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Laws and List of the Members of the Medical Society of Edinburgh
LAWS AND LIST OF THE MEMBERS OF THE MEDICAL SOCIETY o I? EDINBURGH. Jnfiltuted 1737. Incorporated by Royal Charter i 778. EDINBURGH: PRINTED BY MUNDELL b* SOiV FOR THE SOCIETY, 3792. CONTENTS. Page - Chap, I. OfOrdinary Meetings - i II. — Extraordinary Meetings - -. 4 - III. — 'The Decijions of the Society 5 - - IV. — Ordinary Members 8 V. — Extraordinary Members - m 9 — VI, Correfponding Members - 10 - - VII. — Honorary Members IX — VIII. Prejidents - - - 12 - XI. — The Treafurer - iG - X. —- I’he Secretary and Librarian 17 - - XI, — Vifitors - 2t XII. — Providing Subjects for Dijfertations 24 - XIII. — The Delivery of Dijfertations 27 ~ XIV* — The Circulation of Minutes and Differ tations • XV. — The Reading of Dijfertations - 31 - - - XVI. — The Library 32 - - XVII. — Committees - 35 - - XIX. — Penalties - 41 - XX. — T’he Colledion of Money 41 - - - XXL — Diplomas 44 - - - XXII. — Expulfon 47 XXIII. — New Laws - - 49 Order of the Proceedings of the Society at Ordinary - - - Meetings - 50 - Private Btfinefs - • ib. Private IV C O' N T E N T S. Page - - public Bujinefs - - 51 - - Lift of the Medical Society - 55 - Lift of Honorary Members - 95 Lift ofAnnual Prefdents - - - 103 N. B. Thofe whofe names are printed.in Italics have been ele&ed Honorary Members. Thofe to whofe names are prefixed this mark * have been Annual Prefidents# I LAWS OF THE MEDICAL SOCIETY. CHAPTER I. OF ORDINARY MEETINGS. l. The ordinary meetings of the Society fhall com- mence the lad Saturday but one of October, and be held every Saturday until twelve fets of members (hall have read their diflertations. Each ordinary meeting for private bufinefs (hall commence at fix o’clock P. -
RELIGION and EDUCATION an ABBPAST PUBLICATION Introduction
THE ABBOTSKERSWELL VILLAGE HISTORY SERIES, 3 RELIGION AND EDUCATION AN ABBPAST PUBLICATION Introduction he Abbotskerswell Village History Series, is now well under way, with this being the third in the series; if you have missed the first two Task in the shop as they should still have copies. We now move on to the story of the hugely significant village institutions of churches, chapels and schools. The Abbotskerswell of 2016 is a very different place from the nineteenth century village that features in this edition, when the various religious institutions held great importance in most people’s lives; the fact that a village of under 500 people had five separate religious groups represented here was remarkable. Of course many people rarely left the village and had simple views on life, they were poorly educated and many would have been illiterate. Our village’s story continues with the changes brought about by compulsory education and children no longer leaving school aged ten to go to work. In writing each booklet we have tried to make each one readable on its own, whilst trying not to end up repeating ourselves. They probably make more sense read in sequence, as names such as Mrs Hare do keep reappearing. From the research team’s point of view the exciting thing is the wealth of material that has emerged as more people have learnt of our project. The emergence of village histories going back nearly a century has been fascinating, in this edition we feature two more of them. ABBOTSKERSWELL VILLAGE HISTORY Religion and Education 1 Chapter 1 A Religious Heritage These are two church histories, with our village’s vicar Rev. -
Family and Heirs Sir Francis Drake
