Name and Location of Repository

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Name and Location of Repository State Library of Massachusetts - Special Collections Department Ms. Coll. 88 Burrill File Guide COLLECTION SUMMARY Creator: Burrill, Ellen Mudge, 1872?-1937 Call Number: Ms. Coll. 88 Extent: 10 linear feet Preferred Citation Style: Folder Title. Burrill File. State Library of Massachusetts Special Collections. Provenance: Ellen Mudge Burrill, date unknown; additions made by State Library staff members. About This Finding Aid: Description based on DACS. Processed by: Finding aid prepared in September, 1987; updated January, 2013; and updated by Abigail Cramer, February, 2013. Abstract: The Burrill File is a collection of assorted materials primarily concerned with the State House and with Massachusetts political figures. SCOPE AND CONTENT The Burrill File is a group of materials primarily concerned with the State House and Massachusetts political figures. Materials include photographs, newspaper clippings, correspondence, and pamphlets. The collection is based on one compiled by Ellen Mudge Burrill (1872?-1937), author of a number of guides to the State House. There have been numerous additions to the collection and materials are added continually. A list of the subjects for which there is material in the Burrill File is given at the end of this guide. State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 1 of 75 ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION Arrangement Materials in the Burrill File are arranged alphabetically by subject or by individual person's name. All materials about the State House are first listed under the heading, "State House," and then further subdivided. For example: "State House – House of Representatives." Conditions Governing Access This collection is open for research during the Special Collections Department’s regular hours. Conditions Governing Reproduction and Use Copyright restrictions may apply. Requests for permission to publish material from this collection should be discussed with Special Collections staff. Languages and Scripts The collection is entirely in English. Immediate Source of Acquisition Ellen Mudge Burrill, date unknown. Accruals Materials are added continually by State Library staff members. Subjects A Adams, Charles Francis (1807-1886; House of Representatives, 1841-1843; Senate, 1844-1845; U.S. House, 1859-1861; Minister to Great Britain, 1861-1868) Adams, John (1735-1826; Chief Justice of Mass. Supreme Court, 1776; U.S. Minister to Great Britain, 1785-1788; Vice President of U.S., 1789-1797; President of U.S., 1797-1801) Adams, John Quincy (1767-1848; U.S. Senate, 1803-1808; U.S. Secretary of State, 1817-1825; President of the U.S., 1825-1829; U.S. House, 1831-1848) State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 2 of 75 Adams National Historic Site SEE: QUINCY, MA Adams, Samuel (1722-1803; Governor, 1794-1797) Adams, MA Administration and Finance (ANF) – Secretaries’ Reunion (2004) African Meetinghouse (Boston, MA) Albano, Salvatore R. “Sal” (1935- ; Senate, 1985-1990) Alkins, Leonard C. (1944- ; Clerk of the Committee on Rules of the Two Branches, 1978- ) Allen, Frank Gilman (1874-1950; Governor, 1929-1931) Allston, MA SEE: BRIGHTON, MA American Conservatorio of Boston (research conducted by T. Mazzulli, 2010-2011) American Party SEE: “KNOW-NOTHINGS” American War Mothers Ames, Butler (1871-1954; House of Representatives, 1898-1900; U.S. House, 1903-1913) Amesbury, MA Amherst, MA Amick, Carol C. (House of Representatives, 1975-1977; Senate, 1977-1989) Amorello, Matthew John (1958- ; Senate, 1991-1998) State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 3 of 75 Andover, MA Andrew, John Albion (1818-1867; Governor, 1861-1866) Andrew, Richard (1869-1956) SEE: STATE HOUSE – 104TH INFANTRY (MURAL) SEE: STATE HOUSE – 6TH MASS. INFANTRY Andros, Edmond (1637-1714; Governor of New England, 1686-1689) Angellis, Phillip M. (1948- ; Assistant Clerk of the Senate, 1980-1992) Angle Tree Monument Animals in World War I (Tablet) SEE: STATE HOUSE – TABLETS – TO THE ANIMALS IN WORLD WAR I Anthony, Susan B. (1820-1906; American suffragist) Antonioni, Robert