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Thomas and McCulloch
The office was first created in 1838, with Thomas McCulloch serving as the university's first president.
Nixon appointed Democrat Morris Roam to fill Thomas ' Republican seat and appointed Democrat Don McCulloch, the retired Waynesville Police Chief, to fill Ransdall's seat.
Pictou Academy is the town's high school and was founded in 1803 by Dr. Thomas McCulloch, who was travelling to his new clergy posting on Prince Edward Island.
There was considerable argument between Dr. Thomas McCulloch and Nova Scotia's provincial government for funding however it finally became a reality in 1816 when the Pictou Academy was incorporated.
* Cutrer, Thomas W. Ben McCulloch and the Frontier Military Tradition.
* Winner: University of Toronto, Thomas Gough & Michael McCulloch
Stickney belongs to the number of Harvard poets ( or the Harvard Pessimists ) who died young, such as Thomas Parker Sanborn, George Cabot Lodge, Philip Henry Savage and Hugh McCulloch.
From the first major work of Canadian humour, Thomas McCulloch ’ s Letters of Mephibosheth Stepsure ( 1821-23 ) in the Halifax weekly Acadian Recorder, Canadian humorous writing has tended more towards prose than poetry.
Compared to McCulloch ’ s dry and understated style, Thomas Chandler Haliburton showed the same conservative social values in the brash, overstated character of Sam Slick, the Yankee Clockmaker.
Thomas McCulloch formed the Pictou Academy, the first educational school to train ministers.
Higinbotham did not return to power with his chief, Sir James McCulloch, after the defeat of the short-lived Sladen administration ; and being defeated for Brighton at the next general election by a comparatively unknown man, Sir Thomas Bent, he devoted himself to his practice at the bar.
Thomas McCulloch, John Barr, William Smith, Benjamin Moir, Allan Murchie, Alexander Latimer, Alexander Johnson, Andrew White, David Thomson, James Wright, William Clackson, Thomas Pike, Robert Gray, John Clelland, Alexander Hart, Thomas McFarlane, John Anderson and William Crawford were sentenced to penal transportation.
Born in 1814, Andrew Barclay was only 25 years of age when he set up a partnership with Thomas McCulloch in the manufacturer of mill shafts in Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire, Scotland.
Thomas McCulloch, John Barr, William Smith, Benjamin Moir, Allan Murchie, Alexander Latimer, Andrew White, David Thomson, James Wright, William Clackson, Thomas Pike, Robert Gray, John Clelland, Alexander Hart, Thomas McFarlane, John Anderson, Andrew Dawson, William Crawford and the 15 year old Alexander Johnstone were in due course transported to the penal colonies in New South Wales or Tasmania.
Pictou Academy ( PA ), founded in 1816 by the late Dr. Thomas McCulloch, is a secondary school in Pictou, Nova Scotia.
Thomas McCulloch ( 1776-1843 ), the first principal ( 1816-1837 ), was a Presbyterian minister ordained in the Secessionist church in Scotland.

Thomas and Presbyterian
* Thomas Campbell Presbyterian, then early leader of the Restoration Movement
He rarely mentioned religion ; a Presbyterian in his early life, historians believe he was closest to the informal Unitarianism typified by Thomas Jefferson.
Mrs. Crawford recovered completely and years later came to Graysville to live with her son, Thomas, a Presbyterian minister.
In 1819, a Presbyterian minister by the name of Thomas C. Searle ( January 15, 1787-October 15, 1821 ) moved to nearby Madison.
The Capoolong Creek, which runs through the community of Pittstown, was an attraction to early settlers and they soon established three of the oldest churches in present day Hunterdon: Thomas Episcopal, established in 1723, Bethlehem Presbyterian, organized in 1730 and the Quaker Church in 1733.
The organization of the town appears to have been concurrent with the organization of the St. Thomas or “ Campbeltown ” Presbyterian Church in 1818.
David Thomas founded the Presbyterian Church of Catasauqua, in which residents still worship today, and his wife Elizabeth donated money and land to found the Welsh Congregational Church, which no longer exists.
The Globe Knitting Mills, Cold Point Historic District, Central Norristown Historic District, Old Norriton Presbyterian Church, Gen. Thomas J. Stewart Memorial Armory, David Rittenhouse Junior High School, and Valley Forge National Historical Park are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Thomas Bayes (; c. 1701 7 April 1761 ) was an English mathematician and Presbyterian minister, known for having formulated a specific case of the theorem that bears his name: Bayes ' theorem.
Thomas Bayes was the son of London Presbyterian minister Joshua Bayes and perhaps born in Hertfordshire.
The son of a Presbyterian linen-draper, he was destined for the ministry of that church, and — along with future archbishop Thomas Secker — entered Samuel Jones's dissenting academy at Gloucester ( later Tewkesbury ) for that purpose.
Norman Mattoon Thomas ( November 20, 1884 – December 19, 1968 ) was an American Presbyterian minister who achieved fame as a socialist, pacifist, and six-time presidential candidate for the Socialist Party of America.
Thomas was the oldest of six children, born November 20, 1884 in Marion, Ohio to Emma Williams Mattoon and Weddington Evans Thomas, a Presbyterian minister.
Henry Van Dyke at the fashionable Brick Presbyterian Church on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue, Thomas was appointed as pastor for the East Harlem Presbyterian Church, ministering to Italian-American Protestants.
* Thomas Young ( 1587 – 1655 ), Scottish Presbyterian and author
Don Brash was born to Alan Brash, a Presbyterian minister and son of prominent lay leader Thomas Brash, and Eljean Brash ( née Hill ), in Whanganui on 24 September 1940.
Born in Cork, Ireland, he was the son of Thomas Dix Hincks an orientalist, naturalist and Presbyterian minister and the brother of Edward Hincks orientalist, naturalist and clergyman.
In 1675, the Presbyterian Thomas Vincent in London published a popular exposition called The Shorter Catechism Explained.
There are also Baptist meeting halls on Thomas Street and Killicomaine Road ; an Elim church on Clonavon Avenue ; a Quaker meeting hall on Portmore Street ; a Free Presbyterian church in Levaghery and meeting hall on Fitzroy Street.
Lyman Beecher ( October 12, 1775 – January 10, 1863 ) was a Presbyterian minister, American Temperance Society co-founder and leader, and the father of 13 children, many of whom became noted figures, including Harriet Beecher Stowe, Henry Ward Beecher, Charles Beecher, Edward Beecher, Isabella Beecher Hooker, Catharine Beecher, and Thomas K. Beecher.
* Reverend Thomas Boston ( 1676 – 1732 ), theologian and Presbyterian minister.
Held at the same time were several other U. S. citizens, including Thomas Sutherland, an administrator at the American University of Beirut ; Catholic priest, Father Lawrence Jenco ; Presbyterian minister Benjamin Wier ; Jerry Levin, CNN's Beirut bureau chief ; Frank Reed, head of the Lebanese International School ; Joseph Cicippio, deputy controller of the American University of Beirut ; Edward Tracey, an itinerant poet ; and Professors Alann Steen, Jesse Turner, and Robert Polhill.

