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Artemas and at
Due to the risk of smallpox, at first only men picked for their prior exposure to the disease entered Boston under the command of Artemas Ward.
Artemas was born at Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, in 1727 to Nahum ( 1684 – 1754 ) and Martha ( Howe ) Ward.
General Artemas Ward located at Ward Circle, Washington, D. C.
American University named the home of the American University School of Public Affairs, being the closest building at the time to Ward Circle in honor of Artemas Ward.
In 1886, Circuit-riding Methodist minister Artemas Lester started a school at the small community of McTyeire, Georgia, named after Bishop Holland McTyeire.
* Artemas Ward at Ward Circle NW

Artemas and home
Artemas's lifelong home had been built by his father, Nahum, about the time Artemas was born.
The home is now known as the Artemas Ward House and is a museum preserved by Harvard University.
The great-grandson of Artemas Ward gave over four million dollars to Harvard University on the condition that they erect a statue in honor of Ward, and maintain his home in Shrewsbury.

Artemas and Shrewsbury
The young couple returned to Shrewsbury where Artemas opened a general store.

Artemas and on
Immediately after the battles of the 19th, the Massachusetts militia, under the loose leadership of William Heath, who was superseded by General Artemas Ward late on the 20th, formed a siege line extending from Chelsea, around the peninsulas of Boston and Charlestown, to Roxbury, effectively surrounding Boston on three sides.
In June 1823 Ellis joined American Missionaries Asa Thurston, Artemas Bishop and Joseph Goodrich on a tour of the island of

Artemas and October
* October 28Artemas Ward, American Major General in the American Revolutionary War and a Congressman from Massachusetts ( b. 1727 )
Artemas Ward ( November 26, 1727 – October 28, 1800 ) was an American major general in the American Revolutionary War and a Congressman from Massachusetts.

Artemas and 1800
* November 26 – Artemas Ward, American Major General ( d. 1800 )

Artemas and is
The village is named after Artemas Dresser, the first permanent settler and a subsequent owner of mills.
According to Jablonski, the name is also Phrygian and could be " compared with the royal appellation Artemas of Xenophon.
Artemas Roof, the poet and writer, is a native of Brewood.

Artemas and with
The school was founded in 1886 by Reverend Artemas Lester, a circuit-riding Methodist minister who wanted to provide the residents of the Appalachian Mountains with an education.

Artemas and .
Lee was often considered second in command of the Continental forces, although Artemas Ward, who was not in good health, officially held this position.
Putnam was named major general, making him second in rank to General Artemas Ward in the Army of Observation that preceded the founding of the Continental Army.
Auburn was first settled in 1789 and was officially incorporated in 1808 as the town of Ward, in honor of American Revolution General Artemas Ward.
The lot, a small piece of land facing the Meeting House Common in the center of Berlin, was given to the town by Artemas Barnes.
Henshaw would later become an adjutant general to Artemas Ward, who was second in command to George Washington in the Continental Army.
* Artemas Holdredge 1823 -, cheese manufacturer, patented the idea of packaging cheese in rectangular boxes for easier shipping and shelf stacking in stores, as opposed to traditional wheel or round cheese and boxes.
* Artemas Holdredge, cheese manufacturer in Garrattsville, invented the concept of putting cheese in rectangular instead of round " wheel " boxes for easier shipping and shelf storage.
Four major-generals ( Artemas Ward, Charles Lee, Philip Schuyler, and Israel Putnam ) and eight brigadier-generals ( Seth Pomeroy, Richard Montgomery, David Wooster, William Heath, Joseph Spencer, John Thomas, John Sullivan, and Nathanael Greene ) were appointed in the course of a few days.
Until Washington's arrival, it remained under the command of Artemas Ward, while John Thomas acted as executive officer and Richard Gridley commanded the artillery corps and was chief engineer.
At first, the rebels ( led mainly by Massachusetts General Artemas Ward ) faced some 4, 000 British regulars, who were bottled up in the city.
Artemas Ward, Jr. ( F )
Artemas Ward, Jr. ( F )
He served under General Artemas Ward, putting his acquired engineering skills to use developing fortifications around the city.
In the next fifteen years they would have eight children: Ithamar in 1752, Nahum ( 1754 ), Sara ( 1756 ), Thomas ( 1758 ), Artemas Jr. ( 1762 ), Henry Dana ( 1768 ), Martha ( 1760 ) and Maria ( 1764 ).
Artemas was elected a justice of the peace in 1752 and also served the first of his many terms in the Massachusetts Bay Colony's assembly, or " general court.
In 1755 the militia was restructured for the war, and Artemas Ward was made a major in the 3rd Regiment which mainly came from Worcester County.
On June 16 they named Artemas Ward a major general, and second in command to George Washington.

