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Annual Report 2020 a Message from Sandy & Tim
Read Chozin’s story on Page 8. Keeping Families Close | Annual Report 2020 A message from Sandy & Tim It’s all about the kids – always has been and always Before COVID, the families and children of RMH will be. So much has changed over the last year, but already had their lives turned upside down. The love remains, the mission remains, and the critical pandemic simply added another layer of stress and need for RMH remains. During this uncertain time, this worry to families already pushed to the margins and report is a reminder that what we do matters. We are beyond. They need us now more than they ever have. always humbled by the collective love and generosity In a year when everyone had a perfect excuse to pull that keeps our House going, but this year has been back or do less, you all stepped up and showed our something special. Because of you, in a time that has kids and families that no matter what the external tested and challenged everyone, the heart and soul of forces are, our commitment never wavers and we will the Ronald McDonald House is alive and well. never let them down. Sandy Pagnotti 2020 was supposed to be the year we were going to We don’t know what COVID will mean for 2021 and President & CEO have a collective sigh of relief as we settled into the beyond. We look forward to the day in the near future new Ronald McDonald House, fine-tuned our new when we are all together again in person. -
John Taylor of Hadley
HISTORY OF JOHN TAYLOR OF HADLEY INCLUDING ACCOUNTS OF THE ORGANIZATION AND MEETING OF THE TAYLOR RE-UNION ASSOCIATION OF RUSHFORD, NEW YORK, AND GENEALOGY OF THE DESCENDANTS OF THE ANCESTOR FRANK L. TAYLOR COMPILER 328 GENESEE PARK BOULEVARD ROCHESTER, N. Y. Supplement iss~d August, 1922 PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATION 1922 OFFICERS OF THE ASSOC/A. T/ON: PRESIDENT, FRANK L. TAYLOR, Rochester, N. Y. VICE-PRESIDENTS, WILL B. TAYLOR, Marilla, N. Y. BLAINE C. PERSONS, Delevan, N. Y. EARL G. TAYLOR, Rochester, N. Y. NEWMAN WOODS, Rushford, N. Y. RENA HALL, Ceres, N. Y. EDNA HA YNES, Cuba, N. Y. SECRETARY, ELVIE C. TAYLOR, North Tonawanda, N. Y. TREAIURER, MINNIE SHERMAN, Arcade, N. Y. THE DU BOIS PRESS R O C H E S T E a, N. Y., U. S. A. FOREWORD N accordance with the expressed wish of the company at the Taylor Re-union, which was held at Rushford August I 25, 1921, this Supplement to the Taylor Genealogy has been prepared. We have endeavored to obtain and record all the data concerning the descendants of our ancestor John Taylor1, which were not recorded in the original book, or which may have transpired since that book was published. We have attempted to follow the same general plan in recording the various branches, treating individuals in the order of their birth and completing the record of their descendants before taking up the next younger. The Roman numerals at the beginning of a paragraph indicate the generation to which the person belongs in direct line from John 1, likewise a small numeral following a name indicates the generation of that individual. -
Early Records of the Holt Family of Andover
,- I i OF' THE EOJ..JT I<'AL:ILY OF AHDOVER ~---,. The HOLT FAMILY of ANDOVER. Nicholas (1) Holt and his wife, Elizabeth ( Short), with their daughter Hannah, came from London or Southampton in the ship"James", aaili~g in April, 1635. After a voyage lasting 58 days~ they landed in Boston in June. Nicholas is recorded as a "tanner" from Romney. England. His other occupations in the colonies were those of mas- ter cooper, dish turner,yeoman and husbandman. ( Ralph Farnum came over in the same boat.) He first settled in Newbury where he remained 10 years. There he joined the church; ran a ferry at the bridge near Holt's Rocks and ovmed land on Little River. A patch of 30 acres, still called Holb's Neck, between the highway and Little River was owned by a Little,1n In 1637, Nicholas, with nine others. walked