Thomas and minister
Factional infighting developed between moderates in the CSP and radicals led by Captain Thomas Sankara, who was appointed prime minister in January 1983.
His middle name, Marlais, was given in honour of his great-uncle, William Thomas, a Unitarian minister and poet whose bardic name was Gwilym Marles.
* 1703 – Thomas Clap, American minister and academic ( d. 1767 )
* 1647 – Thomas Hooker, English minister, founded the Colony of Connecticut ( b. 1586 )
* 1864 – Thomas Starr King, influential Californian Unitarian minister during the American Civil War ( b. 1824 )
Over 1539, the king's chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, negotiated a potential alliance with the Duchy of Cleves.
In 1530, King Henry VIII acquired York Place from Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, a powerful minister who had lost the King's favour.
When it became clear to Henry that the Tudor dynasty was at risk, he consulted his chief minister Cardinal Thomas Wolsey about the possibility of divorcing Catherine.
Thomas Cromwell, 1st Earl of Essex, Henry VIII's chief minister responsible for the Dissolution of the Monasteries
He was also invited to succeed the venerable Thomas Cawton ( the younger ) as independent minister in Westminster.
** Thomas Rotherham, English cleric and minister ( b. 1423 )
* May 20 – Thomas Sprat, English minister ( b. 1635 )
Following these acts, Thomas More resigned as Chancellor, leaving Cromwell as Henry's chief minister.
Factional infighting developed between moderates in the CSP and radicals led by Captain Thomas Sankara, who was appointed prime minister in January 1983.
Henry demands that his new minister, Thomas Cromwell, find a way to get rid of Anne.
In 1815, an American Protestant minister, Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, travelled to Europe to research teaching of the deaf.
Thomas Cromwell, 1st Earl of Essex ( 28 July 1540 ) was an English statesman who served as chief minister of King Henry VIII of England from 1532 to 1540.
In 1524, Cromwell was elected as a member of Gray's Inn and entered the service of Henry VIII's chief minister, Thomas Cardinal Wolsey.
When in 1832 he read Philosophy of a Future State by the science teacher, amateur astronomer and church minister Thomas Dick, he found the rationale he needed to reconcile faith and science, and apart from the Bible this book was perhaps his greatest philosophical influence.
Thomas Jefferson ( then the Secretary of State ) instructed the U. S. chargé d ' affaires in Paris ( William Short ) to contract with a local engraver to make the medals, since the first was to go to the Marquis de la Luzerne, the former French minister.
During the Fronde, Thomas Francis linked himself closely with Cardinal Mazarin, who, although effectively prime minister of France, was like him an Italian outsider at the French court.
In 1651 when Mazarin had been forced into exile, the Prince was for a time brought onto the conseil du roi, and an ( admittedly very hostile ) contemporary the duchesse de Nemours described him as a ' prime minister without being aware of it '; there were suggestions that Mazarin's opponents within the court had raised him up as a rival to the cardinal with the Queen, but this is unlikely, especially since Mazarin himself urged the Queen to follow Thomas ' advice, and it is more probable that Mazarin backed the Prince as someone who would keep other rivals from gaining control in his absence but who would never have the status within France to set himself up as a permanent replacement for the Cardinal.
During the Fronde, Thomas linked himself closely with Cardinal Mazarin, who, although effectively prime minister of France, was like him an Italian outsider at the French court.
In 1651 when Mazarin had been forced into exile, the Prince was for a time brought onto the conseil du roi, and an ( admittedly very hostile ) contemporary the duchesse de Nemours described him as a ' prime minister without being aware of it '; there were suggestions that Mazarin's opponents within the court had raised him up as a rival to the cardinal with the Queen, but this is unlikely, especially since Mazarin himself urged the Queen to follow Thomas ' advice, and it is more probable that Mazarin backed the Prince as someone who would keep other rivals from gaining control in his absence but who would never have the status within France to set himself up as a permanent replacement for the Cardinal.
In Australia, the Reverend Childe worked as the minister for St. Thomas ' Parish, but proved unpopular, getting into many arguments with other members of the community and often taking unscheduled holidays into the countryside when he was supposed to be overseeing religious services.

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