3 579 Recorder of Deeds A. M. Dellinger, Inc. 6 478 Recorder of Deeds A. N. Wolf Shoe Company (Denver, PA) 6 13 Recorder of Deeds A. N. Wolf Shoe Company (Miller Hess & Co. Inc.) (merger) R-53 521 Recorder of Deeds A. P. Landis Inc. 6 554 Recorder of Deeds A. P. Snader & Company 3 3 Recorder of Deeds A. S. Kreider Shoe Manufacturing Co. 5 576 Recorder of Deeds A. T. Dixon Inc. 5 213 Recorder of Deeds Academy Sacred Heart 1 151 Recorder of Deeds Acme Candy Pulling Machine Co. 2 290 Recorder of Deeds Acme Metal Products Co. 5 206 Recorder of Deeds Active Social & Beneficial Association 5 56 Recorder of Deeds Active Social and Beneficial Association 2 262 Prothonotary Actor's Company 5 313 Prothonotary Actor's Company (amendment) 5 423 Prothonotary Adahi Hunting Club 5 237 Prothonotary Adams and Perry Watch Manufacturing Co., Lancaster 1 11 Recorder of Deeds Adams and Perry Watch Manufacturing Co., Lancaster (amendment) 1 46 Recorder of Deeds Adams County Girl Scout Council Inc. (Penn Laurel G. S. Council Inc.) E-51 956 Recorder of Deeds Adamstown Bicentennial Committee Inc. 4 322 Prothonotary Adamstown Bicentennial Committee Inc. -
Sample Pages
Introduction and Study Guide This is the first edition of Speakers of the House of Representatives 1789 - 2009. With infor- mation that has never before been gathered into one volume, it not only includes detailed biographies of the 53 men and woman who have served as Speaker, but offers a wealth of supportive material that combines for a complete picture of the Speakers and the speaker- ship - the history, the power, and the changes. With detailed content, thoughtful arrangement, and several “user guide” elements, Speakers of the House of Representatives is designed for multiple levels of study. CONTENT Speaker Biographies This major portion of the work - comprises 54 detailed biographies that average 7 pages long. This section is arranged chronologically, beginning with the first Speaker — Frederick Muhlenberg, who began his term in 1789 - and ending with the current Speaker - Nancy Pelosi, who was elected in 2007 as the first female Speaker of the House. Each biography starts off with an image of the Speaker and dates of service, and thoughtfully categorized into logical subsections that guide the reader through the details: Personal History; Early Years in Congress; The Vote; Acceptance Speech; Legacy as Speaker; After Leaving the Speakership. Each biography is strengthened by direct quotations — easily identified in italics — of the Speaker, or influential colleagues of the time. In addition, scattered throughout the bio- graphical section are unique, original graphics - from autographs to personal letters - that not only give the reader an inside look at the Speaker, but also at the times during which he served. Biographies also include Further Reading, and cross references to Primary Docu- ments that appear later in the book. -
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912 Biographical Directory to California in 1877 and established a wholesale fruit and D commission business; was a member of the National Guard of California, and subsequently assisted in the organization DADDARIO, Emilio Quincy, a Representative from of the Coast Guard, of which he later became brigadier Connecticut; born in Newton Center, Suffolk County, Mass., general in command of the Second Brigade; elected as a September 24, 1918; attended the public schools in Boston, Republican to the Fifty-second Congress (March 4, 1891- Mass., Tilton (N.H.) Academy, and Newton (Mass.) Country March 3, 1893); declined to be a candidate for renomination Day School; graduated from Wesleyan University, Middle- in 1892; in 1894 settled in New York City, where he became town, Conn., in 1939; attended Boston University Law interested in the automobile industry; retired to Westport, School 1939-1941; transferred to University of Connecticut N.Y., in 1907; died in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, November and graduated in 1942; was admitted to the bar in Con- 24, 1911; interment in Hillside Cemetery, Westport, N.Y. necticut and Massachusetts in 1942 and commenced the practice of law in Middletown, Conn.; in February 1943 en- CUTTS, Charles, a Senator from New Hampshire; born listed as a private in the United States Army; assigned in Portsmouth, N.H., January 31, 1769; graduated from Har- to the Office of Strategic Services at Fort Meade, Md.; served vard University in 1789; studied law; admitted to the bar overseas in the Mediterranean Theater; was separated -
Civil War Causes