A. (1958- ; House of Representatives, 1989-1992; Senate, 1992-2008) “Appleseed, Johnny” (born John Chapman) SEE: CHAPMAN, JOHN SEE ALSO: LEOMINSTER, MA Arlington, MA Army Nurses Memorial SEE: STATE HOUSE – SENATE STAIRCASE HALL Art Deco Society of Boston SEE: BOSTON – ARCHITECTURE Ashland, MA Athol, MA State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 4 of 75 Atkins, Chester G. (1948- ; House of Representatives, 1971-1972; Senate, 1973- 1984; U.S. House, 1985-1993) Attleborough, MA Audubon, John James (1785-1851) Audubon Society SEE: MASSACHUSETTS AUDUBON SOCIETY Aylmer, John Francis (1934- ; Senate, 1971-1981) B Bachrach, George A. (1951- ; Senate, 1981-1986) Backman, Jack H. (1922- ; House of Representatives, 1965-1970; Senate, 1971-1987) Bacon, Gaspar G. (1886-1947; Senate President, 1929-32; Lieutenant Governor, 1933-1935) Bacon, John (Senate President, 1806-1807) Bailey, James Alderson (1867-1954; House of Representatives, 1894-1895; Senate, 1897) Baker, Charles D. Balser, Ruth (1948- ; House of Representatives, 1999-20 ) Baltimore, MD Balukonis, Patricia Jean Banks, Nathaniel Prentice, Jr. (1816-1894; U.S. House, 1853-1857, 1865-1873, 1875-1879, 1889-1891; Governor, 1858-1861) Barnstable, MA State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 5 of 75 Barrett, Michael John (1948- ; House of Representatives, 1979-1984; Senate, 1987-1994, 2013-) Barrios, Jarrett T. (1968- ; House of Representatives, 1999-2002; Senate, 2003-2007) Barrows, Mary Livermore (1877-1955; House of Representatives, 1929-1938) Bartlett, George Hartnell (1838-1923) Bartlett, Josiah (1729-1795) Bartlett, William Francis (1840-1876) Bartley, David M. (House Speaker, 1969-1975) Basement Excavations (State House) SEE: STATE HOUSE – ADDITIONS – 1853-1856 Bates, John Lewis (1859-1946; Governor 1903-1905) Bates, William Henry (1917-1969; U.S. House, 1950-1969) Bay State Light Infantry SEE: FLAGS – U.S. – CIVIL WAR – 3RD REGIMENT MASS. VOLUNTEER INFANTRY COMPANY K (BAY STATE LIGHT INFANTRY) The Beacon (also called: the Beacon Monument, the Eagle Monument) Beacon Hill SEE: BOSTON – BEACON HILL Beacon Hill Reservoir SEE: BOSTON – BEACON HILL RESERVOIR Belcher, Jonathan (1682-1757; Governor, Province of Mass. Bay, 1730-1741) Bellingham, Richard (c. 1592-1672; Governor, Province of Mass. Bay, 1641-1642) State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 6 of 75 Bellotti, Francis X. (1923- ; Lieutenant Governor, 1963-1964; Attorney General, 1975-1986) Belmont, MA Bernashe, Roger Leo (Senate) Bernard, Francis (1712-1779; Governor, Province of Mass. Bay, 1760-1769) Bernstein, Robert Alan (1961- ; Senate, 1995-2000) Berry, Frederick E. (1949- ; Senate, 1983-2013) Bertonazzi, Louis Peter (1933- ; House of Representatives, 1969-1978; Senate, 1979-1996) Betzger, Julie (1950-2006; clerk to Senate Committee on Bills in the Third Reading, 1978-2006) Beverly, MA Bianculli, Domenic J. (1918- ; Administrative Secretary to the Governor’s Council, 1947-1980) Bickford, Walter E. (1942- ; House of Representatives, 1977-1983) Bicknell, Albion Harris (1837-1915) SEE: LINCOLN, ABRAHAM Big Dig Bigelow, Albert Francis (1880-1958; House of Representatives, 1927-1946) Bill, Richard (Colonial Council, 1740?) Binienda, John J, Sr. (1947- ; House of Representatives, 1987-20 ) Birmingham, Thomas F. (1949- ; Senate, 1991-2002; Senate President, 1995-2002) Bissell, Israel (1752-1823; Massachusetts post-rider) SEE: HINSDALE, MA State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 7 of 75 Black Legislators Blackmar, Wilmon W. (18??-1905; Commander-in-Chief of the Department of Mass., G.A.R.; Judge Advocate General) Blackstone River Valley (MA and RI) Blanchard, Vinson (1916- ; House of Representatives, 1957-196?) Blumer, Deborah D. (1941-2006; House of Representatives, 2001-2006) Blute, Peter I. (1956- ; House of Representatives, 1987-1992; U.S. House, 1993-1997) Bly, Belden Gerald, Jr. (1914-2006; House of Representatives, 1949-1980) Bohigian, Robert J. (1922-2005; House of Representatives, 1959-1990) Boland, Edward P. (1911- ; House of Representatives, 1935-1940; U.S. House, 1953-1989) Bolling, Royal Lee, Sr. (1920- ; House of Representatives, 1961-1968, 1971-1974; Senate, 