Coxe Family Mining Papers (#3005) Background Note
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Colonial American Freemasonry and Its Development to 1770 Arthur F
University of North Dakota UND Scholarly Commons Theses and Dissertations Theses, Dissertations, and Senior Projects 12-1988 Colonial American Freemasonry and its Development to 1770 Arthur F. Hebbeler III Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.und.edu/theses Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Hebbeler, Arthur F. III, "Colonial American Freemasonry and its Development to 1770" (1988). Theses and Dissertations. 724. https://commons.und.edu/theses/724 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, and Senior Projects at UND Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of UND Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. - ~I lII i I ii !I I I I I J: COLONIAL AMERICAN FREEMASONRY I AND ITS DEVELOPMENT TO 1770 by Arthur F. Hebbeler, III Bachelor of Arts, Butler University, 1982 A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the University of North Dakota in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Grand Forks, North Dakota December 1988 This Thesis submitted by Arthur F. Hebbeler, III in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts from the University of North Dakota has been read by the Faculty Advisory Committee under whom the work has been done, is hereby approved. ~~~ (Chairperson) This thesis meets the standards for appearance and conforms to the style and format requirements of the Graduate School of the University of North Dakota, and is hereby approved. -~ 11 Permission Title Colonial American Freemasonry and its Development To 1770 Department History Degree Master of Arts In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the require ments for a graduate degree from the University of North Dakota, I agree that the Library of this University shall make it freely available for inspection. -
HIST Remembers James J. Bohning Mussorgsky’S Pictures at an Exposition Played Softly Barely Breaking the Quiet of the Office
HIST Remembers James J. Bohning Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exposition played softly barely breaking the quiet of the office. It had been selected from two ranks of well-indexed classical music CDs, housed in a drawer at the left of his desk. It was one of Jim’s favorites, but a backup selection of Bach’s six Brandenburg Concertos was poised to replace it in the disk drive. A battered wooden walking cane hung from the top pull handle of the adjacent file cabinet. A rusty five-inch mailing tube containing 50 mg of white crystalline disodium squarate stood balanced on the top shelf. Its red and white mailing label proclaimed it was an August 1980 gift synthesized by Professor Robert West of the University of Wisconsin. Long ago Jim had thought of incorp- orating the unusual substance in a p-chem experiment, but it now sat awaiting an uncertain future. Today’s mail had brought in a small cardboard box with bubble wrap packing -- Jim’s latest EBay purchase: an ancient handsome brass pecan nut cracker intended for addition to his substantial collection of that artifact type. His window sill sported a 4 x 12” Plexiglas case on a polished oak base protecting an inscribed maroon-colored Lionel caboose. Precision white lettering down the length of the car proclaimed not only that it was an authentic Lehigh Valley Railroad model but also that it was a special departure gift from his friends on the National Historic Chemical Landmarks Committee for Jim’s 15 years of service (1992-2007). -
The Revolutionary Struggle in New Jersey, 1776-1783