THE FAMILY AND HEIRS OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE BY LADY ELIOTT-DRAKE WITH PORTRAITS AND ILLUSTRATIONS IN TWO VOLUMES VOL. II. LONDON SMITH, ELDER & CO., 15 WATERLOO PLACE, S. W. 1911 [All rights reserved} THE FAMILY AND HEIRS OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE VOL. II. cJ:-, · ,<Ji-a II c/.) (sf) ra l<e 9/1 ,·,v !J3CLl'O/l-et CONTENTS OF THE SECOND VOLUME PART V SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, THIRD BARONET, 1662-1717 OBAl'TER PAGE CBAl'TER PAGE I. 3 V. 117 II. 28 VI. 142 III. 55 VII. 169 IV. 87 VIII. 195 PART VI SIR FRANCIS HENRY DRAKE, FOURTH BARONET, 1718-1740 OBAPTER PAGE I. 211 PART VII SIR FRANCIS HENRY DRAKE, FIFTH BARONET, 1740-1794 CIIAl'TER PAGE CHAPTER PAGE I. 237 IV. 290 II. 253 V. 310 III. 276 VI. 332 PAGE APPENDIX l. 343 APPENDIX II. 360 INDEX • 403 ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE SECOND VOLUME Sm FRANCIS DRAKE, TmRD BARONET Frontispiece (From a Miniature b11 Sir Peter Lel11) DOROTHY, LADY DRAKE (DAUGHTER Ol!' SIR JOHN BAM• FIELD), WIFE OF TmRD BARONET To face p. 8 SIR HENRY POLLEXFEN, CmEF JUSTICE OF THE COMMON PLEAS • " 76 SAMFORD SPINEY CHURCH 138 ANNE, LADY DRAKE (DAUGHTER OF SAMUEL HEATHCOTE), WIFE OF FOURTH BARONET 218 SIR FRANCIS HENRY DRAKE, FOURTH BARONET 234 Sm FRANCIS HENRY DRAKE, FIFTH BARONET • 234 BEERALSTON 253 BUCKLAND ABBEY 274 Mrss KNIGHT 294 (F'rom a Painting by Sir Joshua Reynolds) ADMIRAL FRANCIS WII,LIAM DRAKE 310 DRAKE'S DRUM 338 PART V SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, 3RD BARONET 1662-1717 PARTY CHAPTER I As we pass from the life story of Sir Francis Drake, the ' Par liamentarian ' baronet, to that of his nephew and heir, Francis, only surviving son of Major Thomas Drake, we feel at first as though we were quitting old friends for the society of new and less interesting companions. -
The E.S.C. Quarterly
The E. S. C. Quarterly VOLUME 7, NO. 3-4 1949 SUMMER-FALL # Merchandising Set New Record in North Carolina Last Year, Retail and Wholesale; History of Development ** One of North Carolina's many fine and modern department stores (see inside cover) PUBLISHED BY Employment Security Commission of North Carolina jpttm^awm FROM RALEIGH, N. C. - B^Y L : ;sTy im PAGE 82 THE E. S. C. QUARTERLY Summer-fall, 1949 The E. S. C. Quarterly MERCHANDISING IN STATE (Formerly The U.C.C. Quarterly) Merchandising in North Carolina is big business. Both wholesale and retail trade has developed and Volume 7, Numbers 3-4 Summer-Fall, 1949 expanded in the State to keep pace with the ever Issued four times a year at Raleigh, N. C, by the growing demands of the State's citizenship for more and EMPLOYMENT SECURITY COMMISSION OF better merchandise. Retail trade exceeded $2,- NORTH CAROLINA 137,000,000 during the fiscal year ended last June 30, and the North Carolina Department of Revenue does Commissioner:-;: Mrs. Quentin Gregory, Halifax; Dr. Harry D. not claim that these figures tell the complete story. Wolf, Chapel Hill; R. Dave Hall, Belmont; Marion W. Heiss, Much trading does not go on the records. Greensboro; C. A. Fink, Spencer; Bruce E. Davis, Charlotte. But the retail trade produced through the 3% sales and use State Advisory Council: Dr. Thurman D. Kitchin, Wake For- tax more than $40,000,000 in taxes, which is the est, chairman; Mrs. Gaston A. Johnson, High Point; W. B. Horton, Yanceyville; C. P. Clark, Wilson; Dr. -
G005073A.Pdf
Copyright, 1922 BY ALBERT A. POMEROY "The Genealogy of the Pomeroy Family is 11 volume of 962 closely printed pages [aside from 78 pages of illustrations) that was published four years ago. At the time of its publication there was a full description of the book in these columns. At that time the secretary and historian of the Pomeroy Family Association was Albert A. Pomeroy of Sandusky, Ohio, who has been continued in the office. The volume represents the expenditure of a large amount of time and money, and the genealogies of the different generations are concise, so that each page contains as much information as is found in some genealogical pampl,/ets." -Boston Transcript. The History and Genealogy of the Pomeroy Family: "The book selected by the New England Register for attack, is a splendid work of 1040 royal octavo pages, with about eighty interesting illustra tions, the whole well printed in excellent type on beautiful white paper and handsomely bound, while in subject matter and contents it is, to an historian, of all genealogies which I have ever examined the one most notable and historically most valuable." -The 'Journal of American History, Vol XI, No. 2. VII ltbttafutn To the memory of Dr. Hiram Sterling Pomeroy, who passed to his reward on April 20, 1917, at Auburn dale, Mass. He studied medicine at Yale and received the degree of M.D. at Leipsic, and in 1891 the degree of M.A. from Yale; Fellow of the Massachusetts Medical Society; member of the American Academy Pol. and Social Science; President of the Pomeroy Family Association, and a generous contributor to the work and expense; and a prolific writer. -
