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Garret and Hobart
* 1844 – Garret Hobart, American politician, 24th Vice President of the United States ( d. 1899 )
Garret Hobart, the first Vice President under William McKinley, was one of the very few Vice Presidents at this time who played an important role in the administration.
* June 3 – Garret A. Hobart, 24th Vice President of the United States ( d. 1899 )
As they did in 1876, the Republicans dipped into the talent pool of the Governor's office of Ohio to nominate William McKinley for president and New Jersey's Garret Hobart for vice-president.
President McKinley chose New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt as his running mate as Vice-President Garret Hobart had died from heart failure in 1899.
Roosevelt's efforts to reform New York politics-including Republican politics-led Platt and other state GOP leaders to pressure President McKinley to accept Roosevelt as his new vice-presidential candidate, thus filling the spot left open when Vice-President Garret Hobart died in 1899.
* Vice Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Calvin Coolidge and Harry S. Truman assumed the Presidency following the deaths of their predecessors, while Garret Hobart and James Sherman died in office.
* Garret Hobart, the twenty-fourth Vice President of the United States, serving from 1897 to 1899
Garret Augustus Hobart ( June 3, 1844 – November 21, 1899 ) was the 24th Vice President of the United States ( 1897 – 1899 ), serving under President William McKinley.
Garret Hobart at age 14
Garret Augustus Hobart was born in Long Branch, New Jersey, to Addison Willard Hobart and the former Sophia Vanderveer.
The Hobart family moved to Marlboro in the early 1850s ; Garret was sent to the village school.
Morton survived five of his successors in the vice presidency: Adlai E. Stevenson, Garret A. Hobart, Theodore Roosevelt, Charles W. Fairbanks and James S. Sherman.
* Garret Hobart ( 1844 – 99 ), 24th Vice President of the United States, under William McKinley.
Among the buildings identified, one building was one of the first churches in the area ( now a dance studio ), another was the childhood home of 24th Vice President of the United States Garret Augustus Hobart ( now an art studio ), and another was the old parsonage ( now a hair cutting business ).
The Mandeville Inn, located on the site of where the soldiers had camped during the war, was built in 1788 and was once owned by Garret Hobart, later Vice President of the United States.
The flat, lower part of the community was laid out in city-sized lots of 25 ' by 100 ' while the hillsides were plated as sites for larger Victorian " villas " for such individuals as Vice President Garret A. Hobart ( now the location of William Paterson University ) and the Barbour family of linen flax manufacturers.
* Jennie Tuttle Hobart ( 1849 – 1941 ), wife of the former U. S. Vice President Garret Hobart.
The town of Hobart was named in honor of Garret Augustus Hobart ( June 3, 1844 – November 21, 1899 ) the 24th Vice President of the United States.
Originally known as Ailsa Farms, the site was purchased by the state of New Jersey in 1948 from the family of Garret Hobart, twenty-fourth vice president of the United States.
In the 1900 presidential election, President William McKinley needed a successor to replace his first vice president, Garret Hobart, who died in November 1899.

Garret and then
Fine Gael, having gambled that former Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald would run as its candidate ( even though he had insisted for two years that he would not run for office ) then approached another senior figure, Peter Barry, who had previously been willing to run but had run out of patience and was no longer interested.
It emerged during the campaign that what Lenihan had told friends and insiders in private flatly contradicted his public statements on a controversial effort in 1982 by the then opposition Fianna Fáil to pressure President Hillery into refusing a parliamentary dissolution to then Taoiseach, Garret FitzGerald ; Hillery had resolutely rejected the pressure.
His successor, Patrick Hillery, was also involved in a controversy in 1982, when then Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald requested a dissolution of the Dáil Éireann.
The plan then allegedly lost momentum, due in part, it was claimed, to warnings made by both the then Foreign Secretary, James Callaghan, and the Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald who admitted the 12, 000-strong Irish army would be unable to deal with the ensuing civil war.
A ' Yes ' vote was urged by a massive campaign by the main parties and by civil society and the social partners, including campaigning through canvassing and all forms of media by respected pro-European figures like then EP president Pat Cox, former Czech president Václav Havel, former President of Ireland Patrick Hillery and former Taoiseach ( prime minister ) Dr. Garret Fitzgerald.
In that, he was supported by the then Taoiseach, Jack Lynch, whom he consulted before making the decision, and the leaders of the main opposition parties, Garret FitzGerald of Fine Gael and Frank Cluskey of the Labour Party.
Former Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald has attributed Ireland's dire economic state in 2009, on a series of " calamitous " government policy errors by the then Finance Minister Charlie McCreevy, who between the years of 2000 and 2003, boosted public spending by 48pc while cutting income tax.
Cooney then held a number of positions in Garret FitzGerald's two governments.
However, when Garret Nagle married Ann Matthew, the family still owned extensive property at Ballygriffin, Killavullen County Cork, as Garret's brother Joseph had converted to the English-imposed Protestantism so that he could hold property on behalf of the Roman Catholic members of his family as was required under the Penal Laws then in force.
The effect of such a withdrawal was considered by Garret FitzGerald, the then Minister for Foreign Affairs in Dublin, and recalled in his 2006 essay.