The Revolutionary Struggle in New jersey, 1776-1783 LEWIS F. OWEN NEW JERSEY'S REVOLUTIONARY EXPERIENCE Larry R. Gerlach, Edito.r This series of publications is dedicated to the memory of Alfred E. Driscoll, governor of New Jersey from 1947 to 1954, in grateful tribute to his lifelong support of the study and teaching of the history of New Jersey and the United States. He was a member of the New Jersey Historical Commission from 1970 until his death on March 9, 1975. The Revolutionary Struggle in New Jersey, 1776-1783 LEWIS F. OWEN New jersey Historical Commission library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Owen, Lewis F The Revolutionary struggle in New Jersey, 1776-1783. (New Jersey's Revolutionary experience; 16) Bibliography: p. SUMMARY: Beginning with the British invasion of Gravesend Bay, Long Island, in August, 1 776, traces the ensuing military events which occurred in New Jersey until the end of the Revolutionary War. 1. New Jersey-History-Revolution, 1775-1783. [l. New Jersey History-Revolution, 1775-1783] l. Title. II. Series. E263.N5N78 no. 16 974.9'03s [974.9'03] 76-19072 Price: $.50 Designed by Peggy Lewis and Lee R. Parks Copyright "1975 by the New Jersey Historical Commission. All rights re served. Printed in the United States of America THE NEW JERSEY HISTORICAL COMMISSION is an official agency of the state of New Jersey, in the division of the State Library, Archives and History, Department of Education. Fred G. Burke, Commis sioner, Ralph H. Lataille, Deputy Commissioner. 113 West State Street, Trenton, NJ 08625 John T. -
Nov. 1974 Vol. XXI, No. 4
. ~ The PENNSYLVANIA FREE1VIASON AN OFFICIAL PUBLICATION Of THE RIGHT WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE Of FREE AND ACCEPTED MASONS Of PENNSYLVANIA VOLUME XXI NOVEMBER e 1974 NUMBER 4 "How Can You Grand Lodge Officers, headed by Bro. Rochester B. Woodall, dedi· Be A Brother To Someone You Don't Even Know" cated the new Mnsonic Temple for Huguenot Lodge No. 377 at Kutztown. The Tem1>le was erected at a cost of S175 ,000.00. By Bro. Rochester B. Woodall have increased attendance by 20 per cent or more. R. W. Grand Master The attendance reports submitted to date indicate that the Some good news . some not so good! percentage of attendance ranges from a high of 31 per cent The cornerstone was placed for the new Masonic Temple- at to a low of 4 per cent. Lodges with memberships of 300 or Kutztown. Pictured left to right are Bro. Milton Borrell, Chairman Since the creation of the Lodge Attendance Committees less, apparently have a better attendance record than larger of the Kutztown Temple Association; Bro. Rochester B. Woodall. R. W. Grand Master; and Bro. Donald F. Heffiey, Worshipful Master a.dditional emphasis has been placed on increasing participa: Lodges. tton by members in Lodge activities. of Huguenot Lodge No. 377. However, regardless of size, the average attendance is ap Many Committees are doing very well in contacting the proximately 15 per cent. Members in person, by telephone and by letter. $175,000 Masonic Temple Lodges with attendance records in the 4 to tO per cent Dedicated Some Committees have established car pools to take Mem range are particularly urged to renew and redouble their ef Grand Lodge Placed Cornerstone bers to Lodge. -
Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey
STATE OF NEW JERSEY FITZGERALD & GOSSON West Ena. x^^^.a Street, SO^ER'^ILLE, .V. J. N. B. BICHAHDSON, GROCERIES AND PROVISIONr West End. Main Street, SOMERl/ILLE, f^. J, r ^(?^ Sfeabe ©i j^ew JeF^ey. MUNUSL ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTH SESSION ^^"^^^ ^^^aRY NEW j: 185 W. ^^t^ £.Lreet Trei COPYRIGHT SECURED. TRENTON, N. J.: Compiled fkom Official Documents and Careful Reseakch, by FITZGERALD & GOSSON, Legislative Reporters. Entered according to act of Congress, in the year 1883, by THOMAS F. FITZGERALD AND LOUIS C. GOSSON, In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. >§®=" The newspaper press are welcome to use such parts of the work as they may desire, on giving credit therefor to the Manual. INTRODUCTORY THE INIanual of the One Hundred and Eighth Session of the Legislature of New Jersey is, we trust, an improvement on preceding volumes. We have honestly striven every year to make each succeeding book suj^e- rior to all others, and hope, ere long, to present a work which will take rank with the best of its kind published in the United States. To do this we need a continuance of the support heretofore given us, and the official assist- ance of the Legislature. We are confident that this little hand-book, furnished at the small cost of one dollar a volume, is indispensable to every legislator, State official and others, who can, at a moment's notice, refer to it for information of any sort connected with the politics and affairs of State. The vast amount of data, compiled in such a remarkably concise manner, is the result of care- ful research of official documents; and the sketches of the Governor, members of the Judiciary, Congressmen, members of the Legislature, and State officers, are authentic. -