Evergreen Cemetery Burial Records
CONSULTING FIRM: SCORED BY: DATE: EVALUATION/RANKING POINTS AWARDED Points Possible Score 1 Describe understanding of project, the services required, and proposed method to accomplish the project 0 – 15 2 Specify persons to provide services, their roles, qualifications, and experience. Name project manager, availability and anticipated scale of involvement. Specify hourly rates of each person proposed. 0 – 15 3 Describe three past projects accomplished by proposed personnel similar in concept and scope. 0 – 8 Subtotal The Engineering Contract Administrator will assign points for criterion 4. below 4 Juneau Proposer 0 or 2 TOTAL POINTS 40 INDIVIDUAL RANKING CA & Inspection OR Design: Page 1 (C3) RFP E EVERGREEN CEMETERY BURIAL RECORDS DATE OF DATE OF DEATH BURIAL NAME NO. (Y/M/D) (Y/M/D) SECTION MAP/KEY COMMENTS A., Annie 1146 1920/10/31 Aase, Harold 3325 1946/12 IOOF 3-D-19 Abbott, Donald 3873 1953/06/25 General Infant Abbott, Johnnie David 0421 1971/11/17 Legion 6-G-8 Abbott, Martha 4124 1956/10/15 General 3-B-17 Abeleac, Emil 0459 1907/12/29 Abraham (Infant) 2886 1942/07/28 General Abrahemson, John 1744 1930/11/25 Masonic Ackerly, Leslie 0143 1900/08/09 Ackerman, Elizabeth 0718 1979/01/26 Catholic 4-D-22 Ackerman, John Michael 0189 1968/02/14 Catholic 4-D-22 Acosta, Josh 0290 1923/10/19 Adair, Richard James 0721 1979/04/21 IOOF 3-C-17 Adams, Cynthia Lou 4335 1959/07/28 Catholic Adams, Edwin Charles 3652 1950/10 Moose 3-C-21 Adams, John D. 1526 1927/12/23 General 12-J-10 Adams, Katherine 0634 1976/05/13 General 2-A-13 Adams, Luilla M. -
The Republican Journal: Vol. 80, No. 32
The Republican Journal. SO. BELFAST, MAINE^ THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1908. NUMBER 32 u John Sanborn Retires. John San- H. Boston arrived on Of To-Day's Journal. Scott Tollman of ] <^ts born has sold bis teams and trucking visit his fie -- THE BELFAST. Tuesday morning's boat to sister, PERSONAL PERSONAL. PERSONAL. Bells. business to Joseph F. McKeen, who sue Mrs. street. v rninent.Wedding NEWSJJE Minnie T. Clark, Cedar Ball...Per- N w>,,t Belfast...Base ceeds him as local agent for the Standard Mr. Lincoln of Washington Mills con A Wednesday an- Master Alton Johnson is in Bangor for a Miss Isabel Ginn left Saturday for a short Miss ;,«• Churches, telegram was received Alice Aborn returned Monday from Oil Co., Mr. Sanborn having resigned few visit in Boston. ducted religions services July 29th and 30tl that morning of Mrs. days visiting friends. a few visit in council. busi- nouncing the death days’ Roekport. were that position and retired from active ... of Waldo County ..The in Hall, City.point, which wel Somerset, Boston. Miss Maude E. Barker left for a H. M. and R. L. Bean of Camden were in .| ietou Peavey George P. Field at Hotel Monday Miss E. Nash of is the tv Library....County Corre- ness. He was born in Hridgton, Me, Ruby Bangor attended and interesting. was seen in visit in Montreal and Quebec. Belfast last week on business. •.. An ocean Liner’s Cargo.... A black steam guest of Miss Charlotte and when very young his parents moved to large yacht Frost, her cousin. apples, Southern Style ^poem.) Miss Arlene Smith will give a social en the headed for Mrs. -
Historic-District-Society-Hill.Pdf
