Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "East Lothian" ¶ 86
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Samuel and Morison
* Samuel Eliot Morison, Christopher Columbus, Mariner, Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1955.
Samuel Eliot Morison wrote that had Marshall carried out his constitutional duties, assumed the presidency, and made the concessions necessary for the passage of the League of Nations treaty in late 1920, the United States would have been much more involved in European affairs and could have helped prevent the rise of Adolf Hitler, which began in the following year.
Samuel Eliot Morison ( 1971 ) suggested the southern part of Newfoundland ; Erik Wahlgren ( 1986 ) Miramichi Bay in New Brunswick ; and Icelandic climate specialist Pall Bergthorsson ( 1997 ) proposed New York City.
The historian Samuel Eliot Morison wrote " this occurs at Angouleme ( New York ) rather than Refugio ( Newport ).
* 1943: Admiral of the Ocean Sea by Samuel Eliot Morison
* 1960: John Paul Jones by Samuel Eliot Morison
b. The Founding of Harvard College, Samuel Eliot Morison, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1935, pages 91 and 396.
* Samuel Eliot Morison.
* Samuel Eliot Morison ( ed .).
Professor Dennis Showalter, the 2005 recipient of the Samuel Eliot Morison Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Military History, is an expert on World War II, a Distinguished Visiting Professor at West Point and the United States Air Force Academy, reviewer for the History Book Club, and author of Tannenberg: Clash of Empires, the 1992 winner of the American Historical Association's Paul Birdsall Prize.
Halsey received much criticism for his decisions during the battle, with naval historian Samuel Morison terming the Third Fleet run to the north " Halsey's Blunder ".
Samuel Loring Morison was a government security analyst who worked on the side for Jane's, a British military and defense publisher.
Historian Samuel E. Morison wrote in 1949 that Spruance was subjected to much criticism for not pursuing the retreating Japanese, and allowing the retreating Japanese surface fleet to escape.
* Morison, Samuel Eliot, New Guinea and the Marianas, March 1944 August 1944, vol.
Commager was coauthor, with Samuel Eliot Morison, of the widely-used history text The Growth of the American Republic ( 1930 ; 1937 ; 1942 ; 1950, 1962 ; 1969 ; 7th ed., with William E. Leuchtenburg, 1980 ; abridged editions in 1980 and 1983 under the title Concise History of the American Republic ).
Commager was representative of a whole generation of like-minded historians who were widely read by the general public, including Samuel Eliot Morison, Allan Nevins, Richard Hofstadter, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., and C. Vann Woodward.
Commager and his co-author Samuel Eliot Morison received vigorous criticism from African American intellectuals and other scholars for their very popular textbook The Growth of the American Republic, first published in 1930.
* The Growth of the American Republic ( with Samuel Eliot Morison, New York: Oxford University Press, 1930 Oxford History of the United States ; 7th ed., 1980 .. Revised and abridged edition with Samuel Eliot Morison and William E. Leuchtenburg published by Oxford University Press in 1980 as A Concise History of the American Republic, rev.
Samuel Eliot Morison, Rear Admiral, United States Naval Reserve ( July 9, 1887 May 15, 1976 ) was an American historian noted for his works of maritime history that were both authoritative and highly readable.
Samuel Eliot Morison was born July 9, 1887 in Boston, Massachusetts to John Holmes Morison ( 1856 1911 ) and Emily Marshall ( Eliot ) Morison ( 1857 1925 ).