Civil War Causes http://www.etymonline.com/cw/apologia.htm APOLOGIA The material here presented is meant to illuminate certain aspects of American history from the Civil War era, but it is also meant to establish arguments and to answer other arguments, either among professional historians or average Americans. Civil War Causes Some of the chapters will give due appreciation of the military effort put forth by the South -- both in comparison to the North and in its own Economics right -- establish the legitimacy of the South's bid for independence, and Yankee Canards encourage respect for the will to fight shown by the people of the Mulattoes Southern states. Others will re-emphasize that racism and slavery were, Northern Racism and remain, national experiences. Still others will give economics and Slavery as History politics their proper roles as causes of the American Civil War. Rebel View Lincoln I am born and raised in the North; I have no moonlight-and-magnolias Lincoln and Race sentimental attachment to the ante-bellum South. I live in an urban Thaddeus Stevens neighborhood, and I teach my child to judge the people around him by Sidelights on Christiana their deeds and character, not their pigment. I have no moral argument 1860 Election to make in favor of American slavery, though, unlike some, I won't Secession condemn every slaveowner in history as a monster. Legal Issues Cornerstone Speech These sort of disclaimers must be made. Anyone, even the most Upper South respected historian, who defends or even speaks objectively about the What Cost Union? Old South or the Confederacy is liable to be shouted down. -
Final-Architecture and Landscape.Pdf
Architecture and Landscape of the Pennsylvania Germans, 1720–1920 This page intentionally left blank Architecture and Landscape of the Pennsylvania Germans, 1720–1920 Q edited by sally mcmurry and nancy van dolsen University of Pennsylvania Press Philadelphia ∙ Oxford Copyright ᭧ 2011 University of Pennsylvania Press All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher. Published by University of Pennsylvania Press Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Architecture and landscape of the Pennsylvania Germans, 1720–1920 / edited by Sally McMurry and Nancy Van Dolsen. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 978-0-8122-4278-2 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. Vernacular architecture—Pennsylvania—Pennsylvania Dutch Country. 2. Cultural landscapes—Pennsylvania—Pennsylvania Dutch Country. I. McMurry, Sally Ann, 1954– II. Van Dolsen, Nancy. na730.p4a73 2011 720.9748—dc22 2010022113 Contents Q List of Illustrations vii introduction Architecture and Landscape of the Pennsylvania Germans, 1720–1920 Sally McMurry and Nancy Van Dolsen 1 chapter one Landscapes Gabrielle Lanier 10 chapter two Rural Houses Sally McMurry 32 chapter three Domestic Outbuildings Philip E. Pendleton 66 chapter four Barns and Agricultural Outbuildings Sally McMurry and J. Ritchie Garrison 94 chapter five Town House: From Borough to City, Lancaster’s Changing Streetscape Bernard L. Herman, Thomas Ryan, and David Schuyler 124 chapter six Commerce and Culture: Pennsylvania German Commercial Vernacular Architecture Diane Wenger and J. -
H. Doc. 108-222
1854 Biographical Directory County, N.Y., and Wellsboro Academy, Wellsboro, Pa.; stud- Eighty-second Congresses); interment in Forest Home Ceme- ied law; was admitted to the bar in 1847 and commenced tery, Forest Park, Ill. practice in Lawrenceville, Pa.; district attorney of Tioga Bibliography: Boxerman, Burton A. ‘‘Adolph Joachim Sabath in Con- County 1850-1856; during the Civil War assisted in the or- gress: The Early Years, 1907-1932.’’ Journal of the Illinois State Historical ganization of Company A of the famous Bucktail Regiment; Society 66 (Autumn 1973): 327-40; Boxerman, Burton A. ‘‘Adolph Joachim appointed by Governor Curtin paymaster with the rank of Sabath in Congress: The Roosevelt and Truman Years.’’ Journal of the Il- linois State Historical Society66 (Winter 1973): 428-43. major in the reserve corps; moved to Pottsville, Pa., and resumed the practice of law; elected as a Democrat to the SABIN, Alvah, a Representative from Vermont; born in Forty-sixth Congress (March 4, 1879-March 3, 1881); presi- Georgia, Franklin County, Vt., October 23, 1793; attended dent of the Pennsylvania National Bank for several years; the common schools and Burlington College; member of the also interested in various other business enterprises; died State militia and served during the War of 1812; studied in Pottsville, Schuylkill County, Pa., March 12, 1901; inter- theology in Philadelphia; was graduated from Columbian ment in St. Patrick’s (No. 3) Cemetery. College (now George Washington University), Washington, D.C., in 1821; was ordained a minister and preached at RYTER, Joseph Francis, a Representative from Con- Cambridge, Westfield, and Underhill until 1825, when he necticut; born in Hartford, Conn., February 4, 1914; at- returned to Georgia, Vt.; was pastor of the Georgia Baptist tended the parochial schools and St. -
National Register of Historic Places 2005 Weekly Lists
