Substitute Gimcrakery Ornamental Architectural Materials, 1870- rchitectural critic Ada Louise Huxtable once wrote that the By 1866, the LinoleumManufacturing Company was reporting its prominence as King of Wall Decoration http://www.nhc.rtp.nc.us/ideasv51/simpson.htm
Custer Battlefield Historical & Museum Association Valley (Custer on the march); With Their Backs to the Wall (troopers trying In 1866,John Ryan, a 21year-old Union Army veteran Barnett, Louise, Touched By Fire http://www.cbhma.org/store.htm
Extractions: Please browse our extensive holdings of materials dealing with the battle, the people, and the times. Please order from our store office at the below address. Please allow four to six weeks for order fulfillment. As a non-profit organization our ability at this time to provide online sales is limited but we are working hard to provide full capability in the near future. We accept checks, money orders, and credit cards with number and expiration date. Please use item numbers when ordering. Shipping Charges are $6.00 for first item and $1.00 for each additional item for shipments delivered in the United States. For delivery outside the United States charges are $12.00 for the first item and $6.00 for each additional item (U. S. Funds only please).
Bibliography, Alpha By Author, A a simple 100 yearold building set within old stone Wall boundaries (Figure In 1866,Samuel and Henry Ferguson were lost at sea for 43 Alexander, Mary Louise. http://www.cslib.org/stamford/b_a.htm
Extractions: "Sometimes what is in the present is in the past; sometimes not. In a quiet sector of Stamford (Figure 6) that was known as the Bangall District, on a rustic half-acre, is a simple 100 year-old building set within old stone wall boundaries (Figure 22). The old structure with its two front doors, looks like a Friends Meeting House. While it is now, it wasn't originally. In fact, the site gives no easily visible evidence of the oldest structure that was on it: the first Baptist church in Stamford. The present structure was a one-room school-house that was moved to the site. This paper will try to recount the changes at the site from 1771 through the present which have been uncovered thus far." Judith F. Abraham, p. 1. (Reproduced with the permission of the author). Aceti, Diana M. "Passage To India In a Connecticut retail center, theatrical flair enhances an authentic atmosphere."
The Hardy Plant Society Of Oregon - Library Catalog Beatrix Potter 1866 1943, Taylor, Judy, et al, 800. Garden In Color,The, Wilder, Louise Beebe, REF 770. Garden Wall, The, Osler, Mirabel, 790. http://www.hardyplant.com/libcatalog.htm
Extractions: A B C D ... Z TITLE AUTHOR NUMBER 1,001 Floral Motifs And Ornaments Grafton, Carol Belanger 100 Garden Plans Addkison, Andrew R 100 Great Garden Plants Frederick, William H. 1001 Pelargoniums Key, Hazel 12 Lessons On Life I Learned From My Garden Glyck, Vivian Elisabeth 1997 Insect Control Handbook Pacific Northwest 1997 Plant Disease Control Handbook Pacific Northwest 1997 Weed Control Handbook Pacific Northwest 20-Minute Gardener, The Christopher, Tom 3,000 Mile Garden, The Land, Leslie 80 Great Collector's Garden Plants Druse, Ken A Back To Top Account Of The Genus Meconopsis Taylor, George Adventure in My Garden Fox, Helen Adventures with Hardy Bulbs Wilder, Louise Beebe Adventurous Gardener, The Lloyd, Christopher Alba: The Book Of White Flowers Bown, Deni All About Evergreens Ortho All About Pruning Ortho All My Edens Welsh, Pat
