State and Territorial Officers

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

State and Territorial Officers ^ 2 PRINCIPAL STATE AND TERRITORIAL OFFICERS EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Lieutenant Attorneys State Governors Governors General Secretaries of Stale Alabama Gordon Persona. J-ames B. Allen Si Garrett Mrs. Agnes Baggett Arizona.... Howard Pyle None Fred O. Wilson Wesley Bolih Arkansas'. Sid McMath Nathan Gordon Ike Murry. C. G. Hall California..;... ,Earl Warren Goodwin J. Knight Edmund G. Brown Frank M. Jordan- Ck>lorado... Dan Thornton Gordon Allott Diike W. Dunbar George J. Baker Connecticut... John Lodge Edward N. Allen George C. Conway Alice K. Leopold, • . Delaware Elbert N'. Carvel. Alexis duPont Bayard H. Albert Young Harris B. McDowell, Jr. Florida........ Fuller Warren None Richard W. Ervin R. A. Gray: G«orgia Herman E. Talmadge ""S. Marvin Griffin Eugene Cook Ben W. Fortson. Jr. Idaho Len Jordan ' Edson Deai Robert E. Smylie Ira H. Masters Illinois. Adiai E. Stevenson Sherwood Dixon Ivan A. Elliott Edward J. Barrett- Indiana Henry F. Schricker John A. Watkins ^ J. Emmett McMan^^mon Leland L. Smith Iowa. Wm. S. Beardsley W. H. Nicholas Robert L. Larson Melvin D. Synhorst Kansas.., Edward F.Am Fred Hall Harold R. Fatzer Paul R. Shanahan Kentucky Lawrence W.Wetherby Emerson Beauchamp J. D. Buckman, Jr. Charles K. O'Connell- " Louisiana Earl K. Long .' William J. Dodd Bolivar E. Kemp Wade O. Martin, Jr. Maine... Frederick G. Payne None Alexander A. LaFleur Harold I, Goss Maryland Theodore R. McKeldin None Hall Hammond John R. Reeves Massachusetts. Paul A.Dever Chas. F. Jeff Suljivan Francis E. Kelly Edward J. Gronin Michigan...... G. Mennen Williams Wm. C. Vandenberg Frank G. Millard Fred M. Alger, Jr. Minnesota....'. C. Elmer Anderson(a) (Vacancy) J. A. A. Burnquist Mike Holm Mississippi Hugh White Carrol Gartin J. P. Coleman Heber Ladner Missouri. Forrest Smith James T; Blair, Jr. J. E. Taylor Walter H. Toberman Montana John W. Bonner . Paul Cannon Arnold^H. Olsen Sam C. Mitchell Nebraska.. Val Peterson . Charles J. Warner Clarence S. Beck James S. Pittenger(b) Nevada Charles H. Russell . Clifford .'\. Jones W. T. Mathews John Koontz New Hampshire Sherman Adams None Gordon M. Tiffany . Enoch D. Fuller. New Jersey . Alfred E. Driscoll None Theodore D. Parsons Lloyd B. Marsh New Mexico.... Edwin L. Mechem Tibo J. Chavez Joe L. Martinez Beatrice Roach ' New York Thomas E. Dewey Frank C. Moore Nathaniel L. Goldstein Thomas J. Curran North Carolina. W. Kerr Scott ' H. P. Taylor Harry McMuUan Thad Eure . North Dakota.. C. Norman Brunsdale Ray Schnell Elmo T. Christiansen Thomas Hall Ohio...;- .... Frank J; Lausche George D. Nye . C. William O'Neill Ted W. Brown Oklahoma.;... JohMton Murray. James E. Berry Mac Q. Williamson John D. Conner Oregon......... Dou^as McKay None George Neuner Earl T. Newbry Pennsylvaiiia.. John S. Fine Lloyd H. Wood Robert E. Woodside Gene D. Smith Rhode Island.. Dennis J. Roberts John S. McKieman William E. Powers Armand H. Cot6 _South Carolina. James F. Byrnes George Bell T. C. Callison O. Frank Thornton ' ; ". • Timmerman, Jr. South Dakota.. Sigurd Anderson Rex Terry Ralph A. Dunham Geraldine Ostroot • Tennessee Gordon Browniag Walter M. Haynes Roy H. Beeler James H. Cummings Texas Allan Shivers Ben Ramsey Price Uaniel John .Ben Shepperd Utah :... J. Bracken Lee None Clinton D. Vfernon Heber Bennion. Jt. , Vermont. •. Lee E. Emerson . Joseph B. Johnson Clifton G. Pa/ker Howard E. Armstrong Virginia ..