1983-1988) Bolton, MA Book Preservation SEE: BOOKS – CONSERVATION AND RESTORATION Books – Conservation and Restoration Borah, William Edgar (1865-1940) Borden, Lizzie Bosley, Daniel E. (1953- ; House of Representatives, 1987-2011) Boston, MA State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 8 of 75 Boston – Architecture Boston – Arts Commission Boston – Beacon Hill Boston – Beacon Hill Reservoir Boston – Bill of Rights Walkway Boston – Black Heritage Trail Boston – Central Artery Boston – Christ Church Boston City Architect Boston City Hospital Boston Common Boston Coliseum Boston – Custom House Boston – Dorchester Boston – East Boston Boston – Faneuil Hall Boston – First Night Boston – Graveyards – Historic Boston – Hancock House State Library of Massachusetts – Special Collections Department Guide to Ms. Coll. 88 – Burrill File Page 9 of 75 Boston – Harbor Islands Boston – King’s Chapel Boston – Literary Trail
Recommended publications
  • The Shape of the Electoral College
    No. 20-366 IN THE Supreme Court of the United States DONALD J. TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, ET AL., Appellants, v. STATE OF NEW YORK, ET AL., Appellees. On Appeal From the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York BRIEF OF AMICUS CURIAE MICHAEL L. ROSIN IN SUPPORT OF APPELLEES PETER K. STRIS MICHAEL N. DONOFRIO Counsel of Record BRIDGET C. ASAY ELIZABETH R. BRANNEN STRIS & MAHER LLP 777 S. Figueroa St., Ste. 3850 Los Angeles, CA 90017 (213) 995-6800 [email protected] Counsel for Amicus Curiae TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS .................................................... i INTEREST OF AMICUS .................................................. 1 SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT .......................................... 2 ARGUMENT ....................................................................... 4 I. Congress Intended The Apportionment Basis To Include All Persons In Each State, Including Undocumented Persons. ..................... 4 A. The Historical Context: Congress Began to Grapple with Post-Abolition Apportionment. ............................................... 5 B. The Thirty-Ninth Congress Considered—And Rejected—Language That Would Have Limited The Basis of Apportionment To Voters or Citizens. ......... 9 1. Competing Approaches Emerged Early In The Thirty-Ninth Congress. .................................................. 9 2. The Joint Committee On Reconstruction Proposed A Penalty-Based Approach. ..................... 12 3. The House Approved The Joint Committee’s Penalty-Based
    [Show full text]
  • 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..
    [Show full text]
  • Reaching for Freedom: Black Resistance and the Roots of a Gendered African-American Culture in Late Eighteenth Century Massachusetts
    W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1998 Reaching for Freedom: Black Resistance and the Roots of a Gendered African-American Culture in Late Eighteenth Century Massachusetts Emily V. Blanck College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the African American Studies Commons, African History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Blanck, Emily V., "Reaching for Freedom: Black Resistance and the Roots of a Gendered African-American Culture in Late Eighteenth Century Massachusetts" (1998). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539626189. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-yxr6-3471 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. REACHING FOR FREEDOM Black Resistance and the Roots of a Gendered African-American Culture in Late Eighteenth Century Massachusetts A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of History The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Masters of Arts b y Emily V. Blanck 1998 APPROVAL SHEET This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Emily Blanck Approved, April 1998 Leisa Mever (3Lu (Aj/K) Kimb^ley Phillips ^ KlU MaU ________________ Ronald Schechter ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS As is the case in every such project, this thesis greatly benefitted from the aid of others.
