Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "George S. Boutwell" ¶ 0
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Boutwell and is
The Man is infuriated that Gen. Warren Boutwell ( Billy Dee Williams ), a U. S. Army general based on Colin Powell, is considering running for president, and his lackey Mr. Feather ( Chris Kattan ) informs him of a mind control drug which The Man uses to make Boutwell abort his plans and instead open a fried chicken franchise.
Mr. Feather sends his henchmen after the infiltrators, who discover the Candidate is Boutwell, and is ordered by Mr. Feather to kill Undercover Brother while he escapes.

Boutwell and for
On March 5, 1868, the impeachment trial began in the Senate and lasted almost three months ; Reps. George S. Boutwell, Ben Butler and Thaddeus Stevens acted as managers ( prosecutors ) for the House and William M. Evarts, Benjamin R. Curtis and Attorney General Henry Stanberry served as Johnson's counsel ; Chief Justice Chase served as presiding judge.
Starting in 1872, Boutwell and Richardson used the " reserve " to counteract seasonal demands for currency, and eventually expanded the circulation of the Greenbacks to $ 382, 000, 000 in response to the Panic of 1873.
Rep. Boutwell gained notoriety for his fanatical opposition to President Andrew Johnson that led to Johnson's impeachment in 1868.
From 1830 to 1834, Boutwell worked as an apprentice and clerk for Simeon Heywood, who owned a palm leaf hat store.
While Boutwell ran the store he began a personal regimen of reading and writing in an effort to make up for having chosen not to attend college.

Boutwell and Republican
Having left the Democratic Party, Boutwell became a founder of the Republican Party in 1854, formed to end the spread of slavery, and advocated the party's radical practical elements.
First elected to the U. S. House of Representatives in 1863 during the American Civil War, Boutwell became prominent nationally as a Radical Republican.
For his service to the Radical Republicans, President Ulysses S. Grant, a Republican, appointed Boutwell to Secretary of Treasury.
In 1898, Boutwell left the Republican Party due to his opposition of the annexation of the Philippines and served as President of the Anti-Imperialist League until his death in 1905.

Boutwell and Party
Boutwell managed a powerful coalition of Democrats and Free Soilers, headed by Charles Sumner, that were able to defeat the established Whig Party.

Boutwell and African
During Reconstruction, Rep. Boutwell served on the Joint Committee on Reconstruction that framed the Fourteenth Amendment that gave African American freedmen citizenship and established the inviolability of the United States Public Debt.
Boutwell advocated the Fifteenth Amendment that gave full suffrage rights to African Americans.

Boutwell and American
George Sewall Boutwell ( January 28, 1818February 27, 1905 ) was an American statesman who served as Secretary of the Treasury under President Ulysses S. Grant, the 20th Governor of Massachusetts, a Senator and Representative from Massachusetts and the first Commissioner of Internal Revenue under President Abraham Lincoln.
*" A Scourge of Small Arms ," from Scientific American, June 2000 ( with Jeffrey Boutwell ).

Boutwell and during
While the United States Notes had been used as a form of debt issuance during the Civil War, afterwards they were used as a way of moderately influencing the money supply by the federal government-such as through the actions of Boutwell and Richardson.
* Lo Boutwell, a professional football player, played in the National Football League during 1922 and 1923
Hoar's position on Grant's Cabinet was tenuous, since two Cabinet members, Secretary of the Treasury, George S. Boutwell and Hoar, were from Massachusetts, during an era when regionally-balanced cabinets were an expected norm by members of the U. S. Senate.
He called upon " all Bishops, Priests, Pastors, Ministers and all of our citizens of various denominations and creeds " to join him in donning burlap sacks and having their heads smeared with ashes during a prayer rally at Boutwell Auditorium.