from Newbury to Cambridge, a distance of 40 miles, to register,in order to help Winthrop in his fight with H. 6th on the Proprietors' List In l6~ he came to he members of the First Church, under the Rev. John W(Dodbridge. Here he had. a 15 acre house lot, 160 acres of meadow, 360 acres on Stony Plain and much more was given to him later. It is thought that he never built on his lot in North Parish Venter. IUs homestead WEtS on liolt t s(I'respect) Hill.A stockade was acrosa the fields to the South. ' In 1652, with Capt. Edward Johnson of Woburn and Thomas Dan- forth of Cambridge, Nicholas helped to layout the Andover boundar ies.The same year , with Lieut.Marshall of Reading,-~robably a -' settler on the border line near Gould's,- and with settler Sprague of ftaverhill, now lethuen, he helped layout roads. -
A Crisis of Commitment: Socialist Internationalism in British Columbia During the Great War
A Crisis of Commitment: Socialist Internationalism in British Columbia during the Great War by Dale Michael McCartney B.A., Simon Fraser University, 2004 THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS In the Department of History © Dale Michael McCartney 2010 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Spring 2010 All rights reserved. However, in accordance with the Copyright Act of Canada, this work may be reproduced, without authorization, under the conditions for Fair Dealing. Therefore, limited reproduction of this work for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, review and news reporting is likely to be in accordance with the law, particularly if cited appropriately. APPROVAL Name: Dale Michael McCartney Degree: Master of Arts Title of Thesis: A Crisis of Commitment: Socialist Internationalism in British Columbia during the Great War Examining Committee: Chair: Dr. Emily O‘Brien Assistant Professor of History _____________________________________________ Dr. Mark Leier Senior Supervisor Professor of History _____________________________________________ Dr. Karen Ferguson Supervisor Associate Professor of History _____________________________________________ Dr. Robert A.J. McDonald External Examiner Professor of History University of British Columbia Date Defended/Approved: ________4 March 2010___________________________ ii Declaration of Partial Copyright Licence The author, whose copyright is declared on the title page of this work, has granted to Simon Fraser University the right to lend this thesis, project or extended essay to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users. -
Winter 2016 Volume 21 No
Fall/Winter 2016 Volume 21 No. 3 A Magazine about Acadia National Park and Surrounding Communities Friends of Acadia Journal Fall/Winter 2016 1 President’s Message FOA AT 30 hen a handful of volunteers And the impact of this work extends at Acadia National Park and beyond Acadia: this fall I attended a Wforward-looking park staff to- conference at the Grand Canyon, where gether founded Friends of Acadia in 1986, I heard how several other friends groups their goal was to provide more opportuni- from around the country are modeling ties for citizens to give back to this beloved their efforts after FOA’s best practices place that gave them so much. Many were and historic successes. Closer to home, avid hikers willing to help with trail up- community members in northern Maine keep. Others were concerned about dwin- have already reached out to FOA for tips dling park funding coming from Washing- as they contemplate a friends group for the ton. Those living in the surrounding towns newly-established Katahdin Woods and shared a desire to help a large federal agen- Waters National Monument. cy better understand and work with our As the brilliant fall colors seemed to small Maine communities. hang on longer than ever at Acadia this These visionaries may or may not year, I enjoyed a late-October morning on have predicted the challenges and the Precipice Trail. The young peregrine opportunities facing Acadia at the dawn FOA falcons had fledged, and the re-opened trail of its second century—such as climate featured a few new rungs and hand-holds change, transportation planning, cruise and partners whom we hope will remain made possible by a generous FOA donor. -
