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A History of Maryland's Electoral College Meetings 1789-2016
A History of Maryland’s Electoral College Meetings 1789-2016 A History of Maryland’s Electoral College Meetings 1789-2016 Published by: Maryland State Board of Elections Linda H. Lamone, Administrator Project Coordinator: Jared DeMarinis, Director Division of Candidacy and Campaign Finance Published: October 2016 Table of Contents Preface 5 The Electoral College – Introduction 7 Meeting of February 4, 1789 19 Meeting of December 5, 1792 22 Meeting of December 7, 1796 24 Meeting of December 3, 1800 27 Meeting of December 5, 1804 30 Meeting of December 7, 1808 31 Meeting of December 2, 1812 33 Meeting of December 4, 1816 35 Meeting of December 6, 1820 36 Meeting of December 1, 1824 39 Meeting of December 3, 1828 41 Meeting of December 5, 1832 43 Meeting of December 7, 1836 46 Meeting of December 2, 1840 49 Meeting of December 4, 1844 52 Meeting of December 6, 1848 53 Meeting of December 1, 1852 55 Meeting of December 3, 1856 57 Meeting of December 5, 1860 60 Meeting of December 7, 1864 62 Meeting of December 2, 1868 65 Meeting of December 4, 1872 66 Meeting of December 6, 1876 68 Meeting of December 1, 1880 70 Meeting of December 3, 1884 71 Page | 2 Meeting of January 14, 1889 74 Meeting of January 9, 1893 75 Meeting of January 11, 1897 77 Meeting of January 14, 1901 79 Meeting of January 9, 1905 80 Meeting of January 11, 1909 83 Meeting of January 13, 1913 85 Meeting of January 8, 1917 87 Meeting of January 10, 1921 88 Meeting of January 12, 1925 90 Meeting of January 2, 1929 91 Meeting of January 4, 1933 93 Meeting of December 14, 1936 -
CA SS C ITY CHRONICL, E @ Vol
i) CA SS C ITY CHRONICL, E @ Vol. 15, No. 1. CASS CITY, MICH., FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1919 8 PAGES =~ 7=, ............ ........... BoYs AR IVE the State of Michigan, do hereby ALL SOLDIERSOFA:E.F.HoMEBY AUGUST!C~SS gIIY Wl~8 HOME FR()M OVERSEAS designate and set aside Sunday, MeW TI?I-01JNTY • i ¸ eleventh next, as Mothers / Day and I call upon our people, both young" Washington, May 7.--Secretary Ba- The following soldier boys from and old, to ~ather in their several ker announced today that by August T~umb counties arrived at New York places of worship and tahe part in 11 the last man of the American expedi- NOEATH[ETIC FAME !frOm overseas within the past week: E[T HERE JU E services appropriate to the day, and, tionary forces will have been with- t Frank E. Wallace, Owendale. by the wearing of a red flower for drawn from France. He said this es- I James O. Coan, Kingston. the living mother and a white for the THUMB CHAMPIONSHIP IN BASE timate was based on the movement t Win. J. Hebner, Bad Axe. ORIGIN OF FIRE UNKNOWN; dear departed, to symbbHze tk_eir love of 300,000 men a month to the United [~ John L. Harris, North Branch. ABOUT $4,000 IS ESTIMATE BALL WILL ALSO BE and reverence for the mothers of the States. Mike Makowski, Harbor Beach. DECIDED. INTERSCHOLASTIC. OF PROPERTY RUINED. nation. Already, Mr. Baker said, the Jacob q)ienes, Bad Axe. suggest too that absent American° forces in France have been Andrew A. -
Yearbook of American Churches
^ ^' 1918 Year Book of the Churches COVERING THE YEAR 1917 Edited by CLYDE F. ARMITAGE Assistant Secretary of the Federal Covincil, Washington, D. C. Published for The Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America BY The Missionary Education Movement New York 1918 » Copyright, 191 8, by The Federal Council of the Churches of Christ IN America FOREWORD The Year Book of the Churches succeeds the Federal Council Year Book and will be issued annually. The Directory of Religious Bodies includes all denominations recognized by the Federal Census. The Directory of Inter- church Bodies contains three times the number of organizations formerly treated. Most of these bodies publish Year Books with other data of value. Part II, General Information, is largely given to information connected with the war. The directories and statistics are official. The statistics con- cerning Churches and Sunday Schools are reprinted from the United States Census Bureau findings and are offered in com- parison with the Census of religious bodies made by the Federal Bureau of the Census ten years ago. The treatment of the cooperation of the Churches and Inter- Church Bodies officially in the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, is especially significant because the war has increased the necessity of federating religious activities. Books of value in nearly every phase of Christian work, published by the Federal Council, are listed as a bibliography. The general arrangement will be the same in future volumes as in this one, but it is expected that additional material will be offered in successive issues. Each division of the book is preceded by a table of the material treated, which, with the table of contents of the book and the complete cross index, will enable the reader to find every topic readily. -
FOTOGRAFS Slavery
