Crystal Falls, Iron County, Michigan
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Landmarks Preservation Commission March 24, 2009, Designation List 411 LP-2311 NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN MUSEUM
Landmarks Preservation Commission March 24, 2009, Designation List 411 LP-2311 NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN MUSEUM (now LIBRARY) BUILDING, FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, and TULIP TREE ALLEE, Watson Drive and Garden Way, New York Botanical Garden, Bronx Park, the Bronx; Museum Building designed 1896, built 1898-1901, Robert W. Gibson, architect; Fountain 1901-05, Carl (Charles) E. Tefft, sculptor, Gibson, architect; Allee planted 1903-11. Landmark Site: Borough of the Bronx Tax Map 3272, Lot 1 in part, consisting of the property bounded by a line that corresponds to the outermost edges of the rear (eastern) portion of the original 1898-1901 Museum (now Library) Building (excluding the International Plant Science Center, Harriet Barnes Pratt Library Wing, and Jeannette Kittredge Watson Science and Education Building), the southernmost edge of the original Museum (now Library) Building (excluding the Annex) and a line extending southwesterly to Garden Way, the eastern curbline of Garden Way to a point on a line extending southwesterly from the northernmost edge of the original Museum (now Library) Building, and northeasterly along said line and the northernmost edge of the original Museum (now Library) Building, to the point of beginning. On October 28, 2008, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the New York Botanical Garden Museum (now Library) Building, Fountain of Life, and Tulip Tree Allee and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 5). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Six people spoke in favor of designation, including representatives of the New York Botanical Garden, Municipal Art Society of New York, Historic Districts Council, Metropolitan Chapter of the Victorian Society in America, and New York Landmarks Conservancy. -
History of the Development of the ICD
History of the development of the ICD 1. Early history Sir George Knibbs, the eminent Australian statistician, credited François Bossier de Lacroix (1706-1777), better known as Sauvages, with the first attempt to classify diseases systematically (10). Sauvages' comprehensive treatise was published under the title Nosologia methodica. A contemporary of Sauvages was the great methodologist Linnaeus (1707-1778), one of whose treatises was entitled Genera morborum. At the beginning of the 19th century, the classification of disease in most general use was one by William Cullen (1710-1790), of Edinburgh, which was published in 1785 under the title Synopsis nosologiae methodicae. For all practical purposes, however, the statistical study of disease began a century earlier with the work of John Graunt on the London Bills of Mortality. The kind of classification envisaged by this pioneer is exemplified by his attempt to estimate the proportion of liveborn children who died before reaching the age of six years, no records of age at death being available. He took all deaths classed as thrush, convulsions, rickets, teeth and worms, abortives, chrysomes, infants, livergrown, and overlaid and added to them half the deaths classed as smallpox, swinepox, measles, and worms without convulsions. Despite the crudity of this classification his estimate of a 36 % mortality before the age of six years appears from later evidence to have been a good one. While three centuries have contributed something to the scientific accuracy of disease classification, there are many who doubt the usefulness of attempts to compile statistics of disease, or even causes of death, because of the difficulties of classification. -
Race, Riots, and Public Space in Harlem, 1900-1935
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works School of Arts & Sciences Theses Hunter College Spring 5-9-2017 The Breath Seekers: Race, Riots, and Public Space in Harlem, 1900-1935 Allyson Compton CUNY Hunter College How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/hc_sas_etds/166 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] The Breath Seekers: Race, Riots, and Public Space in Harlem, 1900-1935 by Allyson Compton Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History, Hunter College The City University of New York 2017 Thesis Sponsor: April 10, 2017 Kellie Carter Jackson Date Signature April 10, 2017 Jonathan Rosenberg Date Signature of Second Reader Table of Contents Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 1 Chapter 1: Public Space and the Genesis of Black Harlem ................................................. 7 Defining Public Space ................................................................................................... 7 Defining Race Riot ....................................................................................................... 9 Why Harlem? ............................................................................................................. 10 Chapter 2: Setting -
Americanizing the Movies and "Movie-Mad" Audiences, 1910-1914
