Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Badger (disambiguation)" ¶ 31
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

William and Badger
* William Badger ( 1779 1852 ), American politician, governor of New Hampshire
* USS William Badger ( 1861 ), an American Civil War Union supply ship and ship's tender
* William Badger, 15th governor of New Hampshire
* William Badger, mill owner and 15th governor of New Hampshire
* William Badger, master shipbuilder
As in Colonial America, many of the painters who specialized in portraits were essentially self-taught ; notable among them are Joseph Badger, John Brewster, Jr., and William Jennys.
Upon taking office, President William Henry Harrison appointed Badger as his Secretary of the Navy, and he continued in that post when John Tyler succeeded to the Presidency upon Harrison's death.
The Four Wheel Drive Auto Company, more often known as Four Wheel Drive or just FWD, was founded in 1909 in Clintonville, Wisconsin, as the Badger Four-Wheel Drive Auto Company by Otto Zachow and William Besserdich.
In March 1863 after three years of upheaval, the surviving Kulin leaders, among them Simon Wonga and William Barak, led forty Wurundjeri, Taungurong ( Goulburn River ) and Bunurong people over the Black Spur and squatted on a traditional camping site on Badger Creek near Healesville and requested ownership of the site.

William and shipbuilder
The land on which Sykesville sits started out as part of the Springfield Estate, owned by wealthy Baltimore shipbuilder William Patterson.
William Cramp & Sons Shipbuilding Company of Philadelphia was founded in 1825 by William Cramp, and was the preeminent U. S. iron shipbuilder of the late 19th century.
Other sources state that Westervelt and William MacKay ( not to be confused with Canadian shipbuilder Donald McKay ) established one of a few new yards at Corlear's Hook ( the block bounded by Third, Goerck and Houston Streets ) in 1841 and moved to Lewis and Seventh Street in 1844.
Henry Havelock was born at Ford Hall, Bishopwearmouth ( now in Sunderland ), the son of William Havelock, a wealthy shipbuilder, and Jane, daughter of John Carter, solicitor, of Stockton-on-Tees.
William King ( February 9, 1768June 17, 1852 ) was an American merchant, shipbuilder, army officer, and statesman from Bath, Maine.
Prominent Anti-confederates included the noted shipbuilder William D. Lawrence and the wealthy merchant Enos Collins.
Consequently, on his initiative, the firm bought several steam ships from local shipbuilder William Gray & Company in 1877.
Steell was born in Aberdeen, one of the eleven children of John Steell senior, an Edinburgh carver and guilder, and Margaret Gourlay, the daughter of William Gourlay, a Dundee shipbuilder.
Webb Institute of Naval Architecture was founded in 1889 by industrialist and philanthropist William Henry Webb, who had established his career as a preeminent shipbuilder in the 19th century.
Sir William Fairbairn, 1st Baronet ( of Ardwick ) ( 19 February 1789 18 August 1874 ) was a Scottish civil engineer, structural engineer and shipbuilder.
William James Pirrie, 1st Viscount Pirrie, KP, PC ( Ire ) ( 31 May 1847 6 June 1924 ) was a leading Irish shipbuilder and businessman.
Born to William Pepperrell, an English settler of Welsh descent who began his career as a fisherman's apprentice, and Margery Bray, daughter of a well-to-do Kittery merchant, William Pepperrell studied surveying and navigation before joining his father ( a shipbuilder and fishing boat owner ) in business.
Sarah Palin as his vice presidential candidate in the 2008 presidential election, saying he had picked " the least qualified running mate since the Swedenborgian shipbuilder Arthur Sewall ran as William Jennings Bryan's No. 2 in 1896.
Coastal defenses on the site date to the late 17th century, when local shipbuilder William Pepperell acquired the property and erected crude defense works in 1689.
* William McDougall ( Nova Scotia politician ) ( 1816 1886 ), Canadian shipbuilder and politician from Nova Scotia
William Davidson ( 1740 17 June 1790 ) was a Scottish-Canadian lumber merchant, shipbuilder and politician.
On 8 September 1890, Sir William Gordon-Cumming and the Prince were among the guests at a house party at Tranby Croft, the country house of shipbuilder Sir Arthur Wilson.
* William Denny and Brothers, British shipbuilder based in Dumbarton, Scotland
The company was founded in the middle of the 19th century by Macgregor Laird, the younger son of the shipbuilder William Laird, and based in Birkenhead.
* William Dawson Lawrence ( 1817 1886 ), successful shipbuilder, businessman and politician

William and 1752
* 1667 William Whiston, English mathematician ( d. 1752 )
* 1688 William Cheselden, English surgeon and anatomist ( d. 1752 )
* May 20 William Bradford, British-born printer ( d. 1752 )
* December 9 William Whiston, English mathematician ( d. 1752 )
William was made the 568th Knight of the Order of the Garter in 1752.
Towson was settled in 1752 when two Pennsylvania brothers, William and Thomas Towson, began farming northeast of present-day York and Joppa Roads.
Originally chartered by Governor Benning Wentworth in 1752, it was called Burnet after William Burnet, a former governor of the Province of Massachusetts Bay.
In 1752, Anne, Princess Royal and Princess of Orange, who had received the land from her consort William IV, Prince of Orange-Nassau, ceded the barony to the Prince of Berghes, who owned the other half, thereby reuniting the original land of Grimbergen as a single, but short-lived, princedom.
He was rewarded for his work in 1752 when he was promoted and sent to Kasimbazar, an important British trading post in Bengal where he worked for William Watts.
On April 28, 1752, while on a hunting and trapping trip along the Baker River, a tributary of the Pemigewasset River, he was captured by Abenaki warriors and brought back to Canada but not before warning his brother William to paddle away in his canoe, though David Stinson was killed.
* The text of William Stukeley's Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton's Life ( 1752 ) at the Newton Project, University of Sussex, UK.
* The manuscript of William Stukeley's Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton's life ( 1752 ) at the Royal Society
* 1752 William Hutton, LL. B.
He was the son of Lt. William Lewis of Locust Hill ( 1733 November 17, 1779 ), who was of Welsh ancestry, and Lucy Meriwether ( February 4, 1752 September 8, 1837 ), daughter of Thomas Meriwether and Elizabeth Thornton who were both of English ancestry.
* William Bradford ( Colonial printer ) ( 1663 1752 ), English-born printer in Pennsylvania and New York
William Bradford ( May 20, 1663 May 23, 1752 ) was an early English printer in North America.
Although often depicted as a young child when he assisted his father in the famed kite experiment in 1752, William was 21 years old at the time.
William Washington ( February 28, 1752 to March 6, 1810 ), was an officer of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, who held a final rank of Brigadier General in the newly created United States after the war.
Beginning in 1752, theater became a major part of Maryland culture for colonists of all classes ; performances included light dance and incidental music, ballad operas and the works of William Shakespeare.
The Particular Baptist Missionary Society for Propagating the Gospel among the Heathen ( later the Baptist Missionary Society, and now BMS World Mission ) was organised in 1792, under the leadership of Andrew Fuller ( 1754 1815 ), John Sutcliff ( 1752 1814 ), and William Carey ( 1761 1834 ).
The first case which brought him prominently into notice and gave him assurance of ultimate success was the government prosecution, in 1752, of a bookseller, William Owen.
* William Digby, 5th Baron Digby ( 1661 1752 )
William Cheselden ( 19 October 1688 10 April 1752 ) was an English surgeon and teacher of anatomy and surgery, who was influential in establishing surgery as a scientific medical profession.
* William Dawson ( college president ) ( c. 1704 1752 ), second president of the College of William & Mary

0.445 seconds.