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Boston and Edwin
A major mural series depicting the Quest for the Holy Grail was done by the artist Edwin Austin Abbey during the first decade of the 20th century for the Boston Public Library.
Spinney was born Caroll Edwin Spinney in Waltham, Massachusetts ( part of the greater Boston area ) on December 26, 1933.
Land cameras are instant cameras with self-developing film named after their inventor, Edwin Land, while working for Research Row in Boston, Massachusetts and manufactured by Polaroid between the years of 1947 and 1983.
The Whalers franchise was born in November 1971 when the World Hockey Association awarded a franchise to New England businessmen Howard Baldwin, John Coburn, W. Godfrey Wood and William Edwin Barnes, to begin play in Boston.
In 1909, under the savvy ownership of Edwin A. Grozier, the Boston Post engaged in its most famous publicity stunt.
Edwin Atkins Grozier ( September 12, 1859 – 1924 ) was a progressive journalist who owned the Boston Post from 1891 until his death.
* Fishel, Edwin C., The Secret War For The Union: The Untold Story of Military Intelligence in the Civil War, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Cyrus Edwin Dallin made a specialty of equestrian sculptures of American Indians: his Appeal to the Great Spirit stands before the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
* Lawrence Barrett's Edwin Forrest ( Boston, 1881 )
He wrote a life of Edwin Forrest in the American Actors Series ( Boston, 1881 ), and an admirable sketch of Edwin Booth for Edwin Booth and his Contemporaries ( Boston, 1886 ).
Boston critic Edwin Percy Whipple noted Whittier's moral and ethical tone mingled with sincere emotion.
* Edwin Meléndez and Edgardo Meléndez, eds., Colonial Dilemma: Critical perspectives on contemporary Puerto Rico ( South End Press, Boston, 1993 ) ISBN 0-89608-441-8
Their first competitive game at home also ended in an emphatic manner, beating Boston Excelsior 11 – 0, with Edwin Teesdale scoring four goals.
* Bacon, Edwin M. ( 1903 ) Boston: A Guide Book.
* Edwin Upton Curtis ( 1861 – 1922 ), American attorney and politician from Massachusetts who served as the 34th Mayor of Boston in 1895
Ancient European Musical Instruments: An Organological Study of the Musical Instruments in the Leslie Lindsey Mason Collection at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, with a preface by Edwin J. Hipkiss and a foreword by Canon Francis W. Galpin.
* Andy Pratt ( born 1947 in Boston ), a great-grandson whose father Edwin H Baker Pratt was headmaster of the school Buckingham Browne & Nichols, is a singer-songwriter.
* Edwin Upton Curtis ( 1878 )-34th and youngest-ever Mayor of Boston
From Bacon, Edwin M. ( 1903 ) Boston: A Guide Book.

Boston and Booth
Thomas P. " Boston " Corbett ( 1832 – presumed dead September 1, 1894 ) was the Union Army soldier who shot and killed Abraham Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth.
* Boston Corbett: The Man Who Killed John Wilkes Booth
" Boston Museum playbill advertising Booth in Romeo and Juliet, May 3, 1864 When the Civil War began on April 12, 1861, Booth was starring in Albany, New York.
Following his performance of Richard III on May 12, the Boston Transcript < nowiki >' s </ nowiki > review the next day called Booth " the most promising young actor on the American stage ".
Between September – November 1863, Booth played a hectic schedule in the northeast, appearing in Boston, Providence, Rhode Island, and Hartford, Connecticut.
* Boston Corbett ( 1832 – presumed dead 1894 ): who killed John Wilkes Booth, castrated himself to avoid temptation from prostitutes
* Boston Corbett was inspired by this same verse to castrate himself ( Corbett was the 19th-century American soldier who is generally believed to have fired the shot that killed John Wilkes Booth ).
A letter signed by John Wilkes Booth, alleged killer of Abraham Lincoln, sells for $ 1, 000 at a Boston, Massachusetts auction.
* It is probable that Boston Corbett, the man who shot John Wilkes Booth, suffered from Korsakoff's syndrome later in life due to his pre-and-post war profession as a hatter, and his eventual madness.
In his early appearances, Booth usually performed alongside his father, making his stage debut as Tressel in Richard III in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1849.
Booth traveled to such cities as Baltimore, Boston and New York.
After becoming trapped in a barn by Union Army troops on the property of Richard Henry Garrett, Herold surrendered to the troops, but Booth, refusing to surrender, was shot by Sergeant Thomas P. " Boston " Corbett through a crack in the barn wall, and died a few hours later.
Herold surrendered, but Booth refused to lay down his arms and suffered a mortal gunshot wound from Sergeant Boston Corbett, who was ratified in his actions, as orders to hold fire had not been given.
Boston Corbett, the soldier who killed Abraham Lincoln's assassin John Wilkes Booth, had performed self-surgery earlier in life.
She had her early training as an actress with the Boston Museum stock company, and afterwards with Edwin Booth.
" Numerous reviewers criticized Game Over for being biased toward Kasparov and making accusations against IBM without presenting evidence for its claims, including Robert Koehler of Variety, Kevin Crust of The Los Angeles Times, Michael Booth of The Denver Post, Liam Lacey of The Globe and Mail, Janice Page of The Boston Globe, and Ned Martel of The New York Times.
Booth was caught on April 26, 1865, but was killed by Boston Corbett, a soldier who violated orders.
Born in Boston, he made his first appearance on the stage in Providence, Rhode Island in support of Junius Brutus Booth.
* Thomas P. " Boston " Corbett, the Union soldier who killed John Wilkes Booth ( President Abraham Lincoln's assassin ), is presumed to have died in the fire.