Americanizing the Movies and “Movie-Mad” Audiences, 1910–1914 The publisher gratefully acknowledges the generous contribution to this book provided by Eric Papenfuse and Catherine Lawrence. Americanizing the Movies and “Movie-Mad” Audiences, 1910–1914 Richard Abel UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Berkeley Los Angeles London University of California Press, one of the most distinguished univer- sity presses in the United States, enriches lives around the world by advancing scholarship in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Its activities are supported by the UC Press Foundation and by philanthropic contributions from individuals and institutions. For more information, visit www.ucpress.edu. University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles, California University of California Press, Ltd. London, England © 2006 by The Regents of the University of California Several chapters and entr’actes are revised and expanded versions of earlier essays, which are listed in the acknowledgments on pages xvi–xvii. The A. A. Milne epigraph is from Winnie-the-Pooh (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1926), 70. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Abel, Richard, 1941– Americanizing the movies and “movie-mad” audiences, 1910–1914 / Richard Abel. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13, 978-0-520-24742-0 (cloth: alk. paper) ISBN-10, 0-520-24742-6 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-13, 978-0-520-24743-7 (pbk.: alk. paper) ISBN-10, 0-520-24743-4 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Motion pictures—United States—History. 2. Motion pic- tures—Social aspects—United States. 3. Nationalism—United States. I. Title: Americanizing the movies and “movie-mad” audi- ences, 1910–1914. -
Felipe Angeles| Military Intellectual of the Mexican Revolution, 1913--1915
University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1988 Felipe Angeles| Military intellectual of the Mexican Revolution, 1913--1915 Ronald E. Craig The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Craig, Ronald E., "Felipe Angeles| Military intellectual of the Mexican Revolution, 1913--1915" (1988). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 2333. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/2333 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. COPYRIGHT ACT OF 1976 THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPT IN WHICH COPYRIGHT SUBSISTS, ANY FURTHER REPRINTING OF ITS CONTENTS MUST BE APPROVED BY THE AUTHOR, MANSFIELD LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA DATE198ft FELIPE ANGELES: MILITARY INTELLECTUAL OF THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION 1913-1915 by Ronald E. Craig B.A., University of Montana, 1985 Presented in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Master of Arts University of Montana 1988 Chairman^ Bagprd—of—Examiners Dean, Graduate School / & t / Date UMI Number: EP36373 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. -
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945. T939. 311 rolls. (~A complete list of rolls has been added.) Roll Volumes Dates 1 1-3 January-June, 1910 2 4-5 July-October, 1910 3 6-7 November, 1910-February, 1911 4 8-9 March-June, 1911 5 10-11 July-October, 1911 6 12-13 November, 1911-February, 1912 7 14-15 March-June, 1912 8 16-17 July-October, 1912 9 18-19 November, 1912-February, 1913 10 20-21 March-June, 1913 11 22-23 July-October, 1913 12 24-25 November, 1913-February, 1914 13 26 March-April, 1914 14 27 May-June, 1914 15 28-29 July-October, 1914 16 30-31 November, 1914-February, 1915 17 32 March-April, 1915 18 33 May-June, 1915 19 34-35 July-October, 1915 20 36-37 November, 1915-February, 1916 21 38-39 March-June, 1916 22 40-41 July-October, 1916 23 42-43 November, 1916-February, 1917 24 44 March-April, 1917 25 45 May-June, 1917 26 46 July-August, 1917 27 47 September-October, 1917 28 48 November-December, 1917 29 49-50 Jan. 1-Mar. 15, 1918 30 51-53 Mar. 16-Apr. 30, 1918 31 56-59 June 1-Aug. 15, 1918 32 60-64 Aug. 16-0ct. 31, 1918 33 65-69 Nov. 1', 1918-Jan. 15, 1919 34 70-73 Jan. 16-Mar. 31, 1919 35 74-77 April-May, 1919 36 78-79 June-July, 1919 37 80-81 August-September, 1919 38 82-83 October-November, 1919 39 84-85 December, 1919-January, 1920 40 86-87 February-March, 1920 41 88-89 April-May, 1920 42 90 June, 1920 43 91 July, 1920 44 92 August, 1920 45 93 September, 1920 46 94 October, 1920 47 95-96 November, 1920 48 97-98 December, 1920 49 99-100 Jan. -
The Stetson Collegiate, Vol. 13, No. 04, January, 1903