-. John S. Battle , L. Preston Collins . J. Lindsay Almond, Jr. Mrs. '5'helma Young Gordon Washington Arthur B.ianglie Victor A. Meyers Smith Troy '• Earl doe West Virginia.. Okey L. Patteson . None William C. Marland D. Pitt O'Brien Wisconsin..... Walter J. Kohler, Jr. George M. Smith Vernon W. Thomson Fred R. Zimmerman Wyoming Frank A. Barrett None Harry S. Harnsberger C. J. Rogers Alaska i Ernest Gruening Lewellyn M. Williatps J. Gerald Williams Lewellyn Williams- Guam....,..'... Carlton Skinner R. S. Herman(c) Knight G. Aulsbrook Randal S. Herman •Hawaii......... Oren E. Long Frank G. Serrao(c) Walter D. Ackerman, Jr. Frank G. Serrao . Puerto Rico.... Luis Munoz-Marin None Victor Gutierrez:, Roberto S&ncKez-Vilella(e)" Franqui(d) Virgin Islands.. Moras F. de Castro DamielW. Ambrose(f) Cyril Michael(g) Daniel W. Ambrose(f) •(a) FiUing unexpired term of Governor Luther W. Youngdahl. (e) Executive Secretary. lb) Appointed by Governor upon death of Frank Marsh. (f) Government Secretary. ^ ' • • (c) Territorftl Secretary. (g) Virgin Islands do hot have an Attorney General; the corre* (d) Appointed to fill unexpired term of Vicente Geigel-Polanco. sponding officer is the United States Attorney. ^ 578 tSj) \ .ROSTERS OF STATE 0FACIALS 579 THE GOVERNO •• . • • '^ S ••• **^ •• • ' • i Hi- II '^.^cS^^a «• .; . > ,.,••; ; "^ ' {:;•§ ^ "&! sg^' • •' • / ' . • .5 ^§ «S' S5 H^-cS . .. /, . .. \ • , "3 v! Sf £ V • •= o 's •« "ft Ammal • State Name 0-. ft,cq v^h fe:'5 !?'c.o ' Inauguration Day Salary Alabama.. Gordon Persons D 1951 4 .. (a) First Mon. after sec. Tues. in Jan. $12,000 Arizona. Howard Pyle R 1951 2 .. .. First Mon. in Jan. 10.000 Arkansas.. Sid.McMath D 1951 2 1 .. Second Tues. in Jan,, 10.000 California Earl Warren R . ^1951 4 2 .. First Moh. after first day in Jan. .25,000 Colorado Dan Thornton R 1951 2 .. .. Second Tuesday in January 10,000 Connecticut.... John Lodge R' 1951 4 .. .. First Wed: after first Mon. in Jan. 15,000 Delaware...:.. Elbert N. Carvel D 1949 4 .. 2 Third Tues. in Jan. 7,500 Florida Fuller Warren '^^ D 1949 4 .. (a) First Tues. after first Mon, in Jan. 12,000 Geprgia........ Herman E°. Talmadge D 195'l 4 (b) .. Set by General .Assembly 12.000 Idaho Len Jordan R 1^51 4 :. (a) First Mon. in Jan. 7,500. Illinois Adlai E. Stevenson D 1949 4 .. .. Second Mon. in Jan. .12.000(g) Indiana........ Henry F. Schricker D 1949 4 1(c) (a) Second Mon. in Jan. 8,000(d) Iowa Wm. S. Beardsiey R 1951 2 1 .. Thurs. after sec. Mon. in Jan, 12,000 Kansas Edward F. Am R 1951 2 .. • .. First Mon. after first Tues. in Jan. 10,000 Kentucky...... Lawrence W.Wetherby D 1952 4 (e) (a) Sixth Tues. after Nov. 1 10,000 Louisiana Earl K. Long D 1948(f) 4 .. (a) Second Tues. in May 15,000 Maine V... Frederick G. Payne R 1951 2-1 .. First Wed. in Jan. 10,000 IVlaryland Theodore R. McKeldin R 1951 4 .. .. Second Wed. in Jan. - 4,500 Massachusetts. Paul A. Dever D 1951 2 1 .. Thurs. after first Wed. in Jan. - -20,000 • Michigan...... G. Mennen Williams D 1951 .2 1 ... First day of Jan. 22.500 Minnesota C. ElmefAnderson R 1951(ab)2 .. .. First Mon. in Jan. 15.000 Mississippi Hugh White D 1952. 4 „.. (a) Usually Third Tues in Jan. • 10,000 Missouri.. Forrest Smith D 1949 4 ... (a) Second Mon. in Jan. 10,000 Montana....... John W, Bonner D ' 1949 4 .. .. First Mon. in Jan. 7,500(h) Nebraska Val Peterson R 1951 2 2 .. First Thurs. after first Tues. in Jan. 10,000{aa) Nevada Charles H. Russell R 1951 4 .. .. First Mon. in Jan. 9,100 New Hampshire Sherman Adams R 1951 2 1 .. First Thurs. in Jan. 10,000 New Jersey..... Alfred E. Driscoll R "^1950 4 l(i) 2 Third Tues. in Jan. ' 20,()00 New Mexico;,.. Edwin L.Mechem R 1951 2 .. 2'(j) First day of Jan. 15,000 New York Thomas E. Dewey R 1951 .4 2 .. First day of Jan. 25,000 North Carolina. W. Kerr Scott D 1949 .4 .. (a) Set by General As.'iembly 15,000 North Dakota.. C. Norman Brunsd'ale R 1951 2 .. .. First Mon. in Jan. or within 6.000(k) • 10 days thereafter Ohio.....r..... Frank J. Lausche D 1951 2 '2(1) .. Second Mon. in JanV 13.000 Olclahoma..... Johnston Murray D 1951 4 .. (a) Second Mon in Jan. 15,000(ni) Oregon Douglas McKay R -1951* 4 (n) 2 Second Men. in Jan. 11,000 Pennsylvania... John S. Fine • R 1951 4' .. (a) - Third Tues. in Jan. 25,000 Rhode Island.. Dennis J. Roberts D 1951 2 ., .. First Tues. in Jan. 15,000 South Carolina. James F. Byrnes D '. 1951 4. .; (a) Set by General Assembly 12,000 South Dakota.. Sigurd Anderson R 1951' 2 .. .. First Tues. after first Mon. in Jan. 9,100 Tennessee...... Gordon Browning D 1951 2 2(p) 3(q)Set by General Assembly 12,000 Texas.. .... Allan Shivers D 1951 2 • (r) .. First Tues. after convening of Leg. in Jan. 12,000 Utah...;....... J. Bracken Lee • R 1949 4 .; .. First Mon. in Jan. 7,500 Vermont L.ee E. Emerson R 1951 ,2 .. .. First Thurs. in Jan. - 8,500 Virginia.; John S. Battle . D 1950 4 .. .: Third Wed! in Jan. 15,000 Washington Arthur B. Langlie" .R 194^ 4 l(s) .. Second Mon. in Jan, 15,000 West Virginia.. Okey L. Patteson D 1949 4 .. (a) First Mon. after sec. Wed. in Jan. 10,000(o) Wisconsin....:. Walter J. Kohler, Jr. R 1951 2 .. .. First Mon. in Jan. 12,500(ac) Wyoming Frank A, Barrett R 1951 4 ,. ,.: First Mon..in Jan. 10,000 Alaska Ernest Gruening D I949(t) 4 2 (u) (t) 15,000 Guam.... Carlton Skinner D 19S0{v) 4 .. (u) . (w) 13,125 Hawaii Oren E. Long D 19Sl(y) 4 .. (w) . 15,000 Puerto Rico Luis Mufloz-Marin (x) 1949 4 .. .. Januarj'2 15,000 Virgin Islands.. MorrisF.de Castro D 1950(z) (u) .. (u) (w) . ^ . 15.000 _ •- , : . : : rf . : : . • (a) Cannot succeed himself. (o) $12,500 effective next term. • (b) Elected in 1948 to fill unexpired portion of term held for two (p) 1937-1939 and 1949-1951. years by Acting Gov. M, E. Thompson. (q) Six terms in all but aliall not be eligible for ofKce morethan (c) 1941-45.
