Unclaimed Property for County: BEAUFORT 7/16/2019
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1835. EXECUTIVE. *L POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT
1835. EXECUTIVE. *l POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. Persons employed in the General Post Office, with the annual compensation of each. Where Compen Names. Offices. Born. sation. Dol. cts. Amos Kendall..., Postmaster General.... Mass. 6000 00 Charles K. Gardner Ass't P. M. Gen. 1st Div. N. Jersey250 0 00 SelahR. Hobbie.. Ass't P. M. Gen. 2d Div. N. York. 2500 00 P. S. Loughborough Chief Clerk Kentucky 1700 00 Robert Johnson. ., Accountant, 3d Division Penn 1400 00 CLERKS. Thomas B. Dyer... Principal Book Keeper Maryland 1400 00 Joseph W. Hand... Solicitor Conn 1400 00 John Suter Principal Pay Clerk. Maryland 1400 00 John McLeod Register's Office Scotland. 1200 00 William G. Eliot.. .Chie f Examiner Mass 1200 00 Michael T. Simpson Sup't Dead Letter OfficePen n 1200 00 David Saunders Chief Register Virginia.. 1200 00 Arthur Nelson Principal Clerk, N. Div.Marylan d 1200 00 Richard Dement Second Book Keeper.. do.. 1200 00 Josiah F.Caldwell.. Register's Office N. Jersey 1200 00 George L. Douglass Principal Clerk, S. Div.Kentucky -1200 00 Nicholas Tastet Bank Accountant Spain. 1200 00 Thomas Arbuckle.. Register's Office Ireland 1100 00 Samuel Fitzhugh.., do Maryland 1000 00 Wm. C,Lipscomb. do : for) Virginia. 1000 00 Thos. B. Addison. f Record Clerk con-> Maryland 1000 00 < routes and v....) Matthias Ross f. tracts, N. Div, N. Jersey1000 00 David Koones Dead Letter Office Maryland 1000 00 Presley Simpson... Examiner's Office Virginia- 1000 00 Grafton D. Hanson. Solicitor's Office.. Maryland 1000 00 Walter D. Addison. Recorder, Div. of Acc'ts do.. -
The Doolittle Family in America, 1856
TheDoolittlefamilyinAmerica WilliamFrederickDoolittle,LouiseS.Brown,MalissaR.Doolittle THE DOOLITTLE F AMILY IN A MERICA (PART I V.) YCOMPILED B WILLIAM F REDERICK DOOLITTLE, M. D. Sacred d ust of our forefathers, slumber in peace! Your g raves be the shrine to which patriots wend, And swear tireless vigilance never to cease Till f reedom's long struggle with tyranny end. :" ' :,. - -' ; ., :; .—Anon. 1804 Thb S avebs ft Wa1ts Pr1nt1ng Co., Cleveland Look w here we may, the wide earth o'er, Those l ighted faces smile no more. We t read the paths their feet have worn, We s it beneath their orchard trees, We h ear, like them, the hum of bees And rustle of the bladed corn ; We turn the pages that they read, Their w ritten words we linger o'er, But in the sun they cast no shade, No voice is heard, no sign is made, No s tep is on the conscious floor! Yet Love will dream and Faith will trust (Since He who knows our need is just,) That somehow, somewhere, meet we must. Alas for him who never sees The stars shine through his cypress-trees ! Who, hopeless, lays his dead away, \Tor looks to see the breaking day \cross the mournful marbles play ! >Vho hath not learned in hours of faith, The t ruth to flesh and sense unknown, That Life is ever lord of Death, ; #..;£jtfl Love" ca:1 -nt ver lose its own! V°vOl' THE D OOLITTLE FAMILY V.PART I SIXTH G ENERATION. The l ife given us by Nature is short, but the memory of a well-spent life is eternal. -
TBRC-17 [Bulk Freighters]
[TBRC-17: Bulk Finding Aid: C. Patrick Labadie Collections Freighters] Collection name: C. Patrick Labadie Collection Collection number: TBRC -1 through 18 [TBRC-17 = BULK FREIGHTERS] Dates: Late 18th Century to early 20th Century. Quantity: 385 linear feet + 6 (5 draw) map cabinets. Provenance note: Collection gathered & researched since early adulthood. Donated by C. Patrick & June Labadie in 2003 to NOAA; housed and managed by the Alpena County Library. Biographical & Historical Information: The son and grandson of shipyard workers, Charles Patrick Labadie was reared in Detroit and attended the University of Detroit. He began his career with the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, became director of the Saugatuck Marine Museum, then earned a master’s license for tugs and worked for Gaelic Tugboat Company in Detroit. He directed Duluth’s Canal Park Museum (now Lake Superior Maritime Visitors Center) from its founding in 1973 until 2001. In 2003, he was appointed historian for the NOAA’s Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary in Alpena, Michigan. Scope & Content: This is an extensive 19th Century Great Lakes maritime history collection. The vessel database is accessible through library’s website. See the library’s card catalog to search the book collection. The major components of the collection are: vessels, cargo, biographical, canals, owners, ports, technology / shipbuilding = broken down by vessels types (i.e. sail, tugs, propellers), and machinery. Files include photographs, newspaper accounts, publications, vessel plans, maps & charts, and research notes. Access: Open to research. Preferred Citation: C. Patrick Labadie Collection, Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary, Alpena, MI. [TBRC-17: Bulk Finding Aid: C. Patrick Labadie Collections Freighters] Contents: TBRC-17: TECHNICAL – BULK FREIGHTERS Box 1: Folders 1. -