SOCIETY HILL (and Pennsylvania Hospital of Washington Square West) HISTORIC DISTRICT Philadelphia Historical Commission 10 March 1999 Amended 13 October 1999 Amended 8 March 2019 1 ADDISON STREET - 400 Block Paving: concrete Curbs: concrete Sidewalks: concrete Light fixtures: none 425-35: See 424-34 Pine Street. *************** 400-10 See 401-09 Lombard Street. 412-34 See 411-49 Lombard Street. 2 ADDISON STREET - 500 Block Paving: granite block Curbs: aggregate concrete Sidewalks: brick Light fixtures: Franklin 501-15 "Addison Court" Eight, 4-story, 2-bay, red brick, contemporary houses. Recessed entrance with large sidelights; single-leaf 1-panel door; coupled casement sash 2nd and 3rd floors; concrete stringcourse 1st floor; brick soldiercourse 2nd and 3rd floors; recessed 4th floor hidden by brick parapet with cast stone coping; single-car garage door; end units turn into court. At each end, a brick and concrete arch spans Addison Street cartway. Built c. 1965 by Bower and Fradley, architects. Building permit. Contributing. 519 2-story, 3-bay, carriage house. Ground floor garage opening; hay loft door, two 8-light windows and metal pulley on 2nd floor. Built c. 1885. Contributing. 521-39 See 516-34 Pine Street. 541-43 See 536-40 Pine Street. *************** 500-14 "Addison Court" Eight, 4-story, 2-bay, red brick, contemporary houses. Recessed entrance with large sidelights; single-leaf 1-panel door; coupled casement sash 2nd and 3rd floors; concrete stringcourses 1st floor; brick soldiercourse 2nd and 3rd floors; recessed 4th floor hidden by brick parapet with cast stone coping; single-car garage door; end units turn into court. -
List of Sir Ernest Satow's General Correspondence from 1906 to 1927
List of Sir Ernest Satow's General Correspondence from 1906 to 1927 著者 Ruxton Ian URL http://hdl.handle.net/10228/00006834 List of Sir Ernest Satow’s General Correspondence from 1906 to 1927 Compiled by Ian Ruxton Copyright Ian Ruxton, 2018. All Rights Reserved. Published through lulu.com in 2018. The compiler can be contacted at [email protected] ISBN: 978-1-387-59639-3 Sir Ernest Satow’s General Correspondence (1906-1927) The listing below refers to Sir Ernest Satow’s general correspondence in retirement as it appears in the National Archives of the United Kingdom, ref. PRO 30/33 12 and PRO 30/33 13. To reproduce every letter with annotations would be a major labour and would probably not be worthwhile. On the other hand, a mere list can be instructive in its own way, and reference to the contents of letters may also assist scholars in evaluating their value in various projects. The approach is similar to the one adopted with the catalogue of the Takeda family letters at the Yokohama Archives of History, which includes a number written by Satow to his Japanese family.1 1 See Nakatake Kanami, ‘Takedake Kyu-zo- A-nesuto Sato- Kankei Shiryo- Mokuroku’ (1), (2), (3) in Yokohama Kaiko- Shiryo-kan Kiyo- No. 21, 22, 24. (Heisei 15, 16 and 18: 2003, 2004, 2006). 中武 香奈実、「武田家旧蔵アーネスト・サトウ関係 資料目録」in 横浜開港資料館紀要 No. 21, 22, 24. (平 成15、16、18) i The total number of letters is 1,397, with the years as follows: 1906 – 8 letters 1907 – 31 1908 – 72 1909 – 45 1910 – 84 1911 – 13 1912 – 24 1913 – 64 1914 – 109 1915 – 117 1916 – 146 1917 – 88 1918 – 123 1919 – 111 1920 – 125 1921 – 104 1922 – 42 1923 – 23 1924 – 12 1925 – 26 1926 – 1 ii 1927 – 26 Year unknown – 3 The great majority are letters which have been received by Satow, though sometimes full copies of letters which he sent are included. -
Chapter Book 8 643 KB
CHAPTER BOOK 8, 1884–1905 Routine matters such as admissions to sizarships, scholarships and fellowships omitted. a.verso List of Master and fellows at October 1884. p. 1 1884 10 Oct. The order of 12 Oct. 1883 having accidentally omitted the words ‘for the current academic year’, Henry Ernest Fanshawe, then appointed classical lecturer, and Charles Archibald Edmund Pollock, then appointed mathematical lecturer, are now appointed to those posts without limitation of tenure. 