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Benjamin and Waterhouse
In October 1805 John Adams wrote to his friend Benjamin Waterhouse, an American physician and scientist:
* March 4 – Benjamin Waterhouse, Cambridge physician and medical professor ( smallpox vaccine pioneer ) ( d. 1846 )
Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins's Iguanodon statues.
The sculptor Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins erected the first lifesized models of the ( then ) newly-discovered dinosaurs and other extinct animals in the park, following the gift of a megatherium skull by Charles Darwin.
At one time or another during the period leading up to the Civil War, Brown, Clark, Benjamin Waterhouse, and Captain Samuel Barry were arrested for violating the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.
While the original settlers are not known for certain, early records and deeds mention the following: William and Jacob Waterhouse ( of Kennebunk ), Love Roberts, Alexander Grant, Thomas Lord, Jacob Rhoades, Benjamin and Mark Goodwin ( brothers who built one of the first mills at Goodwin's Mills ), John Low ( who served as town moderator and treasurer ), John Burbank, Joseph Witten, James and William Brock, Mark Ricker, Robert Cousens, Valentine Hill, and Gershom Downs.
" Man, and the elephant " Plate from Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins | Hawkins A comparative view of the human and animal frame.
In 1852, Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins was commissioned to build a model of Megalosaurus for the exhibition of dinosaurs at the Crystal Palace in Sydenham, where it remains to this day.
* Benjamin Waterhouse ( 1754 – 1846 ), physician
The first of these, the Hadrosaurus mount created by noted natural history artist Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins, made its debut at the Academy in 1868.
His pupils included noted sculptors George Frederic Watts, Thomas Woolner and Henry Weekes, and naturalist Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins.
Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins ( 8 February 1807 – 27 January 1894 ) was an English sculptor and natural history artist renowned for combining both in his work on the life-size models of dinosaurs in the Crystal Palace Park, Sydenham, south London.
Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins was born in Bloomsbury, London on 8 February 1807, the son of Thomas Hawkins, an artist, and Louisa Anne Waterhouse, the daughter of a Jamaica plantation family of apparent Catholic sympathies.
On New Year's Eve, 1853, Sir Richard Owen hosted a dinner for twenty fossil experts inside a life-size reconstruction of Iguanodon made under his direction by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins.
* Benjamin Waterhouse ( 1754 – 1846 ), an American physician
* Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins ( 1807 – 1894 ), an English sculptor and natural history artist
Historical illustration of Hylaeosaurus by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins, 1871.
# REDIRECT Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins

Benjamin and Hawkins
In the 1790s, Benjamin Hawkins was assigned as the US agent to the southeastern tribes, who became known as the Five Civilized Tribes for their adoption of numerous Anglo-European practices.
As did Benjamin Hawkins, European fur traders and colonial officials tended to marry high-status women, in strategic alliances seen to benefit both sides.
In keeping with his trade and acculturation policy, Jefferson kept Benjamin Hawkins as Superintendent of Indian Affairs for the Southeastern peoples, who became known as the Five Civilized Tribes for their adoption of European-American ways.
George Washington sought to ' civilize ' Southeastern American Indians, through programs overseen by the Indian Agent Benjamin Hawkins.
He denounced the treaties Alexander McGillivray had negotiated with Spain and the U. S., threatening to declare war on the United States unless it returned Muscogee lands, and issuing a death sentence against George Washington's Indian agent Benjamin Hawkins, who won the loyalty of the Lower Creeks.
Benjamin Hawkins, seen on his plantation in this 1805 painting, teaches Creeks to use European technology.
In 1796, Washington appointed Benjamin Hawkins as General Superintendent of Indian Affairs dealing with all tribes south of the Ohio River.
In 1806, Fort Benjamin Hawkins was built on a hill overlooking the Ocmulgee Old Fields, to protect expanding settlements and serve as a reminder of U. S. rule.
* Benjamin Hawkins, US senator and Superintendent for Indian Affairs ( 1798-1818 ), for the territory south of the Ohio River and east of the Mississippi
The first white settlers in the area were Indian agent Benjamin Hawkins and his family.
The White Sticks, mostly from the Lower Towns, sided with the United States government, as they had a closer relationship with the US Indian Agent, Benjamin Hawkins, and were more affected by American settlement in their lands.
The government appointed agents, like Benjamin Hawkins, to live among the Indians and to teach them, through example and instruction, how to live like whites.
The Creek Indians of Georgia and Alabama had become divided into two factions: the Upper Creeks ( or Red Sticks ), a majority who opposed the American expansion and sided with the British and Spanish during the War of 1812, and the Lower Creek, who were more assimilated, had a stronger relationship with the US Indian Agent Benjamin Hawkins, and sought to remain on good terms with the Americans.
Benjamin Hawkins ( P )
Benjamin Hawkins ( A )
The two brothers and their neighbors, Joseph and Benjamin Hawkins, were instructed by him from 1766 – 1773.
Blount sought one of North Carolina's inaugural U. S. Senate seats in November 1789, but was defeated by Benjamin Hawkins.
He became Treasurer of the Royal Navy on 1 January 1578, following the death of his predecessor Benjamin Gonson ( who was also his father-in-law, Hawkins having married Katherine Gonson in 1567 ).
Other key figures within the UK anti-folk community include Dan Treacy of Television Personalities, Jack Hayter, Milk Kan, Extradition Order, Benjamin Shaw and Paul Hawkins.
Benjamin Hawkins ( August 15, 1754June 6, 1816 ) was an American planter, statesman, and United States Indian agent.
Benjamin Hawkins, portrayed on his plantation, teaches Creek people to use European technology.