University of Central Florida STARS Stetson Collegiate Newspapers and Weeklies of Central Florida 1-1-1903 The Stetson Collegiate, Vol. 13, No. 04, January, 1903 Stetson University Find similar works at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-stetsoncollegiate University of Central Florida Libraries http://library.ucf.edu This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers and Weeklies of Central Florida at STARS. It has been accepted for inclusion in Stetson Collegiate by an authorized administrator of STARS. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STARS Citation Stetson University, "The Stetson Collegiate, Vol. 13, No. 04, January, 1903" (1903). Stetson Collegiate. 493. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-stetsoncollegiate/493 The Stetson Collegiate VOLUME XIV. , 1 nf\-i NUMBER 4. January, 1903 THE STETSON COLLEGIATE THE OLD FASHIONED WAY When I zvas a lad I used to play "hookey" from school, go foraging for eggs and then "hike" off to the creek zvhere zve caught a mess of Ush; boiled our eggs in a tin can; split our fish in halves and baked them on a plank; picked berries in the spring of the year and in the fall gathered nuts for our desert—and zvhen zve got home at night usually got our "just desserts. 44 A Spread'' Is appreciated by anyone zvho enjoys the "good things" of life. The nearer we get to na ture the more enjoyment zve get out of life. A girl is neither less mischievious nor less ad venturesome than a boy—as one lad tersely expressed'it "They're just like kids, only they're different." The UP-TO-DATE GIRL zvaits until the "lights" are out and then steals softly dozvn the corridor to "Number pp" zvhere phantom-like figures are gathered around "a bunch" of WHITE FRONT dainties. -
December 1900
~olttt -W-ESTERN AUSTRALIA. [Published[Published byby Authority.)Authority.] Thi!<Thin (-jlJ(jiizettezettl ' is published for Police infot'mationinformation only, andand. the Police lhrogyhoulthroughout thl'thf ('n/ulI!!('oluuy rtrpare inlltntctedinstructed tofo makpmake them.~pl11P.qthemselves thm'oughlythoroughly acq1wintedaequoiiited with the content.~.contents. FRED.FIlED. HARE, CmnmissiolluCommissioner 0/of Police.Police. NoNo.. 49.J49.] WEDNESDAY,WEDNESDAY, DEC'.K\IBERDECEMBER 5J.. [HJOO.[1900. CCirculaircularr OrdersOrders anandd MiscellaneousMiscellaneous I'oat,coat, ]mint])aiut staistainn Ill}on rightriglit slesleev 'n';e ; a llarkdarl; tWt'etltweed "I'~tvest Information. alltland paipairr (Ifot trouserstrouser~;; aU paipairr ofof EnglishEnglish madIluulee }acc-uplace-up Information. hootshoot~,, narrownarrow toetOCHs wit hh totoPe caps(,<1.PS,, notnot mucmuchh worn,worn, C.OC.O.. xfiio-—Meinlier·d)~ij.-Memberss o(Iff tthhee Policl'Police POl"{'eForce areare "iz('size 8tl;; tht11('e pro])ertpropert,'v- ofof JameJamcss Robinson.Robin~()n—.- A~A2/7498 74!lH,, hhereberebyy informedinformed thathatt itit isis necessarnecessaryy jurorj nrorss forfor 3r:~r<ld D('C(December'lll bl 'r,, 10001900. coroners'oroner '' inquestinquestss sshalhalll bbee personpprsollss whoswhosee namenamess ;treare onon thethe JurJuryy LiListst.. Per//*.—BetweePl'l'th .-Bctweenn thcthe Hlth19th andand -2811~ th1 lilt.,ult., frofromm .')01501 WhenWhen requirerequired ttoo SUJl1summo111 011n aanu inquesincluestt jurjuryy theythey "\VWillia illiulllm Street,Street, a la(1,lady' \;s 1IBct et.. goMgold llllllhuntin t iugg ststem ('111-- musmLlstt liebe carefu(jarefull ttoo seseee thathatt nnoo persopersonu whoswhosee namnamee i::;is winllingwinding EnglishEno'lish leveIc,,'err watchwatch,. NoNo.. :Hl:H,21134, h.'by excludeexcludedd frofromm ththee JurJ uny ListList iiss summoned,summoned, <>therwisl'(itherwise ""Braclley, Bi-adley, LondoLondoll";n "; ththee propertpropertyy ooff Mrs11'". -
Apartment Housing in Canadian Cities, 1900–1940 Richard Dennis
Document generated on 09/26/2021 5:23 p.m. Urban History Review Revue d'histoire urbaine Apartment Housing in Canadian Cities, 1900–1940 Richard Dennis Volume 26, Number 2, March 1998 Article abstract Apartment houses may be considered as a deviation from the North American URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1016656ar ideal of single-family, owner-occupied homes. Unsurprisingly, therefore, they DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1016656ar attracted substantial criticism when first erected in Canadian cities, especially in Toronto where anti-apartment bylaws were introduced in 1912. They were See table of contents condemned as insanitary, anti-family, and a threat to established property values, undermining "cities of homes" both morally and economically. But they were also evidence of modernity and cosmopolitan sophistication, praised for Publisher(s) their efficiency and appropriateness for new types of households leading new lifestyles. Hence their appearance in new cities in the Canadian West, Urban History Review / Revue d'histoire urbaine especially in the 1910s, and their increasing popularity through the 1920s. Focusing primarily but not exclusively on Toronto, this paper discusses the ISSN history and geography of Canadian apartment housing during pre-World War I and inter-war building booms; the ways in which apartments were advertised 0703-0428 (print) and represented; and the diversity of building types, from luxury downtown 1918-5138 (digital) apartment hotels to suburban walk-up efficiency apartments and even a few semi-philanthropic blocks. It concludes with some observations on the still Explore this journal under-researched questions of how apartment buildings were financed and who owned them. -
The January 1901 Special National Convention of the Social Democratic Party of America by A.S