Alumni· Magazine .~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ a Hoosier Almanac
THE· JANUARY· 1939 ALUMNI· MAGAZINE .~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ A HOOSIER ALMANAC JANUARY THIRTY-ONE DAYS ~ W~ can't always come out with its cabaret dance and floor ~ right smack dab on the first show in Alumni Hall tonight at 9. of the month. what with Christmas Minor sports fans will like this: vacation and all, but it's not too swimming. I.U. vs. DePauw, in the late to wish you all a HAPPY men's pool at Bloomington; and NEW YEAR! If you haven't yet wrestling, I.U. vs. Michigan, at Ann broken all your resolutions, or are Arbor. in the mood for some new ones, 14-vVhat better than a Saturday read "In Closing" on page 32. night spent watching Indiana and I-Tune in today, and every Wisconsin play basketball in the January Sunday, on Professors Fieldhouse. Harper and Mueller discussing "So- IS-Max Lerner, some time edi ciety Today and Tomorrow" over tor of The Nation and now a vVil- WIRE. 9 :30 a.m. on your clock Iiams College professor, is the guest ~ and [400 on your dial. ~peaker of the Indiana Union Open Forum this ~ ~ 3-Now if you were a student and had an 8 afternoon at 3 in the Union Building. Subject: ~ ~ o'clocl-- today, )'ou'd go, for this is the end of the "American Foreign Policy." ~ ~ Christmas. vacation. "Any student absent irom class Another Sunday afternoon recital in the School of ~ ~ ... will be sllbJ'ect to a penalty ...." Remember? Music auditorium, 4:[5· ~ ~ ~ ~ 5-Drs. Sanders and Collins. both of the English 16-Those Purdue boys down here again. -
Bushnell Family Genealogy, 1945
BUSHNELL FAMILY GENEALOGY Ancestry and Posterity of FRANCIS BUSHNELL (1580 - 1646) of Horsham, England And Guilford, Connecticut Including Genealogical Notes of other Bushnell Families, whose connections with this branch of the family tree have not been determined. Compiled and written by George Eleazer Bushnell Nashville, Tennessee 1945 Bushnell Genealogy 1 The sudden and untimely death of the family historian, George Eleazer Bushnell, of Nashville, Tennessee, who devoted so many years to the completion of this work, necessitated a complete change in its publication plans and we were required to start anew without familiarity with his painstaking work and vast acquaintance amongst the members of the family. His manuscript, while well arranged, was not yet ready for printing. It has therefore been copied, recopied and edited, However, despite every effort, prepublication funds have not been secured to produce the kind of a book we desire and which Mr. Bushnell's painstaking work deserves. His material is too valuable to be lost in some library's manuscript collection. It is a faithful record of the Bushnell family, more complete than anyone could have anticipated. Time is running out and we have reluctantly decided to make the best use of available funds by producing the "book" by a process of photographic reproduction of the typewritten pages of the revised and edited manuscript. The only deviation from the original consists in slight rearrangement, minor corrections, additional indexing and numbering. We are proud to thus assist in the compiler's labor of love. We are most grateful to those prepublication subscribers listed below, whose faith and patience helped make George Eleazer Bushnell's book thus available to the Bushnell Family. -
Family Tree Maker
Descendants of John Lindley Generation No. 1 1. John1 Lindley was born 1615 in Stropshire, England, and died Unknown. He married Alice Unknown. She was born 1619 in Cheshire County, Ireland, and died Unknown. Child of John Lindley and Alice Unknown is: + 2 i. James William2 Lindley Sr., born 1641 in Ireland; died 16 May 1714 in Balley Moren, Ireland. Generation No. 2 2. James William2 Lindley Sr. (John1) was born 1641 in Ireland, and died 16 May 1714 in Balley Moren, Ireland. He married Alice Walsmith 1677 in England, daughter of Thomas Walsmith and Walsmith. She was born 1641 in Cronagallagh, Ireland, and died 16 November 1691 in Balley Moren, Ireland. Child of James Lindley and Alice Walsmith is: + 3 i. James3 Lindley Jr., born 16 April 1681 in Ballinaclash, Ireland; died 10 October 1726 in London Grove Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. Generation No. 3 3. James3 Lindley Jr. (James William2, John1) was born 16 April 1681 in Ballinaclash, Ireland, and died 10 October 1726 in London Grove Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. He married Eleanor Parke 14 April 1705 in Ireland, daughter of Robert Parke and Margery Unknown. She was born 21 January 1681/82 in Ballyredmond, Ireland, and died Unknown in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Marriage Notes for James Lindley and Eleanor Parke: Kilconner Meeting, County Carlow, Ireland Children of James Lindley and Eleanor Parke are: + 4 i. Thomas4 Lindley Sr., born 25 February 1704/05 in Bally Brommel, County Carlow, Ireland; died 14 September 1781 in Orange County, North Carolina. 5 ii. Rachel Lindley, born 11 May 1707 in Wicklow, County Wicklow, Ireland; died Unknown. -
Protecting Surf Breaks and Surfing Areas in California