Recommended publications
  • Lake Michigan Surf Newsletter
    Lake Michigan Sail Racing Federation December 2013 Issue 12 Lake Michigan SuRF Newsletter The Official Newsletter of the Lake Michigan Sail Racing Federation I AM ASKING YOU TO DO THIS TO HELP GROW SAILING All The News That Fits ... by Glenn McCarthy Help Grow Sailing ...................................... 1 Each time you read a sailing magazine, is your next effort to Kwiat Yachter of the Year ....................... 1 toss it in the can or put it in the recycle bin? How about a It's Giving Tuesday .................................... 2 Loyola's Post on Winning Team ........... 4 much better use for those? Canfield Wins Alpari World Tour ......... 4 Hall of Fame Nominations Due ............. 4 • Stick it in the seat pocket the next time you fly in an Annual Meeting Report ............................ 5 airplane. The PHRFect Fleet ..................................... 6 One-Design Proliferation ........................ 8 • Drop a stack of them off at the doctor’s office waiting Harris Steps Down ..................................... 9 room. Youth Chair Profile-Brian Bartley ........ 9 • Drop them off at the local hospital. College Sailing's George Griswold ...... 10 Instant Gratification ................................ 10 • Leave them on the bus or train seat pockets. Replace ISAF Special Regs? .................. 11 SER Background ....................................... 12 • Somewhere where you have a free book/magazine swap WWII & Mariner Girl Scouts ................ 12 shelf (if in apartment or condo, suggest one be added in the Karzen to be CYA Yachter of Year ...... 13 laundry room). La Toilette ................................................... 13 I'm Gonna Hurl .......................................... 15 • Or anywhere else you think someone may pick one up out I Blew It ........................................................ 15 of curiosity and read it. Vote Please-Soirée or Road Show .....
    [Show full text]
  • April 20, NOTE
    PRINCIPAL OFFICIALS in the V.XECUTIVE BRANCH Appointed January 20 - April 20, 1953 NOTE: This list is limited to appointments made after January 20, 1953. Names con- tained herein replace corre- sponding names appearing in the 1952-53 U.S. Government Organization Manual. Federal Register Division National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Washington 25, D. C. MEMBERS OF THE CABINET TEE PRESIDENT John Foster Dulles, of New York, Secretary of State. President of the United States.-- Dwight D. Eisenhower George M. Humphrey, of Ohio, Secre- tary of the Treasury. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Charles Erwin Wilson, of Michigan, Secretary of Defense. The White House Office Herbert Brownell, Jr., of New York, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW. Attorney General. NAtional 8-1414 Arthur E. Summerfield, of Michigan, The Assistant to the President.-- Postmaster General. Sherman Adams Assistant to The Assistant to the Douglas McKay, of Oregon, Secretary President.--Maxwell M. Rabb of the Interior. Special Assistant to The Assistant to the President.--Roger Steffan Ezra Taft Benson, of Utah, Secretary Special Assistant to The Assistant of Agriculture. to the President.--Charles F. Willis, Jr. Sinclair Weeks, of Massachusetts, Special Assistants in the White Secretary of Commerce Haase Office: L. Arthur Minnich, Jr. Martin P. Durkin, of Maryland, James M. Lambie Secretary of Labor. Special Counsel to the President (Acting Secretary).--Thomas E. Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, of Texas, Stephens Secretary of Health, Education, Secretary to the President (Press).-- and Welfare James C. Hagerty Assistant Press Secretary.--Murray Snyder Acting Special Counsel to the Presi- For sale by the dent.--Bernard M.