died and at
Suddenly there was a commotion upstairs, a despairing boyish shriek, and the strains of the waltz faltered and died as the musicians and guests gaped at an apparition descending the marble staircase.
This showed that common sense had not died out at the county and village level -- though why the unhappy and obviously unbalanced woman was not restrained remains a puzzle.
`` W. O. Wolfe, prominent business man and pioneer resident of this section, died shortly after midnight Tuesday at his home 48 Spruce Street '', the Asheville Times of Wednesday, June 21, announced.
For ten years a small group of European and U.S. critics has been calling attention to the half-forgotten Austrian expressionist Egon Schiele, who died 42 years ago at the age of 28.
Back in Bavaria he had seen that gesture, and at that sight his heart had always died within him.
People died, she would have said, in hospitals, or in cars on the highway at night.
He did this by the charming practice of buying up used electric blankets for $5 to $10 from survivors of patients who had died, reconditioning them, and selling them at $185 each.
With four younger children at home, Lucy stepped into her mother's role, and even after the brothers and sisters were grown, she was her father's comfort and stay until he died in 1879.
One young man, exhilarated to the point of insanity by liquor and the excitement of the moment, performed a perfect swan dive out of the stands at the Yale Bowl during the Yale-Army football game, landed squarely on his head on the concrete ramp below, and died at once.
Mrs. Eleanor Kowalski, 42, died yesterday afternoon in Holy Cross Hospital of burns suffered in a fire that followed a bottled gas explosion Saturday night at the flat of her widowed mother, Mrs. Mary Pankowski, in the adjoining suburb of Warren.
Funeral services for Mrs. Kowalski and her daughter, Christine, 11, who died of burns at the same hospital Monday, have been scheduled for 10 a.m. tomorrow in St. Anne's Catholic Church, 31978 Mound, in Warren.
Raymond E. Killingsworth, 72, died Sunday at his home at 357 Venable St., Aj.
John William Ball, 68, of 133 Marietta St. NW, Apartment 101b, died Sunday at his home.
Mrs. Lola M. Harris, a native of Atlanta, died Sunday at her home in Garland, Tex..
Funeral for William Joseph Brett, 1926 NE 50th Ave., who died Thursday in Portland, will be Monday 1 p.m. at the Riverview Abbey.
The Lincolns ' fourth son, Thomas " Tad " Lincoln, was born on April 4, 1853, and died of heart failure at the age of 18 on July 16, 1871.
He died in Los Angeles at the age of ninety-six, and is interred in the San Fernando Mission Cemetery, Mission Hills, California.
Suffering from angina, Nobel died at home, of a cerebral haemorrhage in 1896.
" Only four months later, Kurosawa's eldest brother also died, leaving Akira, at age 23, the only one of the Kurosawa brothers still living, together with his three surviving sisters.
McCluskey died at the age of 75, not as a result of exposure, but of a heart disease which he had before the accident.
Poirot's first appearance was in The Mysterious Affair at Styles ( published 1920 ) and his last in Curtain ( published 1975, the year before Christie died ).
The other account is found in Deuteronomy 10: 6, where Moses is reported as saying that Aaron died at Moserah and was buried there.
: which died at the Oval

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