Boutwell and .
The police sharpshooter in the airplane piloted by Jim Boutwell.
* Civilian Jim Boutwell.
In the early 1870s, Treasury Secretaries George S. Boutwell and William Adams Richardson maintained that, though Congress had mandated $ 356, 000, 000 as the minimum Greenback circulation, the old Civil War statutes still authorized a maximum of $ 400, 000, 000-and thus they had at their discretion a " reserve " of $ 44, 000, 000.
Secretary of the Treasury of the Grant administration George S. Boutwell formally abandoned the contraction policy and embraced the ongoing state of political inertia.
* Jeffrey Boutwell, Ph. D., Member
Boutwell, Walnut, and the four patrol boats were part of this group.
Morrill did not have the reputation of a financial authority, he was believed to have political integrity and would run the department as good as George S. Boutwell, Grant's first Treasury Secretary.
Boutwell, as U. S. Representative, was instrumental in the passage and construction of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
Raised modestly on his father's farms in Massachusetts, Boutwell attended public school until the age of seventeen.
After working jobs as a clerk in various shops and trading stores, Boutwell entered politics as a Democrat, served as a representative in Massachusetts state legislature, and eventually was elected Governor of Massachusetts in 1851.

abolitionist and is
It is referenced in the 2006 film Amazing Grace, which highlights Newton's influence on the leading British abolitionist William Wilberforce.
* 1859 – Militant abolitionist leader John Brown is hanged for his October 16th raid on Harper's Ferry.
A prominent abolitionist, Wedgwood is remembered for his " Am I Not a Man And a Brother?
* 1837 – In Alton, Illinois, abolitionist printer Elijah P. Lovejoy is shot dead by a mob while attempting to protect his printing shop from being destroyed a third time.
* December 2 – Militant abolitionist leader John Brown is hanged for his October 16 raid on Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.
* January 1 – The last issue of the abolitionist magazine The Liberator is published.
* November 7 – American abolitionist and newspaper editor Elijah Lovejoy is killed by a pro-slavery mob, at his warehouse in Alton, Illinois.
It is likely that Tubman was by this time working with abolitionist Thomas Garrett, a Quaker working in Wilmington, Delaware.
There is evidence to suggest that Tubman and her group stopped at the home of abolitionist and former slave Frederick Douglass.
He was also an active abolitionist and is now chiefly remembered for finding an interpreter for the African passengers of the ship Amistad, allowing them to testify during the trial that followed their rebellion against being sold as slaves.
It is credited with helping fuel the abolitionist cause in the 1850s.
The largest town in the county is Alton, Illinois known for its abolitionist and American Civil War-era history.
The cemetery of the Wilmington Friends House is the burial site of the abolitionist Thomas Garrett and John Dickinson, signer of the U. S. Constitution.
Lane is the site where in 1856, John Brown ( abolitionist ) and 4 other of his followers hacked 3 pro-slavery men to death with broadswords near Pottawatomie Creek.
* John Brown, the famous abolitionist, is buried on his family's farm in North Elba.
Jonesborough is often considered to be the center of the abolitionist movement within the states that would join the Confederacy during the American Civil War.
He is best known as the editor of the abolitionist newspaper The Liberator, and was one of the founders of the American Anti-Slavery Society.
Harry Blackwell, an abolitionist from a reform-minded family in Cincinnati, Ohio, saw Stone speak on further occasions and wrote of her, saying " I decidedly prefer her to any lady I have met, always excepting the Bloomer costume which I don't like practically, tho theoretically I believe in it with my whole soul — It is quite doubtful whether I shall be able to succeed in again meeting her, as she is travelling around — having been born locomotive, I believe.
In contrast, an abolitionist view in animal rights holds that there is no moral justification for any harmful research on animals that is not to the benefit of the individual animal.
During the 19th century, one of Brazil's greatest poets, the Bahian abolitionist poet and playwright Castro Alves, a native of the recôncavo city of Cachoeira, penned his most famous poem, Navio negreiro, about slavery ; the poem is considered a masterpiece of Brazilian Romanticism and a central anti-slavery text.
A mixed-race woman, who is a member of a secret abolitionist underground, has an affair with Benjamin.
In an abolitionist style of restorative justice, participation is voluntary and not limited by the requirements of organizations or professionals, the process includes all relevant stakeholders and is mediated by an independent third party, and the emphasis is on meeting the needs of and strengthening the community.

0.406 seconds.