IATSE and Labor Movement News
FIRST QUARTER, 2012 NUMBER 635 FEATURES Report of the 10 General Executive Board January 30 - February 3, 2012, Atlanta, Georgia Work Connects Us All AFL-CIO Launches New 77 Campaign, New Website New IATSE-PAC Contest 79 for the “Stand up, Fight Back” Campaign INTERNATIONAL ALLIANCE OF THEATRICAL STAGE EMPLOYEES, MOVING PICTURE TECHNICIANS, ARTISTS AND ALLIED CRAFTS OF THE UNITED STATES, ITS TERRITORIES AND CANADA, AFL-CIO, CLC EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Matthew D. Loeb James B. Wood International President General Secretary–Treasurer Thomas C. Short Michael W. Proscia International General Secretary– President Emeritus Treasurer Emeritus Edward C. Powell International Vice President Emeritus Timothy F. Magee Brian J. Lawlor 1st Vice President 7th Vice President 900 Pallister Ave. 1430 Broadway, 20th Floor Detroit, MI 48202 New York, NY 10018 DEPARTMENTS Michael Barnes Michael F. Miller, Jr. 2nd Vice President 8th Vice President 2401 South Swanson Street 10045 Riverside Drive Philadelphia, PA 19148 Toluca Lake, CA 91602 4 President’s 74 Local News & Views J. Walter Cahill John T. Beckman, Jr. 3rd Vice President 9th Vice President Newsletter 5010 Rugby Avenue 1611 S. Broadway, #110 80 On Location Bethesda, MD 20814 St Louis, MO 63104 Thom Davis Daniel DiTolla 5 General Secretary- 4th Vice President 10th Vice President 2520 West Olive Avenue 1430 Broadway, 20th Floor Treasurer’s Message 82 Safety Zone Burbank, CA 91505 New York, NY 10018 Anthony M. DePaulo John Ford 5th Vice President 11th Vice President 6 IATSE and Labor 83 On the Show Floor 1430 Broadway, 20th Floor 326 West 48th Street New York, NY 10018 New York, NY 10036 Movement News Damian Petti John M. -
The Davis 29 Life 37 Classifieds Showcase Experience Sundance Film Festival Last Minute, from Home Clipperthursday, JANUARY 18, 2018 Vol
7 Opinion 30 Calendar 27 Showcase 35 Sports THE DAVIS 29 Life 37 Classifieds Showcase Experience Sundance Film Festival last minute, from home CLIPPERTHURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 2018 VOL. 126 NO. 22 MARY TAYLOR, president of Pro-Life Utah, speaks at a United Women’s Forum meeting. PHOTO BY BECKY GINOS INDIVIDUALS GATHER outside the Road Home shelter in downtown Salt Lake City. Curbing Utah’s ABORTION DEBATE homelessness PHOTO BY BECKY GINOS problem by Becky GINOS are terribly high barriers at Leader of Pro-Life speaks out [email protected] the shelters where people are in fear of violence and even by Becky GINOS SALT LAKE CITY— being killed. This doesn’t [email protected] “I couldn’t see any options. I Substance abuse, homeless- represent our state. It shows ness and mental health issues me this is going to be one BOUNTIFUL—Roughly felt like a trapped animal.” are topics that affect us all heck of a journey.” 3,000 babies were aborted whether we live in downtown Hughes said people are last year, and one woman is — Mary Taylor Salt Lake or Davis County. In bringing drugs into the determined to curb those a pre-legislative conference Road Home making others staggering statistics as a way of Taylor said she wondered Her boyfriend wasted no last week at the Capitol, Utah fearful to go there. “My idea making amends for her own if it was really a baby growing time leaving once he found out House Speaker Greg Hughes was to get drug sniffing decision to have an abortion. -
California State Normal School, Los Angeles 1891-92