Benjamin and 1855
These included leading figures of the European ' Enlightenment ' including the philosophers Voltaire, 1694 – 1778 ) and Jean-Jacques Rousseau ( 1712 – 1778 ); the future US Presidents John Adams ( 1735 – 1826 ) and Thomas Jefferson ( 1743 – 1826 ); Benjamin Franklin ( 1706 – 1790 ); the German landscape artist Prince Hermann von Pückler-Muskau ; the Italian statesman Giuseppe Garibaldi ( 1807 – 1882 ); Russian Tsars Nicholas I ( 1796 – 1855 ) and Alexander I ( 1777 – 1825 ); the king of Persia ; Queen Victoria ( 1819 – 1901 ) and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg ( 1819 – 61 ); Sir Walter Scott ( 1771 – 1832 ); Prince Leopold III, Duke of Anhalt-Dessau ( 1740 – 1817 ); Prime Ministers William Ewart Gladstone ( 1809 – 1898 ) and Sir Robert Walpole ( 1676 – 1745 ); Queen Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach ( 1683 – 1737 ); John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute ( 1713 – 92 ) his architect William Burges ( 1827 – 1881 ) and the present Prince of Wales and Princess Margaret.
Jacob Benjamin Katznelson ( 1855 – 1930 ) wrote the poem, " Alilot Gibbor ha-Yehudim Yehudah ha-Makkabi le-Veit ha-Hashmona ' im " ( 1922 ); the Yiddish writer Moses Schulstein wrote the dramatic poem, " Yehudah ha-Makkabi " ( in A Layter tsu der Zun, 1954 ); Jacob Fichmann's " Yehudah ha-Makkabi " is one of the heroic tales included in Sippurim le-Mofet ( 1954 ).
Its first mayor was Benjamin Moreau 1855.
* William Benjamin Ross ( 1855 – 1929 ), Canadian politician, lawyer and businessman
Benjamin Newton Duke ( April 25, 1855 – January 8, 1929 ) was a U. S. tobacco, textile, energy industrialist and philanthropist.
With Artelia Duke, he had three children: Mary Elizabeth Duke ( 1853 – 1893 ) who married Robert E. Lyon ; Benjamin Newton Duke ( 1855 – 1929 ) and James Buchanan Duke ( 1856 – 1925 ).
* 1855 – 1868: Samuel Benjamin Auchmuty
Benjamin E. Bates, an industrialist who founded Bates College in Maine in 1855, was a Sunday school teacher and active attendant of Park Street in the mid-nineteenth century.
File: Benhart. jpg | Benjamin Hart, businessman, militia officer, and justice of the peace, in 1855.
He ordained James De Koven as a priest in 1855, and supported Bishop Benjamin Onderdonk during his trial.
Dissident clergymen even began questioning accepted premises of Christian morality, and Benjamin Jowett's 1855 commentary on St. Paul brought a storm of controversy.
It was the parish church of Bengeo until 1855, when it was succeeded by the new Holy Trinity parish church designed by Benjamin Ferrey.
The various owners and the dates associated with the site include: Benjamin Thornton ( 1848 – 1854 ), William H. Macfarland ( 1854 – 1855 ), Alfred V. Scott ( 1855 – 1857 ), Thomas J. Carson and Frank Carson ( 1857 – 1881 ), Louis F. Detrick and William L. Bradley ( 1881 – 1900 ) and Charles King Lennig ( 1900 ).
His most important books are Life of Horace Greeley ( 1855 ), Life and Times of Aaron Burr ( 1857 ), Life of Andrew Jackson ( 1859 – 1860 ), Life and Times of Benjamin Franklin ( 1864 ), Life of Thomas Jefferson ( 1874 ), and Life of Voltaire ( 1881 ).
In 1855, however, a major fire damaged much of the college, placing its future at risk, but a large gift from Benjamin Lombard, an Illinois farmer and businessman, rescued the institution, rechristened as Lombard University.

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