National Register of Historic Places 2005 Weekly Lists January 7, 2005 ............................................................................................................................................. 3 January 14, 2005 ........................................................................................................................................... 6 January 21, 2005 ........................................................................................................................................... 9 January 28, 2005 ......................................................................................................................................... 12 February 4, 2005 ......................................................................................................................................... 16 February 11, 2005 ....................................................................................................................................... 19 February 18, 2005 ....................................................................................................................................... 22 February 25, 2005 ....................................................................................................................................... 25 March 4, 2005 ............................................................................................................................................. 28 March 11, 2005 .......................................................................................................................................... -
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress 1774-2005
Biographies 1357 JUDSON, Andrew Thompson, a Representative from January 1, 1921, and served until December 31, 1922, when Connecticut; born in Eastford, Windham County, Conn., No- he resigned; resumed the practice of law until his death vember 29, 1784; received a limited schooling; studied law; in Chicago, Ill., on December 4, 1929; interment in Mount was admitted to the bar in 1806; moved to Montpelier, Vt., Olive Cemetery. where he began the practice of law; returned to Connecticut and settled in Canterbury in 1809; State’s attorney for Windham County 1819-1833; member of the State house K of representatives 1822-1825; elected as a Jacksonian to the Twenty-fourth Congress and served from March 4, 1835, KADING, Charles August, a Representative from Wis- until July 4, 1836, when he resigned; appointed by President consin; born in Lowell, Dodge County, Wis., January 14, Jackson United States judge for the district of Connecticut 1874; attended the country schools, Lowell graded school, June 28, 1836, and served until his death in Canterbury, Horicon High School, and the University of Wisconsin at Conn., March 17, 1853; interment in Hyde Cemetery. Madison; was graduated from the law department of Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Ind., in 1900; was admit- JULIAN, George Washington, a Representative from ted to the bar the same year and commenced practice in Indiana; born near Centerville, Wayne County, Ind., on May Watertown, Wis.; also interested in agricultural pursuits; 5, 1817; attended the common schools; studied law; was city attorney -
The Unveiling of the Eichholtz Tablet and Valuable Notes Concerning Some Portraits by the Distinguished Artist, Jacob Eichholtz by PROFESSOR HORACE R
The Unveiling of the Eichholtz Tablet and Valuable Notes Concerning Some Portraits by the Distinguished Artist, Jacob Eichholtz by PROFESSOR HORACE R. BARNES The unveiling of the Memorial tablet to Jacob Eichholtz, one of Lan- caster County's most distinguished artists, marked another contribution by The Lancaster County Historical Society, not only to the city, but also to the county and to the state of Pennsylvania. The exercises were held Sunday afternoon, October 13, 1935, on South Lime Street, Lancaster, Pennsylvania; and the tablet was placed on the property No. 46 South Lime Street, where Mr. Eichholtz lived during the last ten years of his life. The Eichholtz Committee consisted of the following named persons in- terested in art and history: Mrs. Albert M. Herr, Chairman, Dr. Horace R. Barnes, Jacob Hill Byrne, William F. Worner, Judge B. C. Atlee, David B. Landis, Mrs. Judith Bauer, Dr. George F. Mull, Dr. H. H. Apple, Dr. Arthur P. Mylin, Judge William H. Keller, Mrs. Charles S. Foltz, Mrs. Charles Y. Tanger, William Shand, Col. James Hale Steinman, Col. John H. Wickersham, Mary Black Diller, Charles Demuth, Mrs. John E. Malone, James Leman, Dr. John A. Schaeffer, E. Grant Eichholtz, Martha Musser Bowman, Ger- trude Hensel Haldy, Mrs. David B. Landis, Walter A. Heinitsh, Laura J. Falck, Mrs. Pierce Lesher, Mrs. Charles P. Abraham, Frances D. Calder, George F. K. Erisman, Adelia Leman, L. B. Herr, I. C. Arnold, M. Luther Heisey, Mrs. A. K. Hostetter, C. H. Martin, Alphaeus M. Angstadt, John W. Lippold, Rev. Martin W. Schweitzer, Mayor James H. -
Lancaster County Guide Script