24 Oct. Agreed to subscribe to Rush Christopher Hawkins’ Titles of the first books from the earliest presses [London, 1884] [W.1.HAW] for the library at a cost of £2 2s. Letters testimonial for deacon’s orders for William Ranger. p. 2 7 Nov. Letters testimonial for deacon’s orders for Cecil Gordon Calthrop, George Grantham Collins, Alfred Marshall and Henry Pickford. Date of entrance scholarship examination set, with regulations for scholarships (see 24 Nov. 1882 and 2 Nov. 1883). Sealings: Lease of the Eagle Inn to Augustus Goodman Ekin at an annual rent of £80 [Lease Book, 97–101, with plan and annotations for renewal]; Licence for Robert Henry Sayle [George Moore Sayle and Joseph Clark] to demise 11 Alexandra Street to Henry Philip Chalk [Lease Book, 103–05]; p. 3 Licence for the last to demise 12 Alexandra Street to Joseph Nichols [Lease Book, 101–03]; and 13 Alexandra Street to the Cambridgeshire Permanent Benefit Building Society [Lease Book, 105–07]; Licence for Anna Susan Fisher and Sarah Elizabeth Charlier to assign Vine Cottage, Trumpington Road, to Philip Llewellyn Hudson [Lease Book, 95–96]. -
GSR Vertical File Index General Subjects
GSR Vertical File Index General Subjects Compiled by the staff of Information Services, Kitchener Public Library Revised 1 January 2017 - 1 - GSR General Subjects Abbreviations: CB-KW = Collective Biography – Kitchener Waterloo CB–Watco = Collective Biography – Waterloo County (Region) – excluding Kitchener –Waterloo RMW = Regional Municipality of Waterloo Note: Coverage starts from various dates to 31 December 2004. For articles from the Waterloo Region Record (formerly K-W Record), dated 1 January 2005 to the present, please see staff at the Information Level 2 desk (outside the Grace Schmidt Room). Thank you. Updated 1 January 2017 Page 2 of 638 GSR General Subjects GSR General Subject Headings Index General A AASMAN, SUSAN see CB WATCO ABATE, LAURA ABBAS, ALI see IRAQ – WAR 2003 ABBEY, JOHN see CB WATCO ABBOTT, BRUCE see CB KW ABBOTT, KATHLEEN (WIFE OF WILLIAM) NEE LOTH see CB KW ABERNATHY, RUTH see ARTISTS-RMW ABERLE, MURRAY see CB WATCO ABERLE, ROY see CB WATCO ABILITY CENTRE ABORIGINAL PEOPLES – ARCHAEOLOGY see also ARCHAEOLOGY ABORIGINAL PEOPLES – GENERAL ABORIGINAL PEOPLES – MISSISSAUGAS OF THE NEW CREDIT FIRST NATION ABORIGINAL PEOPLES – POWWOWS ABORIGINAL PEOPLES – SIX NATIONS OF THE GRAND RIVER ABORIGINAL PEOPLES – WEEJEENDIMIN NATIVE RESOURCE CENTRE ABORTION - K-W see also PLANNED PARENTHOOD - WATERLOO REGION; K-W RIGHT TO LIFE ABWUNZA YMCA CHILD CARE CENTRE see DAY CARE (A-Z) ACADEMY OF DANCE see BUS ENT WAT ACCIDENTS - KITCHENER, ONTARIO - 1995 - 1999, 2000 - see also scrapbooks in GSR (MGSR 363.100971345 ACCID for (Volume -
Strays - Introduction
Bristol & Avon Family History Society Strays - Introduction The Strays listed in this document are people born or who usually lived in the former county of Avon (Bristol, Bath, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire) but have been found (often by chance) in another county. They have been submitted to the Society by family historians for in- clusion in this document and have been taken from many different sources such as baptismal, marriage and death registers, newspapers and monumental inscriptions. Prior to the advent of the internet and its powerful search facilities, locating ancestors who had moved away from their place of birth (or where they usually lived) was an extremely difficult, if not impossible task and the Strays file offered a ray of hope to researchers whose ancestors had ‘dissappeared off the radar’. Nowadays, the internet makes it much easier to find people wherever they are located but nevertheless, the Strays file can still give a clue as to their whereabouts when you hit that ‘brickwall’. Please bear in mind that this document is a secondary source and reseachers should endeavour to verify all information used. The Society is still maintaining its Strays file and we welcome your submissions although we are not recording information from census records because they are widely available on-line. Please include as much information as possible, especially about the source document. For example, if the source is a newspaper article, please include the following: • name of the newspaper • date of its publication • page