    [Show full text]
  • State Election Results, 1954 (PDF)
    ------------------~---------------------- STATE OF COLORADO Abstract of Votes Cast AT THE PRIMARY ELECTION Held on the Ninth Day of September, A. D. 1954 AND AT THE GENERAL ELECTION Held on th.e Second Day of November, A. D. 1954 FOR United States Senator, Congressmen, State, Legislative and District Officers AND Proposed Constitutional Amendments, Initiated and Referred Bills ALSO Directory of the United States, State, Legislative, District and County Officers COMPILED FROM OFFICIAL RETURNS BY GEORGE J. BAKER Secretary of State 1954 PRICE, 50 CENTS THE IRADFORD•AOBINBON PTQ. 00., DENVER STATE OF COLORADO Abstract of Votes Cast AT THE PRIMARY ELECTION Held on the Ninth Day of September, A. D. 1954 AND AT THE GENERAL ELECTION Held on the Second Day of November, A. D. 1954 FOR United States Senator, Congressmen, State, Legislative and District Officers AND Proposed Constitutional Amendments, Initiated and Referred Bills ALSO Directory of the United States, State, Legislative, District and County Officers COMPILED FROM OFFICIAL RETURNS BY GEORGE J. BAKER Secretary of State 1954 PRICE, 50 CENTS DIRECTORY UNITED STATES SENATORS Business Salary Per ../ Name Politics Address Term Annum '~" Eugene D. Millikin ......... Republican ................ Denver .................... Jan. 3, 1951-Jan. 3, 1957 ........ $22,500.00 V'Gordon Allott .............. Republican........... ., .. Lamar .....................Jan. 3, 1955-Jan. 3, 1961 ........ 22,500.00 /CONGRESSMEN V13yron G. Rogers ............ Democrat. ................. Denver .................... Jan. 3, 1955-Jan. 3, 1957 ........ 22,500.00 ..;w-miam S. Hill ............. Republican ................ Fort Collins ...............Jan. 3, 1955-Jan. 3, 1957 ........ 22,500.00 ..,J. Edgar Chenoweth ........ Republican ................ Trinidad ...................Jan. 3, 1955-Jan. 3, 1957 ........ 22,500.00 > ..:w-ayne N. Aspinall .......... Democrat. ............ • .... Palisade ..................
    [Show full text]
  • The Annals of Iowa for Their Critiques
    The Annals of Volume 66, Numbers 3 & 4 Iowa Summer/Fall 2007 A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF HISTORY In This Issue J. L. ANDERSON analyzes the letters written between Civil War soldiers and their farm wives on the home front. In those letters, absent husbands provided advice, but the wives became managers and diplomats who negotiated relationships with kin and neighbors to provision and shelter their families and to preserve their farms. J. L. Anderson is assistant professor of history and assistant director of the Center for Public History at the University of West Georgia. DAVID BRODNAX SR. provides the first detailed description of the role of Iowa’s African American regiment, the 60th United States Colored Infantry, in the American Civil War and in the struggle for black suffrage after the war. David Brodnax Sr. is associate professor of history at Trinity Christian College in Palos Heights, Illinois. TIMOTHY B. SMITH describes David B. Henderson’s role in securing legislation to preserve Civil War battlefields during the golden age of battlefield preservation in the 1890s. Timothy B. Smith, a veteran of the National Park Service, now teaches at the University of Tennessee at Martin. Front Cover Milton Howard (seated, left) was born in Muscatine County in 1845, kidnapped along with his family in 1852, and sold into slavery in the South. After escaping from his Alabama master during the Civil War, he made his way north and later fought for three years in the 60th U.S. Colored Infantry. For more on Iowa’s African American regiment in the Civil War, see David Brodnax Sr.’s article in this issue.