    [Show full text]
  • Writing the Bicycle
    Writing the Bicycle: Women, Rhetoric, and Technology in Late Nineteenth-Century America Sarah Overbaugh Hallenbeck A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of English and Comparative Literature. Chapel Hill 2009 Approved by: Jane Danielewicz Jordynn Jack Daniel Anderson Jane Thrailkill Beverly Taylor ABSTRACT Sarah Overbaugh Hallenbeck Writing the Bicycle: Women, Rhetoric, and Technology in Late Nineteenth-Century America (Under the direction of Jane Danielewicz and Jordynn Jack) This project examines the intersections among rhetoric, gender, and technology, examining in particular the ways that American women appropriated the new technology of the bicycle at the turn of the twentieth century. It asks: how are technologies shaped by discourse that emanates both from within and beyond professional boundaries? In what ways do technologies, in turn, reshape the social networks in which they emerge—making available new arguments and rendering others less persuasive? And to what extent are these arguments furthered by the changed conditions of embodiment and materiality that new technologies often initiate? Writing the Bicycle: Women, Rhetoric and Technology in Late Nineteenth- Century America addresses these questions by considering how women’s interactions with the bicycle allowed them to make new claims about their minds and bodies, and transformed the gender order in the process. The introduction, “Rhetoric, Gender, Technology,” provides an overview of the three broad conversations to which the project primarily contributes: science and technology studies, feminist historiography, and rhetorical theory. In addition, it outlines a “techno-feminist” materialist methodology that emphasizes the material ii and rhetorical agency of users in shaping technologies beyond their initial design and distribution phases.
    [Show full text]
  • Construction of the Massachusetts Constitution
    Construction of the Massachusetts Constitution ROBERT J. TAYLOR J. HI s YEAR marks tbe 200tb anniversary of tbe Massacbu- setts Constitution, the oldest written organic law still in oper- ation anywhere in the world; and, despite its 113 amendments, its basic structure is largely intact. The constitution of the Commonwealth is, of course, more tban just long-lived. It in- fluenced the efforts at constitution-making of otber states, usu- ally on their second try, and it contributed to tbe shaping of tbe United States Constitution. Tbe Massachusetts experience was important in two major respects. It was decided tbat an organic law should have tbe approval of two-tbirds of tbe state's free male inbabitants twenty-one years old and older; and tbat it sbould be drafted by a convention specially called and chosen for tbat sole purpose. To use the words of a scholar as far back as 1914, Massachusetts gave us 'the fully developed convention.'^ Some of tbe provisions of the resulting constitu- tion were original, but tbe framers borrowed heavily as well. Altbough a number of historians have written at length about this constitution, notably Prof. Samuel Eliot Morison in sev- eral essays, none bas discussed its construction in detail.^ This paper in a slightly different form was read at the annual meeting of the American Antiquarian Society on October IS, 1980. ' Andrew C. McLaughlin, 'American History and American Democracy,' American Historical Review 20(January 1915):26*-65. 2 'The Struggle over the Adoption of the Constitution of Massachusetts, 1780," Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 50 ( 1916-17 ) : 353-4 W; A History of the Constitution of Massachusetts (Boston, 1917); 'The Formation of the Massachusetts Constitution,' Massachusetts Law Quarterly 40(December 1955):1-17.
    [Show full text]
  • Charles Bartlett Interviewer: Fred Holborn Date of Interview: January 6, 1965 Place of Interview: Washington, D.C
    Charles Bartlett Oral History Interview – JFK #1, 1/6/1965 Administrative Information Creator: Charles Bartlett Interviewer: Fred Holborn Date of Interview: January 6, 1965 Place of Interview: Washington, D.C. Length: 91 pp. Biographical Note Bartlett, Washington correspondent for the Chattanooga Times from 1948 to 1962, columnist for the Chicago Daily News, and personal friend of John F. Kennedy (JFK), discusses his role in introducing Jacqueline Bouvier to JFK, JFK’s relationship with Lyndon Baines Johnson, and JFK’s Cabinet appointments, among other issues. Access Open. Usage Restrictions According to the deed of gift signed October 11, 1983, copyright of these materials has been assigned to United States Government. Copyright The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research.” If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excesses of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright infringement. This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in its judgment, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law. The copyright law extends its protection to unpublished works from the moment of creation in a tangible form. Direct your questions concerning copyright to the reference staff.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SURGEON GENERAL and the BULLY PULPIT Michael Stobbe a Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the University of North Carol
