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Thayer and chairman
After becoming chairman of GE, Immelt delivered his first commencement address to the 2001 graduating class of the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College, of which he is an alumnus.

Thayer and William
Its business manager, William Randolph Hearst, hired Thayer as humor columnist for the San Francisco Examiner 1886 – 88.
* William Roscoe Thayer, The Life and Letters of John Hay ( Boston: 1915 )
* 1912 – William Thayer Tutt, American ice hockey executive ( d. 1989 )
* William Roscoe Thayer
Among the many other businessmen who established themselves early in the development of Osseo are Z. Labrasch, groceries and notions ; Nelson Rougier, wagon maker ; William Krueger and Joseph Woodly, boots and shoes ; Samuel Pavitt, harness maker, and Maggie Rougier and Frances Thayer, dressmakers.
II William Roscoe Thayer / Clara S. Hay Houghton Mifflin New York 1915 )
A year later American architect William Thayer created the Passage des Panoramas with a row of shops passing between two panorama paintings.
His first professional positions were in the Thayer Military Band in Canton, directed by William E. Strassner followed by the Neddermeyer Band of Columbus, Ohio, conducted by Fred Neddermeyer.
* http :// penelope. uchicago. edu / Thayer / E / Roman / Texts / secondary / SMIGRA */ Lemuralia. html Smith, William, 1875.
* William R. Thayer ( 1918-19 )
* William Greenough Thayer ( 1863 – 1934 ), educator, born in New Brighton
* William Roscoe Thayer
" The site is the creation of William P. Thayer ( Bill ).
* Kershner, James William, Sylvanus Thayer – A Biography, Arno Press, New York, 1982, p. 329.
The couple had one daughter, Grace Thayer ( who married James Bryant Conant ), and two sons, Greenough Thayer and William Theodore.
* William Wallace Thayer ( 1827 – 1899 ), sixth Governor of Oregon
* William Roscoe Thayer ( 1859-1923 ), American author and editor
The first year of the Watson / Thayer Dial alone saw the appearance of Sherwood Anderson, Djuna Barnes, Kenneth Burke, William Carlos Williams, Hart Crane, E. E. Cummings, Charles Demuth, Kahlil Gibran, Gaston Lachaise, Amy Lowell, Marianne Moore, Ezra Pound, Odilon Redon, Bertrand Russell, Carl Sandburg, Van Wyck Brooks, and W. B. Yeats.
William Greenough Thayer Shedd ( June 21, 1820 – November 17, 1894 ), son of the Reverend Marshall Shedd and Eliza Thayer, was an American Presbyterian Theologian born in Acton, Massachusetts.
St. Mark's initial board of trustees was composed of members of many prominent Boston families, as well as many eminent Episcopal churchmen, and from the first the school attracted many members of Boston Brahmin and New York Knickerbocker families, although St. Mark's great headmaster William Greenough Thayer admitted a limited number of Jewish boys as well.
It wasn't until the appointment of Headmaster William Greenough Thayer ( who had taught for five years at slightly younger rival Groton School ) in 1894 that St. Mark's began to experience stability.

Thayer and Company
The largest organization created for this purpose was the New England Emigrant Aid Company, organized by Eli Thayer.
* Eli Thayer 1840, founder of the Oread Institute and the New England Emigrant Aid Company
Created by Eli Thayer in the wake of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which allowed the population of Kansas Territory to choose whether slavery would be legal, the Company is noted less for its direct impact than for the psychological impact it had on proslavery and antislavery elements.
When the Kansas-Nebraska Act threatened to extend popular sovereignty into the newly created Kansas Territory, Eli Thayer, a second-term Congressman from Massachusetts, hatched the idea of an Emigrant Aid Company in the winter of 1853-4.
Thayer announced the Company at a rally against the impending passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in Worcester on March 11.
Although Thayer personally disagreed with such hesitations, in 1855, the Company reorganized as a benevolent society and changed its named to the New England Emigrant Aid Company.
Scofield's father was the owner of several area wool mills, a founding investor in the Crompton & Thayer Loom Company, and a director of the Worcester Trust Company.

Hobson and chairman
Bulmer Hobson, a member of the IRB, approached MacNeill about bringing this idea to fruition, and, through a series of meetings, MacNeill became chairman of the council that formed the Irish Volunteers, later becoming its chief of staff.

Hobson and William
** William Hobson, the first Governor of New Zealand, suffers a stroke.
* September 26 – William Hobson, first Governor of New Zealand ( d. 1842 )
* September 10 – William Hobson 1st governor general of nz / treaty of waitangi writer ( b. 26 September 1792 )
Captain William Hobson was sent to New Zealand to persuade Māori to cede their sovereignty to the British Crown.
* New Zealand-The only person to have held the rank of Lieutenant Governor of New Zealand was Royal Navy Captain William Hobson from 1839 – 1841 when New Zealand colony was a dependency of the colony of New South Wales, governed at that time by Sir George Gipps.
The reason why the Aube sailed ahead of the Comte-de-Paris was to ‘ gain time for fear the British might get the start of them ’ Yet the New Zealand Company's survey ship Tory had sailed from Plymouth on 12 May 1839, before Langlois and his associates had made their first approach to the French government, and as early as June the British Government was considering sending Captain William Hobson to act as Lieutenant-Governor over such parts of New Zealand as might be acquired from the Māori.
This annexation was in response to France ’ s attempts to colonise the South Island at Akaroa and the New Zealand Company attempts to establish a separate colony in Wellington, and so Lieutenant-Governor William Hobson declared British sovereignty over all of New Zealand on 21 May 1840 ( the North Island by treaty and the South by discovery ).
The name New Munster was given by the Governor of New Zealand, Captain William Hobson, in honour of Munster, the Irish province in which he was born.
From May to July 1836, Royal Navy officer Captain William Hobson, under instruction from Sir Richard Bourke, visited New Zealand to investigate claims of lawlessness in its settlements.
Captain William Hobson
Captain William Hobson was called to the Colonial Office on the evening of 14 August 1839 and given instructions to take the constitutional steps needed to establish a British colony.
However, by the time Langlois and his colonists arrived at Banks Peninsula in August 1840, many Māori had already signed the Treaty of Waitangi ( the signatories including two chiefs at Akaroa in May ) and New Zealand's first British Governor, William Hobson, had declared British sovereignty over the whole of New Zealand.
John Atkinson Hobson was born in Derby, the son of William Hobson, ' a rather prosperous newspaper proprietor ,' and Josephine Atkinson.
He was the brother of the mathematician Ernest William Hobson.
Captain William Hobson RN ( 26 September 1792 – 10 September 1842 ) was the first Governor of New Zealand and co-author of the Treaty of Waitangi.
William Hobson was born in Waterford, Ireland, the son of Samuel Hobson, a barrister.
* Scholefield, G. H. Captain William Hobson.
* E. J. Tapp, ' Hobson, William ( 1793 – 1842 )', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 1, MUP, 1966, pp 545 – 546.
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