41 M ...+' •..i .. `:Ya ., ` : '. \.... \.,. :.. :. tea :ro,+\ `.a, .:a ,.;a. ;\.. 4as".:,\ii.\J.++•i.:•.a \i`.\ .off. \a:.cs•'.'+ Aw•:a>..a,.e:.,\' je.:ak Z\ . ,n::a\A>xa .:'.,aa,_. '::atdia a +aa -•.a Y NINTH ANNUALCATALOGUE OF FH$ STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, AT LOS ANGELES, Fos !tR SOHOOL YEAR ENDIIqQ j uw 25, 1891, AND CIRCULAR FOR 1891-92. SACRAMENTO: STATE OFFICE, :: A. J. JOHNSTON , SUPT . STATE PRINTING. 1891. BOARDOF TRUSTEES. H. H. MARKHAM ......................................... Governor. Ex officio. J. W. ANDERSON .................. Superintendent Public Instruction. Ex officio. STEPHEN M. WHITE .................................. Los Angeles. A. S. DAVIDSON ............. ...................... San Bernardino. CHARLES F . HOLDER .....................................Pasadena. A. E. POMBROY ....................... ................ Los Angeles. JOHN MANSFIELD ........................ ... ......... Los Angeles. OFFICERS OF THE BOARD. STEPHEN M . WHITE ... ................................... President. A. B. POMEROY ...................................... Vice -President. IRA MORE ................................................Secretary. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. STEPHEN M. WHITE. A. E. POMBROY. JOHN MANSFIELD. BOARDOF INSTRUCTION. / IRA MORE , Principal ............... Theory and Practice of Teaching. EMMA L: HAWKS , Preceptress ... ............... English Literature. MELVILLE DOZIER .............. ...... Physics and Bookkeeping. ,(CHARLES E. HUTTON ....................... Geometry and Algebra. / SARAH P. MONKS ....................... ....Zoology -
Marriages of Portsmouth Virginia 1858-1901 a - F Date Husband Wife Ages Status Birthplace Currently Living @ Parents Husband Wife Husband Wife
Marriages of Portsmouth Virginia 1858-1901 A - F Date Husband Wife Ages Status Birthplace Currently living @ Parents Husband Wife Husband Wife ABBOTT Richard P & Joseph KNIGHT South Mills Portsmouth Portsmouth Portsmouth B M & Lovey Ann Eliza 26 Jan 1888 Wilson Hattie Noel 22 18 S S NC VA VA VA V Abbott Knight Morris & ABRAHAM ROBINSON Portsmouth Sarah Max & Mary 26 Jun 1900 Pyser Rebecca 23 19 S W NY NY Edenton NC VA Abraham Reshefsky NICHOLSON William and ACH James Fannie Portsmouth Portsmouth Portsmouth Portsmouth James and Kate 30 Dec 1890 Henry Franklin 27 25 S S VA VA VA VA Mary R Ash Nicholson John P & Lorin W & ACKERLY Rockbridge Portsmouth Portsmouth Mary Jane Martha C 28 Aug 1866 Holcomb S LANE Lucy R 22 18 S S Co VA VA Savanah GA VA Ackerly Lane William D & ACKLAND HANSON Cristine Dinwiddie Co Portsmouth Portsmouth Israel & Beta Louisa 30 Sep 1886 Charles John Elizabeth 39 42 W W Finland VA VA VA Acklund Ebinnather George F & William & ADAMS WAGGNER Fredericksbu Baltimore Portsmouth Portsmouth Mary Ann Mary 10 Oct 1860 Charles B Elizabeth A 27 24 S S rg VA MD VA VA Davis Waggner ADAMS WHITEHUR King and John H & D W & Charles ST Permelia Queen Co Portsmouth Portsmouth Portsmouth Maria L Permelia O 23 Nov 1892 Everett Owens 26 24 S S VA VA VA VA Adams Whitehurst John A & Richard & ADAMS VAN PELT Portsmouth Portsmouth Portsmouth Portsmouth Sarah Caroline 4 Aug 1879 George H Vienna 28 22 S S VA VA VA VA Adams VanPelt ADAMS King & John H & Oscar D & Logan BATES Alice Queen Co Baltimore Portsmouth Portsmouth Maria C Maggie C 18 Oct -
A Man for His Time
A Man For His Time Born in ToronTo in 1889, Austin Cottrell Taylor was educated at St. Andrew’s College in Aurora, located north of his birth city, and made his first $1,000,000 playing the stock markets before reaching his 21st birthday. He was an excellent polo player and played in the east, and when he came to BC played up and down the west coast as far south as California in amateur polo matches. He was definitely a man’s man, happiest in the outdoors with his dogs and horses, fishing or hunting. He married Kathleen Elliott, a graduate from the University of Manitoba, and the couple had a son and two daughters. The 28-year-old Major Taylor came to British Columbia in 1917 as the Director of the Aeronautical Department of Britain’s Imperial Munitions Board in charge of harvesting the straight, tough and fine-grained Sitka spruce from the Queen Charlotte Islands for the Above manufacture of training aircraft for the war effort. He was directed Borsalino in Italy made Austin C. Taylor’s to fulfill the IMB’s mandate and with Harold R. MacMillan, Chief fedora for Calhoun’s Ltd. in Vancouver. Forester, to deliver “Airplane Spruce” to the fledgling aircraft industry Opposite A page from a one-off booklet presented to both at home and in England. An expert organizer, Taylor quickly set Major Austin C. Taylor in 1919 by the heads of up hundreds of camps, scores of tugboats, and thousands of men to west coast forestry companies for coordinating cut down the trees. -