Caroliniana Society Annual Gifts Report - April 2012 University Libraries--University of South Carolina
University of South Carolina Scholar Commons University South Caroliniana Society - Annual South Caroliniana Library Report of Gifts 4-2012 Caroliniana Society Annual Gifts Report - April 2012 University Libraries--University of South Carolina Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/scs_anpgm Part of the Library and Information Science Commons Recommended Citation University of South Carolina, "University of South Carolina Libraries - Caroliniana Society Annual Gifts Report, April 2012". http://scholarcommons.sc.edu/scs_anpgm/3/ This Newsletter is brought to you by the South Caroliniana Library at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in University South Caroliniana Society - Annual Report of Gifts yb an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE UNIVERSITY SOUTH CAROLINIANA SOCIETY SEVENTY-SIXTH ANNUAL MEETING __________ UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA Saturday, April 28, 2012 Mr. Kenneth L. Childs, President, Presiding __________ Reception and Exhibit ..............................................................11:00 a.m. South Caroliniana Library Luncheon.....................................................................................1:00 p.m. The Palmetto Club at The Summit Club Location Business Meeting Welcome Reports of the Executive Council...................... Mr. Kenneth L. Childs Address......................................................................Dr. William A. Link Richard J. Milbauer Chair in History, University -
Burd Family Papers
Special Collections Department Burd Family Papers 1703 - 1937 (bulk dates 1800 - 1860) Manuscript Collection Number: 379 Accessioned: Gift of the Moyerman family, 1970. Extent: 3 linear ft. (1372 items) Content: Wills, deeds, estate records, correspondence, bills, receipts, funeral notices, legal documents, stock certificates, mortgages, account books, and ephemera. Access: The collection is open for research. Processed: September 1998 by Arthur Siegel for reference assistance email Special Collections or contact: Special Collections, University of Delaware Library Newark, Delaware 19717-5267 (302) 831-2229 Table of Contents Biographical Note Scope and Contents Note Series List Contents List Genealogical Tables Biographical Note The Burds were a distinguished family of Scottish origin, whose members were engaged in both the legal and military professions, and were also prominent landowners in Pennsylvania. Edward Shippen Burd's grandfather, Col. James Burd (1726-1793), was born near Edinburgh, Scotland, and settled on a farm in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, after his marriage in 1748 to Sarah Shippen, a member of the prominent Shippen family of Lancaster and Shippensburg. He joined the military as an officer at the outbreak of the French and Indian War, eventually earning the rank of colonel by 1758. From 1756-1757 he was in command of Fort Augustus, near Shamokin, Pennsylvania, and from 1764-1770 he held the office of Justice of Lancaster County. In 1774, a year before the outbreak of hostilities with Great Britain, Col. Burd was instrumental in garnering local support for the colonial congress in its opposition to the Crown, and by the following year was assisting in the military organization of Lancaster County as a member of the Committee of Safety. -
The West Jersey Society, 1768-1784