    [Show full text]
  • Report of Receipts and Disbursements
    10/15/2014 12 : 23 Image# 14978252435 PAGE 1 / 162 REPORT OF RECEIPTS FEC AND DISBURSEMENTS FORM 3 For An Authorized Committee Office Use Only 1. NAME OF TYPE OR PRINT Example: If typing, type 12FE4M5 COMMITTEE (in full) over the lines. McCaul for Congress, Inc 815-A Brazos Street ADDRESS (number and street) PMB 230 Check if different than previously Austin TX 78701 reported. (ACC) 2. FEC IDENTIFICATION NUMBER CITY STATE ZIP CODE STATE DISTRICT C C00392688 3. IS THIS NEW AMENDED REPORT (N) OR (A) TX 10 4. TYPE OF REPORT (Choose One) (b) 12-Day PRE -Election Report for the: (a) Quarterly Reports: Primary (12P) General (12G) Runoff (12R) April 15 Quarterly Report (Q1) Convention (12C) Special (12S) July 15 Quarterly Report (Q2) M M / D D / Y Y Y Y in the October 15 Quarterly Report (Q3) Election on State of January 31 Year-End Report (YE) (c) 30-Day POST -Election Report for the: General (30G) Runoff (30R) Special (30S) Termination Report (TER) M M / D D / Y Y Y Y in the Election on State of M M / D D / Y Y Y Y M M / D D / Y Y Y Y 5. Covering Period 07 01 2014 through 09 30 2014 I certify that I have examined this Report and to the best of my knowledge and belief it is true, correct and complete. Type or Print Name of Treasurer Kaye Goolsby M M / D D / Y Y Y Y 10 15 2014 Signature of Treasurer Kaye Goolsby [Electronically Filed] Date NOTE: Submission of false, erroneous, or incomplete information may subject the person signing this Report to the penalties of 2 U.S.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Of Judicial Independence Tara L
    Vanderbilt Law Review Volume 71 | Issue 2 Article 3 2018 The Origins (and Fragility) of Judicial Independence Tara L. Grove Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/vlr Part of the Supreme Court of the United States Commons Recommended Citation Tara L. Grove, The Origins (and Fragility) of Judicial Independence, 71 Vanderbilt Law Review 465 (2019) Available at: https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/vlr/vol71/iss2/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Vanderbilt Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Vanderbilt Law Review by an authorized editor of Scholarship@Vanderbilt Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Origins (and Fragility) of Judicial Independence Tara Leigh Grove* The federal judiciary today takes certain things for granted. Political actors will not attempt to remove Article II judges outside the impeachment process; they will not obstruct federal court orders; and they will not tinker with the Supreme Court's size in order to pack it with like-minded Justices. And yet a closer look reveals that these "self- evident truths" of judicial independence are neither self-evident nor necessary implications of our constitutional text, structure, and history. This Article demonstrates that many government officials once viewed these court-curbing measures as not only constitutionally permissible but also desirable (and politically viable) methods of "checking" the judiciary. The Article tells the story of how political actors came to treat each measure as "out of bounds" and thus built what the Article calls "conventions of judicial independence." But implicit in this story is a cautionary tale about the fragility of judicial independence.
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Records of the 79Th Cameron Highlanders
    %. Z-. W ^ 1 "V X*"* t-' HISTORICAL RECORDS OF THE 79-m QUEEN'S OWN CAMERON HIGHLANDERS antr (Kiritsft 1m CAPTAIN T. A. MACKENZIE, LIEUTENANT AND ADJUTANT J. S. EWART, AND LIEUTENANT C. FINDLAY, FROM THE ORDERLY ROOM RECORDS. HAMILTON, ADAMS & Co., 32 PATERNOSTER Row. JDebonport \ A. H. 111 112 FOUE ,STRSET. SWISS, & ; 1887. Ms PRINTED AT THE " " BREMNER PRINTING WORKS, DEVOXPORT. HENRY MORSE STETHEMS ILLUSTRATIONS. THE PHOTOGRAVURES are by the London Typographic Etching Company, from Photographs and Engravings kindly lent by the Officers' and Sergeants' Messes and various Officers of the Regiment. The Photogravure of the Uniform Levee Dress, 1835, is from a Photograph of Lieutenant Lumsden, dressed in the uniform belonging to the late Major W. A. Riach. CONTENTS. PAGK PREFACE vii 1793 RAISING THE REGIMENT 1 1801 EGYPTIAN CAMPAIGN 16 1808 PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN .. 27 1815 WATERLOO CAMPAIGN .. 54 1840 GIBRALTAR 96 1848 CANADA 98 1854 CRIMEAN CAMPAIGN 103 1857 INDIAN MUTINY 128 1872 HOME 150 1879 GIBRALTAR ... ... .. ... 161 1882 EGYPTIAN CAMPAIGN 166 1884 NILE EXPEDITION ... .'. ... 181 1885 SOUDAN CAMPAIGN 183 SERVICES OF THE OFFICERS 203 SERVICES OF THE WARRANT OFFICERS ETC. .... 291 APPENDIX 307 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS, SIR JOHN DOUGLAS Frontispiece REGIMENTAL COLOUR To face SIR NEIL DOUGLAS To face 56 LA BELLE ALLIANCE : WHERE THE REGIMENT BIVOUACKED AFTER THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO .. ,, 58 SIR RONALD FERGUSON ,, 86 ILLUSTRATION OF LEVEE DRESS ,, 94 SIR RICHARD TAYLOR ,, 130 COLOURS PRESENTED BY THE QUEEN ,, 152 GENERAL MILLER ,, 154 COLONEL CUMING ,, 160 COLONEL LEITH , 172 KOSHEH FORT ,, 186 REPRESENTATIVE GROUP OF CAMERON HIGHLANDERS 196 PREFACE. WANT has long been felt in the Regiment for some complete history of the 79th Cameron Highlanders down to the present time, and, at the request of Lieutenant-Colonel Everett, D-S.O., and the officers of the Regiment a committee, con- Lieutenant and sisting of Captain T.
