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Addison and was
Thomas Addison was first to describe Addison's disease in 1849.
Gibbs never married, living all his life in his childhood home with his sister Julia and her husband Addison Van Name, who was the Yale librarian.
In 1961 the film was nominated for Best Art Direction ( art directors George W. Davis and Addison Hehr ) and Best Sound, but failed to win either.
This was a theory put forward by the former NASA scientist Addison Bain, and later tested in small scale by the scientific reality-TV show MythBusters with semi-inconclusive results ( it was proven not to be the fault of the thermite reaction alone, but instead conjectured to be a combination of that and the burning of hydrogen gas that filled the body of the Hindenburg ).
" In November 1851 Bache went to live with Mellon, who was then living in London, and in 1852 was given a contract by Addison, Hollier and Lucas to write light piano pieces ; he turned out these works in considerable numbers.
An older sister, Anne, born in 1802, was named after his mother, the daughter of Addison Potter.
By 1801, a recipe for tomato ketchup was created by Sandy Addison and was later printed in an American cookbook, the Sugar House Book.
Soundman Addison Tice was present as well, and recorded some of the audio of the disaster.
The first person to write of " making " a landscape was Joseph Addison in 1712.
When someone told a man named Addison that McGee was a glib talker, McGee became known as " Ad Glib McGee.
Garret Augustus Hobart was born in Long Branch, New Jersey, to Addison Willard Hobart and the former Sophia Vanderveer.
Morton was born in Shoreham, Addison County, Vermont.
The town was named after Bishop Creek, flowing out of the Sierra Nevada: the creek was named after Samuel Addison Bishop, a settler in the Owens Valley.
The city was founded in 1876, and was named for its founder, Henry Addison DeLand.
It was visited in 1876 by Henry Addison DeLand, a baking soda magnate from Fairport, New York, who envisioned here a citrus, agricultural and tourism center.
During 1826 the Ambassador House was built, and was later owned by Addison and India Harris.
In 1940 the dike bridge was built that crosses the West Branch of the Pleasant River in Addison.
Oxon Hill was named for the 18th Century manor home of Thomas Addison ( which burned in 1895 but was replaced by another large Georgian-style home called " Oxon Hill Manor ," now publicly owned, which has a river view ).

Addison and later
These narratives of coarse action and crude language appeared first in local newspapers, as a rule, and later found their way between book covers, though rarely into the planters' libraries beside the morocco-bound volumes of Horace, Mr. Addison, Mr. Pope, and Sir Walter Scott.
According to Wright biographer Addison Gayle, just a few months later Wright answered questions at the American embassy in Paris about people he had met in the Communist Party who were at this point being prosecuted under the Smith Act.
In 1931, Christopher Addison ( later Lord Addison ) chaired a government committee that proposed a ' National Park Authority ' to choose areas for designation as national parks.
The later events in the life of Addison did not contribute to his happiness.
In 1705, Steele wrote The Tender Husband with Addison ’ s contributions, and later that year wrote the prologue to The Mistake, by John Vanbrugh, also an important member of the Whig Kit-Kat Club with Addison and Steele.
James Addison Reavis ( May 10, 1843 – November 27, 1914 ), later using the name James Addison Peralta-Reavis, the so-called Baron of Arizona, was an American forger and fraudster.
" Addison obtained his licentiateship in the Royal College of Physicians in 1819 and some years later was elected a fellow of the Royal College.
Joseph Addison, another native of Wiltshire, had entered the same college two years earlier ; he later dedicated to Sacheverell his work on English poets ( 1694 ).
The badge's clear blue border bears the motto IN ACTION FAITHFUL AND IN HONOUR CLEAR ( Alexander Pope's description ( in iambic pentameter ) in his Epistle to Mr Addison of James Craggs, later used on Craggs ' monument in Westminster Abbey ) in gold letters, and the oval is surmounted by an imperial crown.
She married Joel Addison Hayes, Jr. ( 1848 – 1919 ), and they lived first in Memphis ; later they moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado.
This was a tune up for Creation: A Philosophical Poem in 1712, which was praised by John Dennis, Joseph Addison, and, later, Samuel Johnson, for its Miltonic tone.
In 1940, Addison Road, as well as the link to the Metropolitan line at Latimer Road, closed along with the other West London Line stations, but in 1946 it was renamed " Kensington ( Olympia )" and became the northern terminus of a peak-hour shuttle service to Clapham Junction, which was mainly for the benefit of the workers of the Post Office Savings Bank ( later National Savings Bank ), situated in nearby Blythe Road.
Punt is a programme associate while Dennis is a regular panellist alongside Frankie Boyle and later Chris Addison.
In some cases, such as Joseph Addison, the burial took place elsewhere in Westminster Abbey, with a memorial later erected in Poets ' Corner.
The Hole in the Wall Gang operated out of The Gold Rush, Ltd. Other gang members included Peanuts Pancsko, Butch Pancsko and Pops Pancsko, Frank DeLegge, Michael LaJoy, Joseph D ' Argento, Gerald Tomasczek, Peter Basile of Wilmette, Illinois, Carl Urbanotti of Chicago, Illinois, Ernest Lehnigg of Addison, Illinois, Samuel Cusumano, Joseph Cusumano, Ernesto " Ernie " Davino, 34, Las Vegas, " Crazy Larry " Neumann, Wayne Matecki, Salvatore " Sonny " Romano, Leonardo " Leo " Guardino, 47, Las Vegas, Frank Cullotta, 43, Las Vegas, and former Las Vegas detective, Joseph Blasko, 45, Las Vegas, who acted as a lookout and who later worked as a bartender at the Crazy Horse Too, a gentleman's club, and died of a heart attack in 2002.
Addison was about 37 years old, and a private in the 43rd ( Monmouthshire ) Regiment of Foot ( later The Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry ), British Army during the Indian Mutiny when the incident for which he was awarded the VC took place on 2 January 1859 near Kurrereah, India.
In 1846, he moved with his parents to Addison County, Vermont, and two years later they moved to Elba Township, Michigan.
Two days later, her raped and strangled body was found in the bushes by a house at Addison Road, about a mile from the victim's own house.