The West Jersey Society, 1768-1784 jk CCORDING to the treaty marking the end of the American ZJk War of Independence, Congress was to recommend the <L JL. restoration of lands confiscated by the new states from "real British subjects." This provision has been overshadowed by those dealing with the property of genuine American Loyalists. Certainly, Loyalists and their lands merit attention, but the fact remains that in 1776 significant quantities of real estate in America belonged to British subjects who were true absentees, many of whom had never been to the colonies. However, we know little about this group, the management of their property before the war, the steps taken by the new governments respecting their estates, and the shape the American Revolution assumes when viewed from the position of absentee landownership. This study describes the career during the Revolution of one English company, the West Jersey Society, which held valuable lands in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Although peculiar in its character and experience, the Society was a bona fide absentee, with the important exception of one American shareholder; it probably was the largest single landowner in New Jersey; and it was actively engaged in seeking profits from its properties. Thus, despite its uniqueness, the West Jersey Society affords a window for observing the Revolution from a seldom used perspective. In the long, troubled history of the West Jersey Society, the American Revolution appears as only the most dramatic adversity which the company suffered. The Society had its birth in 1692, when forty-eight Londoners became shareholders in a joint-stock company formed to purchase the American holdings of Dr. -
What I Like About the South
CATALOGUE THREE HUNDRED THIRTY-SIX What I Like About the South WILLIAM REESE COMPANY 409 Temple Street New Haven, CT 06511 (203) 789-8081 A Note This catalogue is devoted to books about the American South, spanning from Jacques Le Moyne’s account of Florida in 1565 through President Andrew John- son’s proclamation ending the Civil War in 1866. Early material includes some classic rarities by Beverly, Beyer, Catesby, Coxe, Martyn, and others, including much material on early Georgia. There are a number of important early imprints including runs of laws from the 18th century for Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Kentucky. There is a strong selection of books on the Civil War, including maps, personal and regimental memoirs, and much else. Also offered are many books on the antebellum South, including more early laws from various states, important maps, and much else. Most of the material is new to our stock. Available on request or via our website are our recent catalogues: 330 Western Americana, 331 Archives & Manuscripts, 332 French Americana, 333 Americana–Beginnings, and 334, Recent Acquisitions in Americana; Bulletins 41 Original Works of American Art, 42 Native Americans, 43 Cartography, and 44 Photography; e-lists (only available on our website) and many more topical lists. q A portion of our stock may be viewed at www.williamreesecompany.com. If you would like to receive e-mail notification when catalogues and lists are uploaded, please e-mail us at [email protected] or send us a fax, specifying whether you would like to receive the notifications in lieu of or in addition to paper catalogues. -
PARENT CHAPTER, New York, NY
PARENT CHAPTER, New York, NY Aiken Mrs. Robert K. Aiken (Sara Jennings Ledes) Ancestor: Thomas Jennings Aitken Mrs. Irene R. Aitken (Irene Elder Boyd) Ancestor: Thomas Dixon Allen Mrs. Christine Allen (Anne Christine Allen) Ancestor: Anthony Walke Allport Miss Tara Margaret Allport (Tara Margaret Allport) Ancestor: Caspar Steynmets (Stymets Altschul Mrs. Arthur Altschul (Patricia Fleming) Ancestor: Daniel Dod Anderson Mrs. Kathleen Anderson (Kathleen Mae McConnell) Ancestor: Tristram Coffin Armstrong Mrs. John Armstrong (Mary Helen Post) Ancestor: John Berrien Bahrenburg Mrs. William S. Bahrenburg (Alice Stevenson Braislin) Ancestor: John Shinn Barbey Miss Florence Flower Barbey (Florence Flower Barbey) Ancestor: Joseph Neville Barnes Mrs. John A. Barnes (Mary Reiner) Ancestor: William Wells Barzun Mrs. Jacques Barzun (Thelma Marguerite Lee) Ancestor: Samuel Jordan Bass Mrs. Jane Liddell Bass (Jane Boyer Liddell) Ancestor: Joseph Hawley Bastedo Mrs. Walter A. Bastedo (Julia Gilbert Post) Ancestor: Thomas Tracy Beckler Mrs. Richard W. Beckler (Allison White) Ancestor: William Brewster Benedict Mrs. Peter B. Benedict (Nancy Thomas Huffman) Ancestor: Wilhelmus Beekman Benington Mrs. George A. Benington (Patricia Minniece) Ancestor: Walter Chiles Bereday Mrs. Sigmund Bereday (Marilyn Patricia Pettibone) Ancestor: Samuel Pettibone Bergmayer- Mrs. Nicolas Bergmayer-Deteindre (Sinikka Nadine Deteindre) Ancestor: Edward Winslow Bergstrom Mrs. Victoria Bergstrom (Victoria Allison Weld) Ancestor: William Brewster Bird Mrs. Thomas Edward Bird (Mary Lynne Miller) Ancestor: John Webster Bishopric Mrs. Suzanne Bishopric (Suzanne Powell Bishopric) Ancestor: Jeremiah Fitch Bispham Miss Barbara Harlin Bispham (Barbara Harlin Bispham) Ancestor: John George Bispham Mrs. Thomas P. Bispham (Barbara Cecelia Shea) Ancestor: John George Boss Mrs. Grace H. Boss (Grace Palmer Hammond) Ancestor: Thomas Dudley Boulud Mrs. -