Extractions: Virginia Tech TALBOT, RICHARD B. (1933-1994). PAPERS, 1967-94. 1.4 cu. ft. Educated at Kansas State University (B.S., 1954; D.V.M., 1958), Baylor University (NIH postdoctoral), and Iowa State University (Ph.D., 1963). Professor Biomedical Sciences and Veterinary Medical Informatics at Virginia Tech and founding dean of the Virginia Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech. Director of the Office of New Animal Drug Evaluation at the U. S. Food and Drug Administration. Editor-in-chief of the Journal of Veterinary Medical Education and editor of Veterinary Pharmaceuticals and Biologicals . Pioneering work with computers in the field of veterinary medicine. Collections consists primarily of speeches, speech resource and research materials, administrative notes, departmental program planning and budgeting materials. Inventory available online. [TAMMANY HALL SCRAPBOOK, n.d.]. 1 vol. Scrapbook of news clippings, pages of books, and cartoons concerning information about Tammany Hall of New York City, the political club that became a symbol of corruption in city government. Ms90-067. TANT, MARTHA ANN HITE. GENEALOGY RECORDS, 1991. 0.1 cu. ft. Resident of Kingsport, Tennessee, and genealogy researcher. Records include pedigree charts, Bible records, and family group listings of 300 years of Tant's ancestors, including the Brown, Haden, Harman, Hite, Linkous, Marrs, May, Salmons, and Trollinger families, who settled in Henry, Montgomery, Pittsylvania, and Tazewell counties, Virginia, and in Kentucky. Ms91-040.
Extractions: We will pay tribute to our former (and beloved) "East Coast Secretary," Joseph R. Dunlap, with a special meeting at the Grolier Club, New York on Friday evening, 9 November. Joe's title does not begin to describe himhe was the founder of what was then the "North American" branch of the Society; he has published extensively on Morris and the book arts; he has been the friend, helper, and inspirer of many of our members and others interested in Morris, his works, and his ideas. THE WILLIAM MORRIS SOCIETY reception to follow Nicolas Barker, Head of Conservation at the British Library, is also editor of The Book Collector . He is the author of numerous works of bibliographic importance, including "A Sequel to an Enquiry into Certain Nineteenth Century Pamphlets," in which he and John Collins considered the forgeries perpetrated by Thomas J. Wise and Buxton Forman, Morris's friend, editor, and first bibliographer.
Women Writers-19th Century She returned to London in 1824, and in 1827 married Sir Augustus Wall Callcott,the celebrated artist. London Macmillan Co., 1866. Trans. Louise Brooks. http://www.library.unt.edu/rarebooks/exhibits/women/19th.htm
Extractions: Frances Hodgson Burnett Born in Manchester, England, Burnett moved to rural Tennessee at age sixteen with her financially bankrupt family. To support herself, she began writing for American magazines. Though she began writing novels for adults, she gained lasting success writing for children. She is best known for Little Lord Fauntleroy The Secret Garden , and A Little Princess The Secret Garden . New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company, 1911. Kate Chopin Kate Chopin was born in St. Louis, Missouri. In 1870, she married Oscar Chopin and moved to Louisiana, living in both New Orleans and Natchitoches. She began to write after her husband died of swamp fever in 1883, and she was forced to support herself and her children. Bayou Folk (1894), a collection of stories about life in Louisiana, gave her national recognition. Her popularity soon ended with the publication of her controversial, but now critically aclaimed novel
Extractions: Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part II Later Historians ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Poetry collected in Driftings from the Stream of Life (1866). poems (see Anne Lynch Bottaand Louise Imogen Guiney by lot; My kingdom, from the garden Wall Reached to http://www.unl.edu/legacy/19cwww/books/elibe/poetry.htm
Extractions: This site has been prepared by Sharon M. Harris, University of Nebraska, Co-Editor of LEGACY. There are now several valuable poetry collections of 19th-century U.S. women poets available, including Paula Bernat Bennett's Nineteenth-Century Women Poets (1997), Janet Gray's She Wields a Pen (1997), and Cheryl Walker's American Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century (1992), as well as excellent work in Dickinson studies. To complement these collections, the following poems are presented as additional examples of the rich field of nineteenth-century women's poetry.