Boston and was
For the Coolidges, it was Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Stearns of Boston, Massachusetts, owners of a large department store.
Just when it was needed for the campaign, Hearst Paper No. 8, the Boston American, began publication.
Deppy is Despina Messinesi, a long-time member of the Vogue staff who, although born in Boston, was born there of Greek parents.
After all, Pike was an established poet and his work had been published in the respectable periodicals of that center of American culture, Boston.
He was thrown out, more or less, from Boston, Plymouth, Pocasset, Newport, and Providence.
With his wife and three or more children he arrived in Boston in March, 1637, and soon found it was no place for anyone looking for liberty of conscience.
The unconquerable Mrs. Hutchinson was residing at Pocasset, after having been excommunicated by the Boston church and thrown out of the colony.
The Boston elders were great at befuddling the opposition with torrents of ecclesiastical obscurities, but Gorton was better.
He had ridden hard from Boston, and he was not used to horseback.
'' and others concerning camp friends who resided in her suburban neighborhood,, and news of her commencing again her piano lessons, her private school, a visit to Boston to see her grandparents and an uncle who was a surgeon returned on furlough, wounded, from the war in Europe.
In 1914 when the town was chosen for the U. S. Amateur Golf tournament, a representative hurried here from the Boston manager's office.
The nearest undisrupted end of track from Boston was at Concord, N. H..
-- Boston Red Sox Outfielder Jackie Jensen said Monday night he was through playing baseball.
Bobby Lowe of Boston was the first to hit four at home and Gil Hodges turned the trick in Brooklyn's Ebbetts Field.
He was the lawyer for Ted Collins' old Boston Yankees in the National Football League.
In 1825, the Boston house carpenters' strike for a ten-hour day was denounced by the organized employers, who declared: `` It is considered that all combinations by any classes of citizens intended to effect the value of labor tend to convert all its branches into monopolies ''.
The fact is incontestable: that liberal world of Unitarian Boston was narrow-minded, intellectually sterile, smug, afraid of the logical consequences of its own mild ventures into iconoclasm, and quite prepared to resort to hysterical repressions when its brittle foundations were threatened.
Our endeavor to capture even a faint sense of how strenuous was the fight is muffled by our indifference to the very issue which in the Boston of 1848 seemed to be the central hope of its Christian survival, that of the literal, factual historicity of the miracles as reported in the Four Gospels.
If one of Mr. Rodgers' melodies seemed to deserve a better fate than interment in Boston or the obscurity of a Broadway failure, Mr. Hart was likely to deck it out with new lyrics to give it a second chance in another show.
His most well-known teaching position was at the Temple School in Boston.
He moved to Boston on April 24, 1828, and was immediately impressed, referring to the city as a place " where the light of the sun of righteousness has risen.
" Alcott began to believe Boston was the best place for his ideas to flourish.
It was named the Temple School because classes were held at the Masonic Temple on Tremont Street in Boston.
Reverend James Freeman Clarke was one of Alcott's few supporters and defended him against the harsh response from Boston periodicals.

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