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William and Smith
To the Weston house came once William Allen Neilson, the president of Smith College who had been one of my old professors and who still called me `` Boy '' when I was sixty.
The first directors of the Manchester Light and Power Company were John Marsden, M. L. Manley, William F. Orvis, George Smith, and John Blackmer.
Members of the committee include Mrs. Milton Bernet, Mrs. J. Clinton Bowman, Mrs. Rollie W. Bradford, Mrs. Samuel Butler Jr., Mrs. Donald Carr Campbell, Mrs. Douglas Carruthers, Mrs. John C. Davis 3,, Mrs. Cris Dobbins, Mrs. William E. Glass, Mrs. Alfred Hicks 2,, Mrs. Donald Magarrell, Mrs. Willett Moore, Mrs. Myron Neusteter, Mrs. Richard Gibson Smith, Mrs. James S. Sudier 2, and Mrs. Thomas Welborn.
* Smith, William ; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London ( 1873 ).
* Smith, William ; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London ( 1873 ).
* 1930 William Smith, 4th Viscount Hambleden ( d. 2012 )
William Bennett ( Flute ), Lenore Smith ( Flute ), Bernard Soustrot ( Trumpet ), Hans Elhorst ( Oboe ).
G. E. Marindin, William Smith, LLD, William Wayte )
The architect was William Smith of Aberdeen, although his designs were amended by Prince Albert.
The house was quickly found to be too small, and John and William Smith were commissioned in 1848 to design new offices, cottages and other ancillary buildings.
The programme of improvement culminated during early 1852 with the decision to commission a new, larger house, from William Smith.
The son of John Smith, designer of the earlier castle, William Smith was City Architect of Aberdeen from 1852.
On learning of the commission, William Burn sought an interview with the Prince, apparently to complain that Smith had plagiarised his work in the past.
Jones was a friend and admirer of William Jennings Bryan but also campaigned throughout the South for Herbert Hoover ( and against Al Smith ) during the 1928 presidential election.
* Smith, William V. ( 2001 ).
* Smith, William ; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London ( 1873 ).
* Smith, William ; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London ( 1873 ).
Hayek saw the British philosophers Bernard Mandeville, David Hume, Adam Smith, Adam Ferguson, Josiah Tucker, Edmund Burke and William Paley as representative of a tradition that articulated beliefs in empiricism, the common law, and in traditions and institutions which had spontaneously evolved but were imperfectly understood.
* Muir, William, Annals of the Early Caliphate: From Original Sources, Smith, Elder & co., London, 1883
Frederick Douglass, William Garrison, Horace Greeley, Harriet Stowe, William Seward, Gerrit Smith, Charles Sumner, Theodore Parker, and Cassius Clay used the term caste, rather than race or class, in their writings and speeches to discuss and inspire America to abolish slavery.
According to lexicographer William Smith, " She was accused of too much familiarity with Orestes, prefect of Alexandria, and the charge spread among the clergy, who took up the notion that she interrupted the friendship of Orestes with their archbishop, Cyril.
The building of this line was promoted by Andrew Smith Hallidie with design work by William Eppelsheimer, and it was first tested in 1873.

William and Ordnance
For example, in the late 1780s, a team from the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain, originally under General William Roy began the Principal Triangulation of Britain using the specially built Ramsden theodolite.
In 1784 General William Roy set out the baseline of what would become the Ordnance Survey across Hounslow Heath, passing through Feltham.
A cannon in Roy Grove marks the Hampton end of the baseline measured in 1784 by General William Roy at the start of the Principal Triangulation of Great Britain, i. e. Ordnance Survey maps.
Ordnance Survey maps dating back to before the Second World War show an earthwork, a quarter of a mile to the south of the Bath Road, that had been excavated in 1723 by William Stukley.
On William Adam's death, John Adam inherited both the family business and the position of Master Mason to the Board of Ordnance.
William III recognised Marlborough's qualities as a soldier and strategist, but the refusal of the Order of the Garter and failure to appoint him Master-General of the Ordnance, rankled with the ambitious Earl ; nor did Marlborough conceal his bitter disappointment behind his usual bland discretion.
General William Crozier became Chief of Ordnance of the Army in 1901.
The problems prompted the then Chief of Ordnance, General William Crozier, to authorize further testing for a new service pistol.
On the initiative of General William Crozier, then Chief of Ordnance these included that of the Emergency Fleet, the Shipping Board, etc.
* William Bridges ( politician ) ( d. 1714 ), Member of Parliament for Liskeard and member of the Board of Ordnance
William Patten described the English officers of the Ordnance after the battle retrieving 30 of the Scottish guns, which were left lying in sundry places, on Sunday 11 September.
Richmond sat in Rockingham's second cabinet as Master-General of the Ordnance, and in 1784 he joined the ministry of William Pitt.
With the beginning of the Spanish American War, Thompson was promoted to lieutenant colonel and sent to Tampa, Florida as Chief Ordnance Officer under the top commander for the Cuban campaign, General William R. Shafter.
* William Atwater ( curator ), Director of the U. S. Army Ordnance Museum in Maryland
Knightswood features on maps by Ordnance Survey cartographer William Roy dating back to 1748-55, which show it lying within the parish of New Kilpatrick in Dumbartonshire.
On Queen Elizabeth's accession in November 1558 Dudley was appointed Master of the Ordnance, in which capacity he was to unofficially assist William the Silent in his struggle against Spain by delivering English weaponry.
She was the wife of Gen. Josiah Gorgas, Chief of Ordnance of the Confederate States of America, mother of William Crawford Gorgas, 22nd US Surgeon General who freed the Panama Canal Zone of yellow fever .< sup > 1 </ sup >
The Elswick Ordnance Company ( sometimes referred to as Elswick Ordnance Works, but usually as " EOC ") was originally created in 1859 to separate William Armstrong's armaments business from his other business interests, to avoid a conflict of interest as Armstrong was then Engineer of Rifled Ordnance for the War Office and the company's main customer was the British Government.
* Major General William Roy, widely regarded as the founding father of the Ordnance Survey
William grew up at Ballymacash and mastered the skills for employment with the Ordnance Survey of Ireland from 1827 to 1829, when his parents took him to Montreal to join his brothers, the eldest of whom had emigrated there in 1819.
The Principal Triangulation of Britain was a triangulation project carried out between 1783 and about 1853 at the instigation of the Director of the Ordnance Survey General William Roy ( 1726 1790 ).

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