ley of Nebraska anil souingaie wi of thU article the manu- ratification its standard-bearers. They in- ISSUE Illinois as sale or transportation of POLITICAL Nation surprised facture, polled about 13,000 votes. liquors within, the Impor- toxicating YEARS The feature of the Prohibition cam- tation thereof Into, or the exportation FOR FIFTY BY SUDDEN END OF a tour of the coun- and paign of 1900 was thereof from the United States of try by the candidates and a corps all territory subject to the jurisdiction PROHIBITION PARTY PERSISTED FIGHT ON SALOON speakers by special train. In 1912 thereof for beverage purposes is here- LIKE IN WHAT SEEMED the Prohibitiou convention renom- by prohibited. HOPELESS BATTLE. inated the candidates of 1908. Amendment Ratified Section 2—The congress and the Sheppard Results in Later Years. have concurrent pow- severul states Prominent in Little More Than Year Women Have Been candidates since 1884 and their to this article by appropri- The er enforce W. C. T. U.— Movement Through are as follows: After Submission. ate legislation. vote Frances Willard Won World- Clinton B. Fislc, New Jersey, UNIVERSAL NEWS Section 3—This article shall be in- 1888, FIVE INTERSTATE-ORPHEUM ACTS and it shall have been Wide Fame. and J. A. Brooks, Missouri, 249,945 War Is Given Credit for Hastening operative unless New Show Every Monday and Thursday. Daily Matinee as an amendment to the Con- votes. of Prohibition—Cam- ratified Adoption a John California, and at 2:30. at 7:30 and 9:00. stitution the legislatures of the sev- Nation-wide prohibition has been 1892, Bidwell, Nights on for by paign Carried B. -
“The Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man”: the Social Gospel Interracialism of the Southern Sociological Congress
“The Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man”: The Social Gospel Interracialism of the Southern Sociological Congress by James Joseph Boshears, Jr. A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Auburn University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Auburn, Alabama May 7, 2012 Keywords: U.S. South, Progressive Era, social gospel, race, religion Copyright 2012 by James Joseph Boshears, Jr. Approved by J. Wayne Flynt, Chair, Professor Emeritus of History David C. Carter, Associate Professor of History Charles A. Israel, Associate Professor of History Abstract Scholars have long debated the nature and extent of the social gospel movement’s influence on southern religion. The Southern Sociological Congress’ (SSC) rhetoric and actions demonstrated the blending of southern pietistic evangelicalism’s emphasis on spirituality with liberal theology’s accent on ecumenism, social service, and community. Adding credence to claims of a social gospel movement in the South, the SSC’s adaptive theology also challenged the notion of a static and definitive social gospel fitting prescribed parameters. SSC delegates adjusted the movement’s tenets to their ethical reality, a move that challenges commonly held notions about the SSC and contributes to a more inclusive understanding of the social gospel. As they reshaped social gospel beliefs to address regional social ills, SSC delegates melded southern evangelical spirituality with liberal theology’s insistence on social action, focusing most intently on racial ills. Emphasizing the interconnectedness of African Americans and southern whites, SSC delegates embraced a southern social gospel interracialism that battled the most egregious injustices of the segregated system. -
Political Campaign Ephemera Collection, 1867-2010
POLITICAL CAMPAIGN EPHEMERA COLLECTION, 1867-2010 Finding aid Call number: LPR271 Extent: 11.2 cubic ft. (8 archives box and 8 oversized boxes.) To return to the ADAHCat catalog record, click here: http://adahcat.archives.alabama.gov/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=34498 Alabama Dept. of Archives and History, 624 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 36130 www.archives.alabama.gov POLITICAL CAMPAIGN EPHEMERA COLLECTION FINDING AID Collection number: LPR271 Box /Folder Description 1 1 James B. Allen – Governor, 1954 1 2 James B. Allen – U. S. Senate, circa 1968 1 49 James B. Allen – Lt. Governor, 1950, 1962 1 3 R. P. Almon, Supreme Court, 1980 1 4 Amendment #1, 1980 (to reduce property taxes) 7 18 Amendment#3, 2010 8 18 “Keep Alabama Working!” Special Amendment, 2012 8 21 Guide Ballot Special Amendment, 2012, Distributed by the Alabama Democratic Conference 7 5 James H. Anderson – Attorney General, 2010 1 5 John Anderson – President, 1980 1 6 Mark Anderson – Circuit Court Judge, 2004 6 1 Bill Armistead – Lieutenant Governor, 2002 1 7 Spencer Bachus - Attorney General, 1990 8 17 Penny Bailey, 6th Congressional Dist., 2012 1 8 Howard Baker - President, 1979 1 9 Alabama ballot, 1906 (photocopy) 1 10 Alabama ballots, 1916 1 11 Ballot – Jefferson County, 1922 1 12 Ballot sample – Montgomery County, 1998 1 13 Ballot sample – Montgomery County, 1978 7 2 Ballot sample – Montgomery County, 2010 6 2 John Bankhead, Jr. – U.S. Senate, 1926 10 7 John Bankhead, Sr. – U. S. Senate, 1912 1 14 John Bankhead, Sr. - U.S. Senate, 1918 1 15 Bishop N. Barron - Alabama Senate, 1978 1 16 Ray Bass - Lieutenant Governor, 1978 6 3 Lucy Baxley – Lieutenant Governor, 2002 Oversize #58 3 Lucy Baxley – Lieutenant Governor, 2002 6 4 Lucy Baxley – Governor, 2006 6 5 Lucy Baxley – Governor, 2006 Oversize #58 5 Lucy Baxley – Governor, 2006 8 20 Lucy Baxley – Public Service Commission President, 2012 1 17 Jere Beasley - Governor, 1978 11 7 Roger Bedford – Attorney General, 1994 1 18 Bob Beno – State Representative, 81st District, 1978 7 4 Dr.