Protecting Surf Breaks and Surfing Areas in California by Michael L. Blum Date: Approved: Dr. Michael K. Orbach, Adviser Masters project submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Environmental Management degree in the Nicholas School of the Environment of Duke University May 2015 CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ........................................................................................................... vi LIST OF FIGURES ...................................................................................................................... vii LIST OF TABLES ........................................................................................................................ vii LIST OF ACRONYMS ............................................................................................................... viii LIST OF DEFINITIONS ................................................................................................................ x EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ......................................................................................................... xiii 1. INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................................... 1 2. STUDY APPROACH: A TOTAL ECOLOGY OF SURFING ................................................. 5 2.1 The Biophysical Ecology ...................................................................................................... 5 2.2 The Human Ecology ............................................................................................................ -
Distributor Settlement Agreement
DISTRIBUTOR SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT Table of Contents Page I. Definitions............................................................................................................................1 II. Participation by States and Condition to Preliminary Agreement .....................................13 III. Injunctive Relief .................................................................................................................13 IV. Settlement Payments ..........................................................................................................13 V. Allocation and Use of Settlement Payments ......................................................................28 VI. Enforcement .......................................................................................................................34 VII. Participation by Subdivisions ............................................................................................40 VIII. Condition to Effectiveness of Agreement and Filing of Consent Judgment .....................42 IX. Additional Restitution ........................................................................................................44 X. Plaintiffs’ Attorneys’ Fees and Costs ................................................................................44 XI. Release ...............................................................................................................................44 XII. Later Litigating Subdivisions .............................................................................................49 -
Luke Decker and Slavery: His Cases with Bob and Anthony, 1817-1822
Luke Decker and Slavery: His Cases with Bob and Anthony, 1817-1822 Merrily Pierce" Luke Decker, farmer, judge, and militia officer, owned and traded slaves in the Northwest Territory, Indiana Territory, and the state of Indiana despite laws prohibiting such practices. As a member of the proslavery element in the Old Northwest, Decker encouraged the establishment of slavery in the territory, a plan that nearly succeeded under Indiana Territorial Governor William Henry Harrison. By the time Indiana Territory was ready for statehood in 1816, however, settlers against slavery outnumbered those, like Decker, who supported it. The institution was outlawed by the 1816 state Constitution, but slavery did not die out. In Knox County, where Decker resided arid slavery was concentrated, some slave owners continued to hold slaves, believing that the Consti- tution was not retroactive. In July, 1816, barely a month after the Indiana Constitution was written, two of Decker's slaves-Bob, nominally an indentured servant, and Anthony, a slave for life-escaped from his possession and fled to Orange County, a Quaker stronghold in the southern part of the state. Decker pursued his slaves and had them cap- tured. Confronted by the Quaker-influenced court in Paoli, he used all of his influence in his determination to regain possession of the two men. Decker's cases were before the court for five years, from 1817 to 1822. Summaries of the court proceedings in early county his- tories and in other accounts attest to their importance.' A study of * Merrily Pierce, a former aquatic biologist, is currently serving as a staff aide for transportation, environment, and parks to the chairman of the Board of Super- visors, Fairfax County, Virginia. -
Rural Poverty in the United States. a Report by the President's National