Addison and appointed
Joel B. Peck, H. A. Cook ; 1879, William Moul ; 1880, C. Snyder ; 1881, Albert Kilmer ; 1882, Ezra W. Knowlton ; 1883, William Moul ; 1884, B. J. L. Sliter ; 1885, Albert Kilmer ; 1885, A. H. Cipperly ( appointed to fill, vacancy ); 1886, A. H. Cipperly ; 1887, Addison P. Lape ; 1888, C. Snyder ; 1889, Albert Kilmer ; 1890, Addison P. Lape ; 1891, Addison TJline ; 1892, E. M. Gregory, Le Grand M. Turner ( appointed to fill vacancy ); 1893, Sanford B. Horton ; 1894, Le Grand M. Turner ; 1895, Addison Uline ; 1896, Aipheus Bailey.
Addison was born in Milston, Wiltshire, but soon after his birth his father, Lancelot Addison, was appointed Dean of Lichfield and the Addison family moved into the cathedral close.
The government, more specifically Lord Treasurer Godolphin, commissioned Addison to write a commemorative poem, and he produced The Campaign, which gave such satisfaction that he was forthwith appointed a Commissioner of Appeals in Halifax's government.
Addison was shortly afterwards appointed secretary to the new Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Lord Wharton, and Keeper of the Records of that country.
Addison was promoted to assistant physician on January 14, 1824 and in 1827 he was appointed lecturer of materia medica.
In 1717 he was appointed Under Secretary to Joseph Addison, Secretary of State.
Before being elected, he had attracted notice by advocating the establishment of a Ministry of Health ; after the election he was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary ( an unpaid ministerial assistant, a traditional first rung on the political ladder ) to the first Minister of Health, Christopher Addison.
His right hand man at West Bromwich Albion, Colin Addison, was appointed — much to the dislike of Ron, who at the time in the English media went on record as saying Addison had " stabbed him in the back ".
Ramsay MacDonald appointed Addison as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture in 1929.
Attlee appointed Addison to be Labour's leader in the Lords in 1940, after Lord Snell stepped down for health reasons.
His cousin, the writer Joseph Addison, took him to Ireland and got him appointed to a lucrative office.
In late July 2012, a new chair for the NMC, Mark Addison, was appointed by the privy council, an appointment which was subject to criticism by the NMC Council, who described their " grave concern " with regard to what they claimed was a " lack of an open, transparent and equal opportunities process " in regards to the appointment.

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