Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "George T. Emmons" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Emmons and got
Through his duties, Emmons got in contact with, and interested in, the Alaska Native cultures of the region: particularly the Tlingit and Tahltan.
His interests in Alaska Natives got him into close contact with the American Museum of Natural History, which purchased his first two collections of Alaska Native artifacts in the 1890s and with which Emmons had an exchange of items for the next three decades.

Emmons and on
Phillip Emmons Isaac Bonewits ( October 1, 1949 – August 12, 2010 ) was an influential American Druid who published a number of books on the subject of Neopaganism and magic.
Emmons Lake runs on an alternative school schedule that is longer on the calendar, but the same amount of school days.
About 1909 until 1912 an extensive lumber operation by Emmons L. Peck of Carbondale, Pennsylvania, utilizing a steam tramway straddled the county line on South Hill east of Mud Lake, shipping finished lumber from Burnsides Switch on the D & HRR.
* Emmons L. Peck of Carbondale, PA, built a wooden tramway around Gilbert Lake 1906-1909, moving nine million feet of logs using a homebuilt geared steam locomotive later reputed to have been dragged out on the lake ice and sunk by employees when the land was purchased for the state present park about 1927.
Emmons returned again in 1788 with another wagon load of supplies, while camping he was killed by a tree that fell on the wagon where he was sleeping.
* Horner – Wadsworth – Emmons reaction, a variation on the Wittig chemical reaction
Nearly a year later, Newell hired Gideon Emmons and Henry Nichols, ostensibly to dig a well, and on October 16, 1869 they found the giant.
Emmons retired in 1899 and took on special projects for the federal government.
So Emmons was officially ordered and detached from active service to write the Ethnological report on the Native tribes of Southeast Alaska, elaborated from the museum collections.
It flows about 75 miles ( 121 km ) from its source, the Emmons Glacier on Mount Rainier, to join the Puyallup River at Sumner.
The source of the White River is the Emmons Glacier on the northeast side of Mount Rainier.
This is usually the case on those summer routes to the summit whose lower portions are on the south face of Mount Rainier: climbers traverse the " flats " of Ingraham Glacier, but ascend Disappointment Cleaver and follow its ridgeline rather than ascending the headwall either of that glacier or ( on the other side of the cleaver ) of Emmons Glacier.
After the fall of France, the Americans and British increased their military cooperation ; Emmons was one of three American military observers sent to London on August 6, 1940.
General Emmons was returned by Arnold to Hawaii as commanding general of the Hawaiian Department on December 17, ten days after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
* Buddy Emmons on One For The Road
The second version aired on the USA Network from September 29, 1986 to December 27, 1991 and was hosted first by Blake Emmons and later by Geoff Edwards.
In the autumn of 1832, Yancey took his first steps as a politician by working on the campaign for Whig Ebenezer Emmons.
Koenig subsequently worked for brief periods for Candreva and Jarrett, Edward H. Fickett, Kistner, Wright and Wright, and finally in 1956 for Jones and Emmons, on the Eichler X-100 steel model.
The four piece, with Williams on bass and Masters on drums, eventually came across Chris Emmons as a second guitar and the lineup was solidified.

Emmons and Alaska
Emmons was assigned as commanding officer of Company B, 30th Infantry Regiment at the Presidio of San Francisco and in May 1912 went to Fort Gibbon, Alaska with the 30th.
Mount Emmons is a post-caldera stratovolcano within the Emmons Lake caldera on the Alaska Peninsula.
# REDIRECT Mount Emmons ( Alaska )

Emmons and there
After General Emmons granted the Varsity Victory Volunteers to form, a confidential memo was sent to the War Department in early April stating that there were 2, 000 Japanese-American soldiers now serving and many more who wished to serve in order to demonstrate their loyalty to the United States and requests to organize them into a fighting force to be sent to Europe or Africa.

Emmons and through
US 69 enters the state at Emmons heading north-northeast through southern Minnesota.
Hjalmar Nygaard taught in the rural schools of Emmons and Steele Counties from 1932 to 1935 and then was engaged in the grocery and hardware businesses from 1936 through 1960.

Emmons and .
The films were directed by J. Farrell MacDonald, with casts that included Violet MacMillan, Vivian Reed, Mildred Harris, Juanita Hansen, Pierre Couderc, Mai Welles, Louise Emmons, J. Charles Haydon, and early appearances by Harold Lloyd and Hal Roach.
The original campus plan was prepared by the San Francisco architecture and planning firm of Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons.
1977 ); Hughes, Glenn: Pierrot's Mother ( 1923 ); Johnstone, Will B .: I'll Say She Is ( 1924 revue featuring the Marx Brothers and two " breeches " Pierrots ; music by Tom Johnstone ); Macmillan, Mary Louise: Pan or Pierrot: A Masque ( 1924 ); Millay, Edna St. Vincent: Aria da Capo ( 1920 ); Renaud, Ralph E .: Pierrot Meets Himself ( 1933 ); Rogers, Robert Emmons: Behind a Watteau Picture ( 1918 ); Shephard, Esther: Pierrette's Heart ( 1924 ).
William Emmons, the Boston printer, published a biography of Johnson in New York dated July 1833.
Richard Emmons, from Great Crossing, Kentucky, followed this up with a play entitled Tecumseh, of the Battle of the Thames and a poem in honor of Johnson.
Emmons ' poem provided the line that became Johnson's campaign slogan: " Rumpsey Dumpsey, Rumpsey Dumpsey, Colonel Johnson killed Tecumseh.
Emmons and Langworthy, contemporary sources, give 1781, and Pratt and Sobel accept this date ; this has the effect of making him born in Kentucky, which would be a reason to invent it.
Note that Emmons, like Langworthy, was published in New York City.
* William Emmons, Authentic Biography of Colonel Richard M. Johnson, of Kentucky.
To get around the Skil patents, Art Emmons of Porter-Cable invented the direct-drive sidewinder saw in 1928.
Emmons County is a county located in the U. S. state of North Dakota.
The county was created by the 1879 territorial legislature and named for James Emmons ( 1845 – 1919 ), a steamboat operator and early Bismarck merchant and entrepreneur.
Emmons County was established before the state of North Dakota.
It was named for James A. Emmons who was a steamboat navigator from Virginia.
The first settlers of Emmons County came from parts of Europe and the eastern United States.
The settlers faced many hardships upon arrival in Emmons County.
The first building in Emmons county was a log cabin built near what was to become the town of Winona in 1852.
The first bridge in Emmons County was not built until 1889.

0.163 seconds.