    [Show full text]
  • A Circular History of Modern Chamorro Activism
    Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont Pomona Senior Theses Pomona Student Scholarship 2021 The Past as "Ahead": A Circular History of Modern Chamorro Activism Gabby Lupola Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.claremont.edu/pomona_theses Part of the Asian American Studies Commons, Ethnic Studies Commons, Indigenous Studies Commons, Micronesian Studies Commons, Military History Commons, Oral History Commons, Political History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Lupola, Gabby, "The Past as "Ahead": A Circular History of Modern Chamorro Activism" (2021). Pomona Senior Theses. 246. https://scholarship.claremont.edu/pomona_theses/246 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Pomona Student Scholarship at Scholarship @ Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in Pomona Senior Theses by an authorized administrator of Scholarship @ Claremont. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Past as “Ahead”: A Circular History of Modern Chamorro Activism Gabrielle Lynn Lupola A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in History at Pomona College. 23 April 2021 1 Table of Contents Images ………………………………………………………………….…………………2 Acknowledgments ……………………..……………………………………….…………3 Land Acknowledgment……………………………………….…………………………...5 Introduction: Conceptualizations of the Past …………………………….……………….7 Chapter 1: Embodied Sociopolitical Sovereignty on Pre-War Guam ……..……………22
    [Show full text]
  • January 1955
    mE PRESID.ENm1S APPOIN TS S Y, J WARY 1, 1955 9•45 12: 20 pn De .... .,. ....... .,, the Off'ic and returned to the Rous • 2:00 part the Hou e went to the Ottiee. 4:00 pn The President d arted the Office and returned to the House, via Mr. Clift berts suite. (Ft avy rains throughout the dq) I J.w.:A.u..u.>;•n'?'' S A? 0 'lie J.5 J. AI 2, 1955 AUGUSTA, GIDRGIA ll.:00 The esid t an - senho er d , rted the Hou nroute to the Rei M orial byterian Church. 11:10 Arri.Ted at t Church. lltlS am Church en:ice began. 12:12 pm The President and l s . Eisenh er d rt4'<1 the Church and returned t o t he l:ouse. 12:19 Jiil An-iv at th Rous • 1:00 The esident t e off wit h the following: • Zig Lannan • Frank lillard r. F.d Dudley 3:50 Completed 18 hol e s. 4140 The lident nd a. s nh P and s. Dou , accompanied by the following, depart, th House enroute to Bush Airti ld. Hr. ClU't Roberts Mr. illiam Robinson • Ellis Slat r • Frank rill.ard Mr. and 11" • Free Go den 5:0; pm Arrived sh Airfi ld d boarded Columbine. 5tl3 J:lll Airborne for ~ e.ahington, D. c. 7:00 pi Arrim HATS Terminal. The Preli.dent and lro. Eisenhower and guest• deplaned. 7:10 pa The President and e. i enh er d s. Do departed the Airport and motored to the ~'hite House.
    [Show full text]
  • Senate
    <rongrcssional Record United States PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 84th CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION of America The letters were ·read by the legislative The certificates of appointment were SENATE clerk <Edward E. Mansur, Jr.), and or­ ordered to be printed in the RECORD and dered to be placed on file, as follows: placed on file, as follows: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1955 DECEMBER 16, 1954. STATE OF NEBRASKA, The Honorable ROBERT B. CROSBY, EXECUTIVE OFFICE, The 5th day of January being the day Lincoln. prescribed by Public Law 700, 83d Con­ State Capitol, Lincoln, Nebr. DEAR GOVERNOR CROSBY: I herewith tender To the PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE OF THE gress 2d session, for the meeting of Con­ UNITED STATES: gress, the 1st session of the 84th Congress. my resignation as United States Senator, ef­ fective at the close of business, December This is to certify that pursuant to the commenced this day. 31, 1954. power vested in me by the Constitution of the United States and the laws of the State RICHARD M. NIXON, of California,· This is in line with my statement last Vice President of the United States, of Nebraska, I, Robert B. Crosby, the Gov­ July that if elected to the Senate I would ernor of said State, do hereby appoint CARL called the Senate to order at 12 o'clock cooperate to permit our new Senator to be T. CURTIS, a Senator from said State, to rep­ meridian. sworn in at an early date so as to assure resent said State in the Senate of the United The Chaplain, Rev.