Australia Family Tree Agnes Gertrude Monteith (1866 ); Florence Helen Monteith (1868 Monteith (Dec 04,1887 -) Stella Wall ( ) (m. 25/11 Emma Louise Locke (Oct 15, 2001). Dianne Goss http://www.monteith.org/au_monteith.htm
Extractions: The following tables represent tidbits of information about the Monteith's who have sent feedback about their families in Australia. As with other branches, these families have immigrated from either Scotland or Ireland in the 1800's to begin new lives in this part of the world. Hopefully information will continue to be forwarded about Monteith's who settled in Australia and eventually some common links will appear. MONTEITH'S OF NEW SOUTH WALES Alexander Monteith (Oct 27, 1810 - Nov 16, 1886 [born in County of Leith Stirling, Scotland; came to Australia on the Barque "William Glen Anderson" which sailed from London on 13/7/1836 - he was a steerage pasenger. Some say that he first went to New Zealand but this is not substantiated. He then later settled in Sydney and was married to Ann Stevens in 1839. He later moved to Queensland for a short time where we suspect he was a mining assayer.]
Gurdjieff Studies: Chronology Of Gurdjieff's Life 1866, ?Jan. On visits to Frankfurt and Berlin with Louise Goepfert and Olga de Hartmann,G. intentionally alienates Olga. The Wall Street stock market crash (Oct http://www.gurdjieff.org.uk/gs9.htm
Extractions: Who was Gurdjieff? What did he teach? Some testimony Gurdjieff's Music ... How to Contact Us Gurdjieff Studies Chronology of Gurdjieff's Life by James Moore APOLOGIA AND WARNING Date Event ?Jan. G. born in Cappadocian Greek quarter of Alexandropol on Russian side of Russo-Turkish border. Birth of G.'s only brother Dmitri Ivanovitch Gurdjieff (?1870) and eldest sister (?1871). summer G.'s father Giorgios Giorgiades, impoverished when rinderpest wipes out his large cattle herd, opens a lumber-yard. Birth of two further sisters. Giorgiades' lumber-yard fails and he opens a small carpentry shop. G. precociously begins to contribute to family income. Russia declares war on Turkey (24 Apr.) and captures Turkish border citadel town of Kars (18 Nov.). Giorgiades moves his family to Kars, and re-establishes his carpentry shop in the Greek quarter. Father Dean Borsh of Russian military cathedral assumes responsibility for G.'s private education, co-opting as tutors four graduates of the Theological Seminary. G. reads intensively in library of Kars military hospital. G. falls under moral influence of his tutor Dean Bogachevsky.
Robinson Journal & Index Alexander W. Hugh C. ROBERTSON Pottery est 1866 MA P.26 Hardin, Columbia, MO inregard to Elizabeth Louise Nelson, b FGS data P. 13 James T. Wall, AOL; desc http://jrshelby.com/rfotw/hewick.htm
Extractions: The purpose of this Journal is to provide and share information on the Robinson (and related spellings). I will publish information on these families regardless of time period or locale. However, we are especially interested in documenting the descendants of Christopher Robinson, our immigrant ancestor to Virginia in 1666, who built our historic home "Hewick" circa 1678. His uncle Richard Robinson was an earlier immigrant to the Tidewater area. I will publish and provide references for documentation needed by those who wish to pursue memberships in the many major lineage organizations. I invite everyone who can to share their Robinson, etc. information, and especially if you can make a correction to material that has been presented by providing the proof references. QUERY space (45 Words) free to subscribers and.$5.00 to Non-Subscribers, this Query will also be put out for you on the Internet, if requested. If you have an on line address, please send it to me for research updates on your line. Back issues of almost all issues are available for $7.50 each including postage. Vol. 1, No. #1 began in Nov. 1991.I am working on putting together a booklet that will contain the all the earlier issues in one volume.