Pennsylvania Quest for Freedom Lancaster County Guide Script Guide Script . 1–27 Introduction . 1–3 Christiana . 4–5 Stop No. 1: Site of Christiana Resistance . 6–7 Stop No. 2: Christiana Underground Railroad Center . 8–10 Stop No. 3: Mt. Zion AME Church . 11 Bird-in-Hand. 12 Stop No. 4: Bird-in-Hand Bake Shop. 13 Gibbons Farm . 14 Stop No. 5: Lampeter Friends Meeting House . 15 Lancaster. 15–17 Stop No. 6: Bethel AME Church. 18 Stop No. 7: Stevens/Smith Historic Site . 19 Stop No. 8: Thaddeus Stevens Gravesite . 20–21 Columbia . 21 Stop No. 9: Zion Hill Cemetery . 22 Stop No. 10: First National Bank Museum . 23–24 Stop No. 11: Wright’s Ferry Mansion . 25 Stop No. 12: Columbia-Wrightsville Bridge . 26–27 Resource and Source Materials . 28–29 Appendix . 30–44 This Quest for Freedom script was created by Terri R. Durden of Tribute at Freedom’s Crossing, Inc., with assistance from Cara O’Donnell and Darlene Colon. Local community experts also added information and research to aid in the completion of this project. Tribute at Freedom’s Crossing Terri Durden P.O. Box 1088 Lancaster, PA 17608-1088 717-481-7935 [email protected] PA Dutch Convention & Visitors Bureau | QUEST FOR FREEDOM: LANCASTER COUNTY | 10/24/06 Pennsylvania Quest for Freedom Lancaster County Guide Script INTRODUCTION: To be delivered upon meeting the group or immediately following boarding of motorcoach. Good morning/afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I’d like to take a moment to welcome you to a Lancaster County you may have never seen before. -
James Buchanan Papers 0091 Finding Aid Prepared by Dana Dorman
James Buchanan papers 0091 Finding aid prepared by Dana Dorman. Last updated on November 09, 2018. Historical Society of Pennsylvania 2010 James Buchanan papers Table of Contents Summary Information....................................................................................................................................3 Biography/History..........................................................................................................................................4 Scope and Contents....................................................................................................................................... 6 Overview of Arrangement.............................................................................................................................6 Administrative Information........................................................................................................................... 7 Related Materials........................................................................................................................................... 8 Controlled Access Headings..........................................................................................................................8 Other Finding Aids......................................................................................................................................10 Bibliography.................................................................................................................................................10 -
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1094 Biographical Directory ciation of America, 1987-1998; is a resident of Arlington, 3, 1993-January 3, 1999); was not a candidate for reelection Va. in 1998 to the One Hundred Sixth Congress. FURCOLO, John Foster, a Representative from Massa- FUSTER, Jaime B., a Resident Commissioner from Puer- chusetts; born in New Haven, Conn., July 29, 1911; grad- to Rico; born January 12, 1941, in Guayama, Puerto Rico; uated from New Haven High School, New Haven, Conn.; attended parochial schools; B.A., Notre Dame University, graduated from Yale University, New Haven, Conn., 1933; 1962; J.D., University of Puerto Rico Law School, 1965; LL.B., Yale University, New Haven, Conn., 1936; lawyer, LL.M., Columbia University Law School, 1966; Law and Hu- private practice; United States Navy; elected as a Democrat manities Fellow, Harvard University, 1973-1974; professor to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses (January of law, 1966-1979, and dean of law, 1974-1978, University 3, 1949-September 30, 1952); Massachusetts state treasurer, of Puerto Rico; United States Deputy Assistant Attorney 1952-1954; unsuccessful candidate for election to the United General, 1980-1981; president, Catholic University of Puerto States Senate in 1954; governor of Massachusetts, January Rico, 1981-1984; elected as a Democrat to the United States 3, 1957-January 5, 1961; assistant district attorney, Mid- House of Representatives in 1984 for a four-year term; re- dlesex County, Mass., 1967; chairman, United States Attor- elected in 1988 and served from January 3, 1985, until ney General’s Advisory Committee on Narcotics, 1969; ad- his resignation March 4, 1992; associate justice, Supreme ministrative law judge, United States Occupational Safety Court of Puerto Rico; is a resident of Candado, San Juan, and Health Review Commission, 1975-1989; died on July P.R.