~~~2Lns(9Rrhin'11etu5
«~~" ~~~ 2l ns (9 rrhi n' J}11 etu5 . , Published by The Tennessee Geneologicql Society - Quarterly - Mrs. Edwin Miles Standefer. Editor VOLUME 18 JULY-SEPTEMBER 1971 NUMBER 3 WHITE COUNTY, TENNESSEE ISSUE - CONTENTS - THE PRESIDENT'S LETTER ••.•. 101 NOTES FROM THE EDITOR'S DESK •• ... 102 BOOK REVIEWS .•••••••• .. 103 ROBERT GUTHRIE BIBLE RECORDS. .. ... .... 105 ( WHITE COUNTY, TENNESSEE 1811 TAX LIST. 106 WHITE COUNTY, TENNESSEE 1840 CENSUS •• 119 WHITE COUNTY, TENNESSEE MORTALITY SCHEDULE, 1850 • 126 WHITE COUNTY, TENNESSEE REVOLUTIONARY & MILITARY PENSIONERS. 127 SUMNER COUNTY, TENNESSEE MARRIAGES, 1787-1838 128 YELLOW FEVER DEATHS IN MEMPHIS & SHELBY COUNTY, TENNESSEE, 1878. 132 WEST TENNESSEE LAND GRANTS, BOOK 1A ... ....... 138 CHARLES COLLIER BIBlE RECORD · 142 ENOCH WARD TERRY BIBLE RECORD · 143 BENJAMIN TERRY WILL ABSTRACT • 144 JOSEPH TERRY REVOLUTIONARY WAR RECORD • ... • 144 BRIGGS-JORDAN-CHAPPELL CONNECTIONS. · 144 CAPTAIN DAVID CRAWFORD FAMILY .. • 145 HATCHER FAMILY NOTES· • 145 .QUERIES ••••••••••• . .. • 146 THE TENNESSEE GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY POST OFFICE BOX 12124 • MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE 38112 OFFICERS AND STAFF FOR 1971 President Mrs. T. Rivers Young Vice-President Miss Jessie T. Webb Treasurer Mr. Stuart Caya Phillips Corresponding Secretary ................. Mrs. Sidney WiJroy Recording Secretary Mrs. John W. McDonald Director of Research Mrs. Reeves Hughes, Jr. Librarian Mrs. Charles Roy Gilley Advisor Mr. Laurence B. Gardiner Advisor ........................... Mrs. Byron G. Hyde Editor: Mrs. Edwin M. Standefer Associate Editor: Mrs. Henry N. Moore Secretary to the Editor Mrs. Robert Louis Cox Subscription Manager Colonel Byron G. Hyde Query Editor Miss Myrtle L. Shelton Mr. Herman L. Bogan Mrs. Thomas Preston Dr. Edwina Campbell Mrs. S. E. Fowler Miss Carrie Boals Mr. Thomas P. Hughes, Jr. Mr. -
Rhodes, Hughes Stars in Double Feature
ews Volume XXI Memphis, Tennessee, January, 1958 Number 2 Rhodes, Hughes Stars LOYALTY FUND REACHES NEW HIGH In Double Feature PARTICIPATION UP ONE-HALF IN '57 Alumni giving reached new heights in 1957 with a total of $19,734.85. Added to this There's nothing like a two month old $2,321.78 in contributions from non-alumni, including husbands, wives, parents, and friends, kitten to liven things up-and this was the the Loyalty Fund total comes to $22,056.63. The 1956 total was $14,149.18. final ingredient that was tossed into an al Gratifying, too, to Goodbar Morgan, alumni secretary, Alfred 0. C anon, dean of ready bubbling Homecoming potpourri Oct. alumni, and various class agents whose efforts 19. are reflected in these happy figures, was the The lawn decorations were never more in 50 percent increase in participation. Southwestern within shouting distance of the geni0usly nor elaborately done. The weather In 1957, 16.1 percent (17.3 percent in national average in alumni giving. But, of was just nippy enough to give spectators that Memphis and 15.3 out of town) of South course, Southwestern alumni do not want to football feeling. And the crowd approached western's alumni shared in the alumni giving. be average. They want to excel!. And there its first luncheon meeting in the new Cather In 1956 it was only 10.5 percent. is still ample opportunity for future record ine Burrow Hall with high expectancy. The class of 1932, which held its 25th re breaking. Barney Gallagher did not disappoint them.