    [Show full text]
  • Administrator
    The Administrator Texas State Agency Business Administrators’ Association • Volume 28, Number 1 • March 2010 “Shootout at the TSABAA Meetings Y.O.”: 30th Mid-Winter Enrich Your Life Conference Highlights December Bi-Monthly Meeting Now that your cowboy boots have been kicked Deepens Understanding of to the back of the closet, it’s time to reflect Effective Listening on the 30th Annual Mid-Winter Conference held at the YO Ranch Resort and Conference Sometimes we could all use a jumpstart, a tune- Center on Jan. 13–15. The turnout was one up or a makeover. No matter how long or short a of the biggest ever, and folks had a great time time we’ve spent toiling at our jobs, a new angle networking, exchanging ideas, and acquiring can enliven us and help connect all those loose new tools to assist to help them with their ends. TSABAA bi-monthly meetings can be the personal and professional development. means to accomplish just that. Shootoutat the Conference Chair Cecilia Whitley scored TSABAA meetings live up to their billing. YO a big A+ by lining up a top-notch To wit, the meetings “provide quality training group of interesting and insightful from noted experts speaking on subjects offering Revenue vs. Budget professional growth and quality managerial, TSABAA speakers. Here are some highlights: 30th Mid-Winter Conference���������������������������� ���������������������������������������������� John O’Brien, Director of the Legislative Budget technical and self-improvement training and Board (LBB), provided the group with interesting provide members with the opportunity to network albeit sobering news on the state’s economy, with other agency associates.” revenue projections and the budget forecast.
    [Show full text]
  • Church Bulletin Inserts-Year Two
    Church Bulletin Inserts-Year Two 57 Anna Spencer 88 Elizabeth Haynes 58 Joel Linsley 89 John Davenport 59 John Cotton 90 Philo Parsons 60 Phyllis Wheatly 91 Abigail Wittelsey 61 Richard Mather 92 Queen Kaahumanu 62 William Goodell 93 Elkanah Walker 63 Sarah Lanman Smith 94 Marcus Whitman 64 Abigal Adams 95 Samuel Seawall 65 Henry Obookiah 96 Mary Chilton 66 Harriot Beecher Stowe 97 Hugh Proctor 67 Gordon Hall 98 Owen Lovejoy 68 Don Mullen 99 John Wise 69 Emma Cushman 100 Harvey Kitchel 70 John Shipherd 101 Frank Laubach 71 John Winthrop 102 Isaac Watts 72 Mary Richardson 103 Charles Chauncy 73 James O'Kelly 104 Mary Brewster 74 Elizabeth Hopkins 105 Josiah Grinnell 75 Francis Peloubet 106 Eleazar Wheelock 76 Mary Dyer 107 Samuel Hopkins 77 Lemuel Haynes 78 Oliver Otis Howard 79 Gaius Atkins 80 Priscilla Alden 81 Neesima Shimeta 82 James Pennington 83 Anne Hutchinson 84 William Bradford 85 Catherine Beecher 86 Horace Bushnell-1 87 Horace Bushnell-2 Did you know Anna Garlin Spencer… Born in 1851, Anna Garlin Spencer is known as a woman of many firsts. She was the first woman ordained as a minster in the state of Rhode Call To Worship Island (an ‘independent’ serving an independent chapel), the first woman L: We are keepers of the Way. to serve as a leader in Ethical Culture. She was also a pioneer in the C: We come, aware of our place as 21st Century pilgrims. profession of social work, a college teacher, an author and expert on the family. L: May we bring to this worship hour and to our very lives, a commitment to refashion this world for Christ.
    [Show full text]