Samuel and Brown
Teaming up with Samuel Slater, Moses Brown helped to create the second cotton mill in America, a water-powered textile mill.
* July 26 Opening of Union Chain Bridge across the River Tweed between England and Scotland, a wrought iron suspension bridge designed by Captain Samuel Brown.
Prior to either of these structures the famous Chain Pier was built, to the designs of Captain Samuel Brown.
* The art of awareness ; a textbook on general semantics by J. Samuel Bois, Dubuque, Iowa: W. C. Brown Co., 1966.
In 1940, Plumpe sold the worldwide distribution rights to Rowland and Samuel Brown.
* Samuel Brown, born in Augusta County, noted surgeon and editor
Much of O ' Connor's best-known writing on religion, writing, and the South is contained in these and other letters, including letters written to her friends Brainard Cheney and Samuel Ashley Brown.
* Samuel Brown house (“ The Brick ”), Roachdale
At one time or another during the period leading up to the Civil War, Brown, Clark, Benjamin Waterhouse, and Captain Samuel Barry were arrested for violating the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.
* Samuel Robbins Brown ( 1810 1880 ), missionary
In 1764, Stiles played an influential role in the establishment of the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations ( the original name for Brown University ) by contributing substantially to the drafting of its charter and by serving with thirty-five others-including Stephen Hopkins, William Ellery, Samuel Ward, the Reverend John Gano, the Reverend Isaac Backus, the Reverend Samuel Stillman, and the Reverend James Manning-as a founding fellow or trustee.
The incorporators were John B. Smith, Henderson Gaylord, Peter Shupp, Draper Smith, Josiah M. Eno, Daniel Gardiner, A. R. Matthews, William Jenkins, George P. Richards, S. M. Davenport, Edward Griffith, Lewis Boughton, A. F. Shupp, John J. Shonk, James McAlarney, J. P. Davenport, Eli Bittenbender, David McDonald, C. A. Kuschke, Andrew F. Levi, Querin Krothe, David Madden, John Dodson, Darius Gardiner, John Cobley, William L. Lance, Jr., J. E. Smith, R. N. Smith, John Dennis, David Levi, W. W. Lance, William W. Dietrick, James Hutchison, George Brown, Oliver Davenport, Samuel French, A. Gabriel, Theodore Renshaw, Edward G. Jones, J. L. Nesbitt, J. W. Weston, J. H. Waters, John E. Halleck, E. R. Wolfe, F. E. Spry, C. F. Derby, Anthony Duffy, D. Brown, A. G. Rickard, Thomas P. Macfarlane, William L. Lance, Lewis Gorham, John Jessop, A. S. Davenport, A. Hutchison, Brice S. Blair, John S. Geddis and C. H. Wilson, M. D.
Antoinette Brown married Samuel Charles Blackwell on January 24, 1856, becoming Stone's sister-in-law in the process, and taking the name Antoinette Brown Blackwell.
The publication of a new Hebrew-English Lexicon was started in 1892 under the editorship of Professors Francis Brown, Samuel Rolles Driver and Charles Augustus Briggs, now well known as the Brown Driver Briggs lexicon or BDB for short.
West also worked in London where many American artists studied under him, including Washington Allston, Ralph Earl, James Earl, Samuel Morse, Charles Willson Peale, Rembrandt Peale, Gilbert Stuart, John Trumbull, Mather Brown, Edward Savage and Thomas Sully.
Samuel Brown was parish clergyman.
Sessions conferred with Chief Justice Hopkins and lawyer John Cole, and with Moses Brown the four men drafted a letter to Massachusetts ' statesman Samuel Adams, who replied, urging Rhode Island to remain defiant, or at least to stall matters by appealing the creation of the royal commission.
Historian Samuel R. Brown stated 25 killed or fatally injured and 50 wounded in Johnson ’ s regiment and 2 killed and 6-7 wounded in the infantry, for a total of 27 killed and 56 or 57 wounded Harrison informed United States Secretary of War John Armstrong, Jr. that the only casualties inflicted on his command by the British troops at the battle were three men wounded: all of the rest were inflicted by the Indians.
Brown wanted to plead guilty but Justice Samuel Chase wanted him to name everybody who had helped him or who subscribed to his writings.

Samuel and chemist
Holden did not patent his invention and claimed that one of his pupils wrote to his father Samuel Jones, a chemist in London who commercialised his process.
* Samuel Smith ( chemist ) ( born 1927 ), American scientist ; co-inventor of Scotchgard
* Samuel Morison Brown ( 1817-1856 ), Scottish chemist, poet and essayist
He and Flagler enlisted chemist Samuel Andrews and with his brother, William Rockefeller, Jabez Bostwick, and Flagler's relative and silent partner, Stephen V. Harkness, went into the refining business in Cleveland as Rockefeller, Andrews & Flagler.
* Samuel Parkes ( chemist ) ( c. 1759 1825 ), British chemist
He had seven siblings: three being, Lilla Cabot ( b. 1848 ), among the first American impressionist artists, Samuel Cabot IV ( b. 1850 ), chemist and founder of Cabot Stains, and Dr. Arthur Tracy Cabot ( b. 1852 ), a progressive surgeon.
) His sons were the famous Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, who lived in Boston and commuted to teach Talmud at Yeshiva University in Manhattan ; Dr. Samuel Soloveichik, a chemist as well as a Talmudic scholar ; and Rabbi Ahron Soloveichik, who taught at Mesivta Rabbi Chaim Berlin and then at Yeshiva University.
Webber's son, also named Samuel ( September 15, 1797 Cambridge, Massachusetts December 5, 1880 Charlestown, New Hampshire ), was a distinguished physician, chemist and author.
She had seven siblings: three being, Samuel Cabot IV ( b. 1850 ), chemist and founder of Valspar's Cabot Stains, Dr. Arthur Tracy Cabot ( b. 1852 ), a progressive surgeon, and Godfrey Lowell Cabot ( b. 1861 ), founder of Cabot Corporation.
Karl Samuel Leberecht Hermann ( 20 January 1765 1 September 1846 ) was a German chemist who independently discovered cadmium in 1817.
* Samuel C. Lind ( 1879 1965 ), American radiation chemist
* Samuel Morison Brown-( 1817 1856 ), chemist and writer, grandson of John Brown, born in Haddington.
David Hebert Samuel, 3rd Viscount Samuel OBE (; born 8 July 1922 ) is a Anglo-Israeli chemist and neurobiologist.
* Samuel Parkes ( chemist ) ( c. 1759 1825 ), British manufacturing chemist
Samuel Parkes ( c. 1759 1825 ) was a British manufacturing chemist, now remembered for his Chemical Catechism.
* Samuel Isaac Weissman, chemist and professor

0.401 seconds.