    THE SURGEON GENERAL AND THE BULLY PULPIT Michael Stobbe A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Public Health in the Department of Health Policy and Administration, School of Public Health Chapel Hill 2008 Approved by: Ned Brooks Jonathan Oberlander Tom Ricketts Karl Stark Bryan Weiner ABSTRACT MIKE STOBBE: The Surgeon General and the Bully Pulpit (Under the direction of Ned Brooks) This project looks at the role of the U.S. Surgeon General in influencing public opinion and public health policy. I examined historical changes in the administrative powers of the Surgeon General, to explain what factors affect how a Surgeon General utilizes the office’s “bully pulpit,” and assess changes in the political environment and in who oversees the Surgeon General that may affect the Surgeon General’s future ability to influence public opinion and health. This research involved collecting and analyzing the opinions of journalists and key informants such as current and former government health officials. I also studied public documents, transcripts of earlier interviews and other materials. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF TABLES.................................................................................................................v Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION ...............................................................................................1 Background/Overview .........................................................................................1
    [Show full text]
  • The Newspapers of the British Empire As a Matrix for The
    Warner.communicating.liberty-1 Communicating Liberty: the Newspapers of the British Empire as a Matrix for the American Revolution William B. Warner “I beg your lordship’s permission to observe, and I do it with great concern, that this spirit of opposition to taxation and its consequences is so violent and so universal throughout America that I am apprehensive it will not be soon or easily appeased. The general voice speaks discontent… determined to stop all exports to and imports from Great Britain and even to silence the courts of law…foreseeing but regardless of the ruin that must attend themselves in that case, content to change a comfortable, for a parsimonious life,…” Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina, Wm. Bull to Earl of Dartmouth, July 31, 1774. [Documents of the American Revolution, 1770-1783, Ed. K. G. Davies. (Dublin: Irish University Press, 1975) VIII: 1774, 154.] Momentous historical events often issue from a nexus of violence and communication. While American independence from Britain ultimately depended upon the spilling of blood on the battlefields of Bunker Hill, Saratoga and Yorktown, the successful challenge to the legitimacy of British rule in America was the culmination of an earlier communications war waged by American Whigs between the Stamp Act agitation of 1764-5 and the Coercive Acts of 1774. In response to the first of the Coercive acts--the Boston Port Bill--Boston Whigs secured a tidal wave of political and material support from throughout the colonies of British America. By the end of 1774, the American Secretary at Whitehall, Lord Dartmouth, was receiving reports from colonial Governors of North America, like the passage quoted above from the Lieutenant-Governor of South Caroline, William Bull.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SURGEON GENERAL and the BULLY PULPIT Michael Stobbe a Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the University of North Carol
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Carolina Digital Repository THE SURGEON GENERAL AND THE BULLY PULPIT Michael Stobbe A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Public Health in the Department of Health Policy and Administration, School of Public Health Chapel Hill 2008 Approved by: Ned Brooks Jonathan Oberlander Tom Ricketts Karl Stark Bryan Weiner ABSTRACT MIKE STOBBE: The Surgeon General and the Bully Pulpit (Under the direction of Ned Brooks) This project looks at the role of the U.S. Surgeon General in influencing public opinion and public health policy. I examined historical changes in the administrative powers of the Surgeon General, to explain what factors affect how a Surgeon General utilizes the office’s “bully pulpit,” and assess changes in the political environment and in who oversees the Surgeon General that may affect the Surgeon General’s future ability to influence public opinion and health. This research involved collecting and analyzing the opinions of journalists and key informants such as current and former government health officials. I also studied public documents, transcripts of earlier interviews and other materials. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF TABLES.................................................................................................................v Chapter 1. INTRODUCTION ...............................................................................................1
    [Show full text]
  • Henry Cabot Lodge