Timeline Of Frederick Douglass And Family color prejudice is the demon which surrounds this house like a Chinese Wall, beyondwhich only 1866. Mary Louise was the daughter of Charles Resmond Douglass. http://www.math.buffalo.edu/~sww/0history/hwny-douglass-family.html
Extractions: His mother, Harriet Bailey, was a field slave from whom he was separated during his infancy. Douglass only saw his mother four or five times thereafter and for only a few hours each time. She had been sold to a man who lived twelve miles from where Douglass lived, and to see her son required that after her day's work in the field she walk the twelve miles, visit with him for a short time during the night, walk the twelve miles back to her home, and work a second day in the fields without rest. She died when Douglass was about seven. . Sent to live with Hugh Auld family in Baltimore. . Asks Sophia Auld to teach him his letters. Hugh Auld stops the lessons because he feels that learning makes slaves discontented and rebellious. . Hired Out to Edward Covey, a "slave breaker", to break his spirit and make him accept slavery.
Cl - New General Catalog Of Old Books & Authors Clement Comer CLAY (M 1789 Dec 17 1866 Sep 7 LeRoy CLEMENS {US?} (M ? - after1950) Marie Louise CLEMENS {US?} (F n 1872 Twenty-Eight Years In Wall Street a http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/ngcoba/cl.htm
Extractions: Follow these links for explanations of the of this catalog, its condition of use , the dates , the general abbreviations , the language abbreviations , the nationality abbreviations electronic library codes used, and for advice on buying or borrowing selling or valuing old books. If you have any corrections, additions or other suggestions, please send them to webmaster@kingkong.demon.co.uk Louise CLACK (F: ? - ?) R nee ? (F: 1830 - ?) Z g Ompdrailles, Le Tombeau Des Lutteurs [Fr-?] Jim CLADPOLE (see: James RI CHARDS) Tennessee Celeste CLAFLIN, 1:Lady COOK (F: c1846 - 1923) L Cooinaghtyn Manninagh [Ma-?] nee CH GA NI Ma ... I nee L L nee ? (F: ? - ?) R R JA R ... I nee R N CR I ... R nee I AU nee QU I A A ... R nee R nee nee R A A I nee Z Australian Scenery [?] Z Australian Tales [?] Learning Colonial Experience [?] Pretty Dick [?] Margaret R CLARKE (F: ? - ?) The Secret Joy [1940] Mary Bayard CLARKE, nee Story Of Aeneas [?] Ossie CLARKE (M: ? - 1996) Peter Dooyentate CLARKE (M: ? - ?) I nee R nee nee Mc I D SM ITH) Mrs, Mary CLAVERS (see: Caroline Matilda
Cornish People In Cornish Books - V 1 Letter W Wall, Jemmy; miner/prospector St Just 1836 ; 1125. Williams, Jane; ran school inRedruth 1866 ; 569. Williams, Louise; lived in Melindwr in 1871 census ; 18 http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/jon_rees/corbookW.htm
Extractions: Cornish people in Cornish Books - v 1 Surnames starting with letter W Up to Index Wade ; smuggling spirits at Fowey 1822 ; [4]78 Wade, Mary Wade, S. ; sent servant to see some sheep 1812 ; [13]31 Wade, Stephen ; farmer in Tintagel 1822 ; [13]121 Wade, William ; Headmaster Redruth Academy 1842-1862 ; [5]66 Wade, William ; Grammar School in Redruth 1856 ; [5]148 Wade, William ; grocer in Redruth 1844 ; [5]125 Wade, William ; draper in Redruth 1847 ; [5]132 Wadge, E.Harvey Archer ; wrote re Wheal North 1904 ; [8]35 Wakefield, S.R. ; recruited labour from Victoria ; [15]41 Wakfer, T.C. ; Penzance councillor 1973 ; [1]145 Wakfer, Thomas Charles ; Penzance councillor 1974 ; [1]276 Wainwright, William ; member of Newlyn Art Colony 1884 ; [3]110 Wales, Thomas ; stonemason in Redruth 1844 ; [5]125 Wales, Thomas ; mason in Redruth 1856 ; [5]148 Wales, W. ; cabinet maker in Redruth 1854 ; [5]142 Wales, William ; cabinet maker in Redruth 1847 ; [5]131 Wales, William ; cabinet maker in Redruth 1856 ; [5]148 Walford, Thomas