The University of Pennsylvania's Department of Mines, Arts, And
The University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Mines, Arts, and Manufactures in Context Will Kearney Kearney 1 The University of Pennsylvania, as part of a restructuring of its undergraduate education,1 established the Department of Mines, Arts, and Manufactures in 1852, but courses were not offered until the 1855-56 school year. While the Department ceased to operate during the Civil War and never resumed classes, Penn’s Scientific School, later the Towne Scientific School and eventually the School of Engineering and Applied Science, rose from the remnants of the Department of Mines. Behind these institutional changes lies a broader change in what Christopher Jones, in his University of Pennsylvania Ph.D dissertation, calls the “energy landscape” of eastern Pennsylvania. This energy landscape, according to Jones, consists of the energy source and everything that it comes in contact with on its journey to the consumer, including mining, transportation, and consumption technologies and the people who use those technologies.2 But an energy landscape, or any landscape defined by technologies for that matter, also includes the knowledge economy that grows up to support technological progress. Penn’s Department of Mines, while short-lived compared to other contemporary engineering schools, was an integral part of the changing energy landscape of 19th century Pennsylvania. The Energy Landscape of Eastern Pennsylvania An energy landscape starts with an energy source – anthracite coal in the case of northeastern Pennsylvania – and adds in the people and technology that take the energy source to its consumers whether they are iron manufacturers or homeowners.3 This landscape is distinct from its place because, in a mineral-based economy like the Coal Region, the energy source is 1 A scientific course, emphasizing natural philosophy and leading to a Bachelor of Science degree, was also established alongside the classical Bachelor of Arts education in the College. -
Weld Coxe Collection
Collection 3008 Collection 3008 Weld Coxe Collection 1669-1982, n.d. 13 Boxes, 33 flat files, 20 volumes, 7 images, 7.5 linear feet Contact: The Historical Society of Pennsylvania 1300 Locust Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107 Phone: (215) 732-6200 FAX: (215) 732-2680 Processed by: Patrick Henry Shea Processing Completed: January 2002 Restrictions: None Related Collections at HSP: Daniel Coxe, Agreement from 1688, (#806) Brinton Coxe Papers, (#1983) Coxe Family Papers, (#2049) Coxe Family Mining Papers (#3005) William J. Wilgus Papers (#3006) Sophia Yarnall Jacobs Papers (#3007) ______________________________________________________________________________ © 2002 The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. All Rights Reserved. Weld Coxe Collection Collection 3008 Weld Coxe Collection 1669-1982, n.d. 13 boxes, 33 flat files, 20 volumes, 7 images, 7.5 linear feet Collection 3008 Abstract The Weld Coxe Collection documents over three hundred years of the Coxe family in America and provide valuable insight into the lives various family members. Beginning with Dr. Daniel Coxe of London, the proprietary governor of West Jersey and continuing through Daniel Michaux Coxe, who in 1968 oversaw the liquidation of the Coxe properties in Pennsylvania, this collection spans eight generations of Coxes who had the drive and determination to make their ancestor’s dreams a reality. Background note The story of the Coxe family in America began over three hundred years ago, when in 1684, Dr. Daniel Coxe of London began speculating in land on the American continent, eventually acquiring over one million acres. Little, if any of this land remained in the possession of the Coxe family following the American Revolution, as the new government confiscated proprietary lands.