Garret and Rutgers
During his tenure as President of Rutgers College, which began in 1882, Gates built the College's first dormitory, Winants Hall ( completed in 1890 ) named for Garret E. Winants and New Jersey Hall ( funded by the state ) which was used for instruction in Chemistry and Biology ( now home of the Economics department ).

Garret and College
The Garret Mountain campus of Berkeley College is located in Woodland Park.
It was reported in September 2012 during the second Dr Garret FitzGerald Memorial Lecture at University College Cork by Seán Donlon, former secretary general at the Department of Foreign Affairs, that “ It came to our of Foreign Affairs attention that a substantial amount in three bank accounts in Dublin by the archbishop were way in excess of what was needed to run the nunciature.

Garret and from
In or around 2004, researchers from the Department of Gynaecology, Elizabeth Garret Anderson Hospital in London, measured the labia and other genital structures of 50 women from the age of 18 to 50, with a mean age of 35. 6.
Shortly afterwards, Robinson resigned from the party in protest at the Anglo-Irish Agreement that the coalition under Garret FitzGerald had signed with the British Government of Margaret Thatcher.
He remained on as a TD until 1969 when he retired from politics, being succeeded by Garret FitzGerald as Fine Gael TD for Dublin South – East.
* Crossing Over: One Woman's Escape from Amish Life, Ruth Irene Garret, Rick Farrant
Childers considered resigning from the presidency, but was convinced to remain by Cosgrave's Foreign Minister, Garret FitzGerald.
Garret FitzGerald ( 9 February 192619 May 2011 ) was an Irish politician who was twice Taoiseach of Ireland, serving in office from July 1981 to February 1982 and again from December 1982 to March 1987.
In 1987, Max More moved to Los Angeles from Oxford University in England, where he had helped to establish ( along with Michael Price, Garret Smyth and Luigi Warren ) the first European cryonics organization, known as Mizar Limited ( later Alcor UK ), to work on his Ph. D. in philosophy at the University of Southern California.
Jim Mitchell ( 19 October 1946 – 2 December 2002 ) was an Irish Fine Gael politician who served in the cabinets of Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald from 1981 – 82 and 1982 – 87.
On his appointment as Taoiseach, Garret FitzGerald caused some surprise by excluding some of the older conservative ex-ministers from his cabinet.
He is Fine Gael's first Taoiseach since John Bruton from 1994 to 1997, and the first Fine Gael leader to win government in an election since Garret FitzGerald in 1982.
Windows were also provided for the Garret at the same time, suggesting that its function changed from storage to a working environment.
Election Newsroom was broadcast live on Telefís Éireann from their Donnybrook studios in Dublin, presented by John O ' Donoghue with analysis provided by John Healy ( Irish Times ), John O ' Sullivan ( The Cork Examiner ), Garret Fitzgerald and Professor Basil Chubb.
" O ' Brien explained, " I refrained from telling this story to Garret or Justin, because I thought it would worry them.
Garret later donned a bulletproof blue costume ( described by Garret as being chain-mail made of a cellulose material which was " as thin and light as silk but stronger than steel ") and temporarily gained superhuman strength and stamina from ingesting the mysterious vitamin 2-X.
bar: Garret from: 05 / 01 / 2000 till: 03 / 01 / 2001 color: Guitar
Its northern end is broken by a shallow gap separating it from Campgaw Mountain, while its southern end is divided from Garret Mountain by the Passaic River in Paterson.
South of Garret Mountain is Orange Mountain, which is separated from Garret Mountain by a gap known as the Great Notch.

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