CONRAD AIKEN: UNITARIAN PRODIGY POET In 1866 the idea of a spiritual antislavery society by Frederick Winslow Taylor andhis wife, Louise Spooner Taylor joining of the Church put a Wall of dogma http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/aiken.html
Mack's Memories side with the end of the organ against the Wall of what the organ during high schooland studied with Louise Carlson. He was born in Elkton , Maryland in 1866. http://www.st-margarets.org/mack1a.htm
Extractions: Glebes, Salaries and Rectories from the April/May 1996 issue of THE SPIRE. Over the years St. Margaret's Church has held six glebe lands. The earliest two were Luck and Ironstone Hills, 155 acres next to the first church on Deep Creek. I suspect the name Ironstone came from the pieces of sandstone found in that area. The parish sold these two glebes in 1814 to help pay for the replacement of the church at Winchester (Severn Heights). In 1749 Col. Charles Greenberry bequeathed Whitehall to St. Margaret's, and the parish held Whitehall until 1763. Whitehall-the home place-included 150 acres at the end of Whitehall Road. In 1763, St. Margaret's got Burl's Hills and then Homewood Lot in 1783 in a trade with Governor Sharpe for Whitehall. These 155 acres were to the right of what is now Podickory Point Road and north of the fork in Log Inn Road. The reason for the delay in obtaining Homewood Lot was to accommodate the widow Govane who lived in the small brown shingled house that is still there. By 1850, the parish sold both Burls Hills and Homewood Lot. St. Margaret's owned Felicity Plains glebe from 1841 to 1875. We held no other glebes after that time. Glebes provided revenue for the operation of the church including the rector's salary. The rector could farm glebes, but most often a farmer rented the land and the church received the proceeds. Farming was lucrative and the parish did well, paying a minister in cash or in tobacco. In colonial days landholders paid 40 pounds of tobacco per head whether or not they belonged to the Church of England, with the pounds in cash being turned over to the sheriff. Other produce was acceptable instead of tobacco. Knowing the wet soils of this community I have always questioned how much tobacco actually grew. Nevertheless, being paid for services with tobacco or with any farm product was not a bad proposition. Produce was readily saleable for good prices up through 1895. If paid in cash in the early years, the rector earned 100 to 150 pounds Maryland currency (not English Sterling), and until 1900, at least $500 to $600 per year.
Hail The Broadway Queen! a penis, and revealed on the penis Wall the tiny necessarily discarded male pastas Boy Louise Mame, as a nearly plotless spectacle of 1866, is generally http://mnl_1221.tripod.com/bwayqueen.html
Extractions: Gay Community and Musical Theater Without Jews, fags, and gypsies, there is no theater. Mel Brooks, To Be or Not To Be (1983 film remake) The difference between a fag and a queer: a fag was a guy who wouldnt go downtown with you beating up queers. Probably that Irish street macho of the era. George Carlin, White Harlem Occupation: Foole (1973 LP) Musical theatre queens (noun, plural): gay men enlightened enough to realize that stage and screen musicals are the be all and end all, the ultimate cultural flowering of the human race. John B. Kenrick, Our Love is Here to Stay: Gays and Musicals Why do gay men love musical theater? Why does love of musical theater seem to indicate that a man wants to go to bed with another man? In the satiric film (1997), high school English teacher Howard Bracketts love for Barbra Streisand , and one scenes background noise of Ethel Merman belting out the score of Gypsy , are clues that Howard is, unknown to himself, gay. Does anyone here know how many times I had to watch