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 078 985 RC 007 092 AUTHOR Wilber, George L., Ed.; Bishop, C. E., Ed. TITLE Rural Poverty in the United States. A Report by the Presidents National Advisory Commission on Rural Poverty. _INSTITUTION National Advisory Commission on Rural PdVerty, Washington, D.C. PUB DATE May 68 NOTE 606p. AVAILABLE FROMSuperintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C._20402 ($5.75) EDRS PRICE MF-$0.65 HC-$23.03 DESCRIPTORS Agriculture; *Economic DisadVantagement; Family Planning; Health Services; Local Government; *Migration; Natural Resources; Negroes; *Rural Areas; *Rural Urban Differences; *Unemployment ABSTRACT Papers prepared for the National Advisory Commission on Rural Poverty are presented in this repOrt._These papers provide the Commission background information for recommendations submitted to the President of the United States. Major topics covered include the structural changes taking place in rural areas and the inter-relationships between rural and urban America; occupational mobility and migration; health care and family planning; the developmental nature of agriculture and other natural resource industries; the ecnomics of poverty; and policies and pfograms .to alter income distribution. Other papers prepared for the Commission but not published are listed in the appendix. (PS) FILMED FROM BEST AVAILABLECOPY Lrl CO Cr% CO U S DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, O EDUCATION ',WELFARE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION THIS DOCUMENT HAS BEEN REPRO OUCEO EXACTLY AS RECEIVED FROM LIJ THE PERSON OR ORGANIZATION ORIGIN ATING IT POINTS OF.VIEW OR OPINIONS STATEO 00 NOT NECESSARILY REPRE SENT OFFICIAL NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF EOUCATION POSITION OR POLICY RURAL POVERTY IN THE TED STATES A Report by the President's National Advisory Commission on Rural Poverty Washln B ton, D.C. -
From 1940 to 2011
A Cumulative Index for and From 1940 to 2011 © 2010 Steamship Historical Society of America 2 This is a publication of THE STEAMSHIP HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, INC. 1029 Waterman Avenue, East Providence, RI 02914 This project has been compiled, designed and typed by Jillian Fulda, and funded by Brent and Relly Dibner Charitable Trust. 2010 TABLE OF CONTENTS Part Subject Page I Listing of whole numbers of issues, 3 with publication date of each II Feature Articles 6 III Authors of Feature Articles 42 IV Illustrations of Vessels 62 V Portraits 150 VI Other Illustrations (including cartoons) 153 VII Maps and Charts 173 VIII Fleet Lists 176 IX Regional News and Departments 178 X Reviews of Books and Other Publications 181 XI Obituaries 214 XII SSHSA Presidents 216 XIII Editors-in-Chief 216 (Please note that Steamboat Bill becomes PowerShips starting with issue #273.) 3 PART I -- WHOLE NUMBERS AND DATES (Under volume heading will follow issue number and date of publication.) VOLUME I 33 March 1950 63 September 1957 34 June 1950 64 December 1957 1 April 1940 35 September 1950 2 August 1940 36 December 1950 VOLUME XV 3 December 1940 4 April 1941 VOLUME VIII 65 March 1958 5 August 1941 66 June 1958 6 December 1941 37 March 1951 67 September 1958 7 April 1942 38 June 1951 68 December 1958 8 August 1942 39 September 1951 9 December 1942 40 December 1951 VOLUME XVI VOLUME II VOLUME IX 69 Spring 1959 70 Summer 1959 10 June 1943 41 March 1952 71 Fall 1959 11 August 1943 42 June 1952 72 Winter 1959 12 December 1943 43 September 1952 13 April 1944 -
Lick Creek African American Settlement \ USDA Forest Service Hoosier National Forest 8/2012
Lick Creek African American Settlement \ USDA Forest Service Hoosier National Forest 8/2012 The first African American settlers came to Indiana law required of all negroes and mulla- Orange County, Indiana before 1820. Led by tos. A physical description, often including dis- Jonathan Lindley, eleven families traveled with tinguishing marks, is listed and statements by a group of sympathetic Quakers in search of white witnesses vouching for the registrants a new land which forbade slavery. Jonathan free status and character. Lindley settled in Orange County in 1811, five years before the County was established and A focal point of the settlement was the church. Indiana became a state. In 1843, Thomas and Matilda Roberts sold one acre of their 120 acres to five trustees for These settlers were free citizens who fled its establishment. The deed states the trustees racial persecution and increasingly restrictive (Elias Roberts, Mathew Thomas, Thomas laws for free blacks in their previous home in Roberts, Isaac Scott, and Samuel Chandler) North Carolina. Traveling with the Quakers were to erect or cause to erect a house or offered some protection on their journey and place of worship for use by the members of the promise of supportive neighbors upon the African Episcopal Church (AME) of the their arrival. United States of America. This church oper- ated from 1843-1869. According to the census records, there were 96 blacks living in Orange County in 1820. As This AME church was near the site of the more blacks came to the area they purchased colored Methodist Union Meeting House.