The January 1901 Special National Convention of the Social Democratic Party of America by A.S. Edwards 1 (January 26, 1901) The special national convention of the Social Democratic Party of America, which opened in Aldine Hall, Chicago, at 10 o’clock Tuesday morning, January 15 [1901], was attended by a larger number of individual delegates than the convention at Indianapolis last March [1st: March 6-9, 1900]. The principal object of the former gathering was the nomination of Presidential candidates; that of the present one to dispose of the question of the consolidation of the socialists of the United States.2 For nearly a year, during which the campaign prosecuted a national campaign and found its resources taxed to the utmost in discharging its duty to the cause of socialism, it has found itself harassed by persistent misrepresentations of the attitude of its members toward the question of union with the Rochester faction of the Socialist Labor Party and a few bolters from its own ranks. The officers and members of the party have never been opposed to union os socialists; they have stood almost solidly against the surrender of the Social Democratic Party organization to the control of those who, by methods now familiar to and condemned by the socialists of the country generally, sought its destruction. The convention just held was a complete and splendid vindication of the course pursued by those in temporary control of the party’s interests, in local branch and national board, and the inspiriting outcome of the four days’ deliberations, marked by the truest devotion, tolerance, and comradeship,3 is that the Social Democratic Party is on record not merely for union with a faction which has attempted to destroy it, but for a consolidation of all the organized socialists of the country, whether constituted as national parties or in isolated state and territorial organizations. -
SELF-IPIEREST and SOCIAL CONTROL: Uitlandeet Rulx of JOHANNESBURG, 1900-1901
SELF-IPIEREST AND SOCIAL CONTROL: UITLANDEEt RUlX OF JOHANNESBURG, 1900-1901 by Diana R. MacLaren Good government .. [means] equal rights and no privilege .. , a fair field and no favour. (1) A. MacFarlane, Chairman, Fordsburg Branch, South African League. At the end of May 1900 the British axmy moved into Johannesburg and Commandant F. E. T. Krause handed over the reins of government to Col. Colin MacKenzie, the new Military Governor of the Witwatersrand. But MacKenzie could not rule alone, and his superior, Lord Roberts, had previously agreed with High Commissioner Milner that MacKenzie would have access to civilian advisers who, being Randites for the most past, could offer to his administration their knowledge of local affairs. So, up from the coast and the Orange Free State came his advisers: inter alia, W. F. Monypenny, previously editor of the jingoist Johannesburg-; Douglas Forster, past President of the Transvaal Branch of the South African League (SAL); Samuel Evans, an Eckstein & CO employee and informal adviser to Milner; and W. Wybergh, another past President of the SAL and an ex-employee of Consolidated Gold Fields. These men and the others who served MacKenzie as civilian aides had been active in Rand politics previous to the war and had led the agitation for reform - both political and economic - which had resulted in war. Many had links with the minbg industry, either as employees of large firms or as suppliers of machinery, while the rest were in business or were professional men, generally lawyers. It was these men who, along with J. P. Fitzpatrick, had engineered the unrest, who formulated petitions, organized demonstrations and who channelled to Milner the grist for his political mill. -
January, 1903
18 MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW. JANUARY,1903 terior curves computed from Helmholtz's equations harmonize cleared the men waited in the station, when the wind struck it with such force that the men thought the station would blow down and left it. All so happily with the exterior lines derived from this discussion the men say they never encountered such a terrific wind in their lives. on the output of the sun, that the probability is strengthened that this scheme is the proper one with which to enter upon Reports from all such valley towns would fill a Scrapbook. the analysis of the internal circulation of the sun. As This phenomenon should not be compared with that of the easterly winds (see MONTHLYWEATHER REVIEW, 1897, Vol. XXV, already noted in that bulletin, if the vortexlaw (urnz= constant, pp. 212, 307; 1898, Vol. XSVI, p. 66), inasmuch as the east where rd= the radius and w = the angular velocity) holds good in this case, then we have an explanation of the cause of and southeast gales seem to attain their destructive force in retardation of the diurnal angular velocity of the motions of the valleys at the leeward bases of mountain ranges. the photosphere in middle latitudes as referred to the equato- CLIMATOLOGICAL DATA FOR JAMAIUA. rial or polar belts. For if m2> w, then uz< wl, and since UJ~ is the initial rotational velocity at the equator, the angular ve- Through the kindness of H. H. Cousins, chemist to the gov- locity in middle latitude8 must be less than at the equator or ernment of Jamaica and now in charge of the meteorological at the poles.