    1650 Copyright by CLP Research Partial Genealogy of the Lodges Main Political Affiliation: (of Massachusetts & Connecticut) 1763-83 1789-1823 Federalist ?? 1824-33 National Republican ?? 1700 1834-53 Whig ?? 1854- Republican 1750 Giles Lodge (1770-1852); (planter/merchant) (Emigrated from London, England to Santo Domingo, then Massachusetts, 1791) See Langdon of NH = Abigail Harris Langdon Genealogy (1776-1846) (possibly descended from John, son of John Langdon, 1608-97) 1800 10 Others John Ellerton Lodge (1807-62) (moved to New Orleans, 1824); (returned to Boston with fleet of merchant ships, 1835) (engaged in trade with China); (died in Washington state) See Cabot of MA = Anna Sophia Cabot Genealogy (1821-1901) Part I Henry Cabot Lodge (1850-1924) 1850 (MA house, 1880); (ally of Teddy Roosevelt) See Davis of MA (US House, 1887-93); (US Senate, 1893-1924; opponent of League of Nations) Genealogy Part I = Ann Cabot Mills Davis (1851-1914) See Davis of MA Constance Davis George Cabot Lodge Genealogy John Ellerton Lodge Cabot Lodge (1873-1909) Part I (1878-1942) (1872-after 1823) = Matilda Elizabeth Frelinghuysen Davis (1875-at least 1903) (Oriental art scholar) = Col. Augustus Peabody Gardner = Mary Connally (1885?-at least 1903) (1865-1918) Col. Henry Cabot Lodge Cmd. John Davis Lodge Helena Lodge 1900(MA senate, 1900-01) (from Canada) (US House, 1902-17) (1902-85); (Rep); (newspaper reporter) (1903-85); (Rep) (1905-at least 1970) (no children) (WWI/US Army) (MA house, 1933-36); (US Senate, 1937-44, 1947-53; (movie actor, 1930s-40s);
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter VI, Executive Department
    A Comparative Analysis of the Michigan Constitution Volume I Article VI Citizens Research Council of Michigan 1526 David Stott Building 204 Bauch Building Detroit, 26, Michigan Lansing 23, Michigan Report Number 208 October 1961 Citizens Research Council of Michigan TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER VI EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT Page A. State Officers - Election and Term 1 B. General Powers of the Governor - Executive Organization 9 C. The Governor’s Power of Appointment and Removal 22 1. Power of Appointment 22 2. Power of Removal 27 D. Civil Service Commission 32 E. The Governor’s Relations with the Legislature 41 1. Messages to the Legislature 41 2. Writs of Election for Legislative Vacancies 42 3. Convening Special Legislative Session 43 4. Convening Legislature Elsewhere Than at State Capital 45 5. Gubernatorial Veto 46 6. Item Veto 53 F. Other Powers of the Governor 56 1. Military Powers 56 2. Reprieves, Commutations and Pardons 58 3. Use of the Great Seal 62 VI Executive Department 4. Issuance of Commissions 63 G. Eligibility, Lieutenant Governor, Succession and Other Provisions 65 1. Eligibility to Office of Governor 65 2. Prohibition of Dual Office Holding and Legislative Appointment 66 3. Lieutenant Governor 68 4. Devolution of the Governor’s Powers upon Lieutenant Governor 72 5. Succession Beyond Lieutenant Governor 76 6. Compensation of State Officers 78 7. Boards of State Auditors, Escheats and Fund Commission 80 (See over for Section detail) Page Article VI, Section 1 ......................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form
    Form No. 10-300 (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOW TO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS ________TYPE ALL ENTRIES -- COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS_____ INAME HISTORICI II W I V II V* 4^\ f Essex County Court >Bouse AND/OR COMMON LOCATION STREET & NUMBER _NOT FOR PUBLICATION CITY. TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Newark _ VICINITY OF 10th STATE CODE COUNTY CODE New Jersey 34 Essex 013 QCLASSIFICATION CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE V —DISTRICT 2lPUBLIC ilOCCUPIED —AGRICULTURE —MUSEUM X_BUILDING(S) —PRIVATE —UNOCCUPIED —COMMERCIAL —PARK —STRUCTURE —BOTH —WORK IN PROGRESS —EDUCATIONAL —PRIVATE RESIDENCE —SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE —ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS —OBJECT _|N PROCESS —YES: RESTRICTED XGOVERNMENT —SCIENTIFIC —BEING CONSIDERED X.YES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL —TRANSPORTATION —NO —MILITARY —OTHER: OWNER OF PROPERTY NAME STREET & NUMBER CITY. TOWN STATE Newark VICINITY OF New Jersey [LOCATION OF LEGAL DESCRIPTION COURTHOUSE. REG.STRYOFDEEDS.ETC. Registry of Deeds, Hall of Records STREET & NUMBER High Street CITY. TOWN STATE New Jersey REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS TITLE New Jersey Historic Sites Inventory r#2186.491 DATE 1972 —FEDERAL -XSTATE —COUNTY —LOCAL DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEYRECORDS Historic Sites Section, Dept. of Environmental Protection CITY. TOWN STATE m- New Jersey DESCRIPTION CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE ^EXCELLENT _DETERIORATED —UNALTERED ^ORIGINAL SITE —GOOD _RUINS ^—ALTERED _MOVED DATE. .FAIR _UNEXPOSED DESCRIBE THE PRESENT AND ORIGINAL (IF KNOWN) PHYSICAL APPEARANCE Original "The Essex County Court House of Newark, New Jersey, completed in 1906, is located at the junction of Springfield Avenue and Market Street, occupying the entire block between Thirteenth Avenue and Market Street east of High Street.
    [Show full text]