Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Charles Scott (governor)" ¶ 26
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

June and 1787
Carl Friedrich Abel ( 22 December 1723 – 20 June 1787 ) was a German composer of the Classical era.
Throughout his life he had enjoyed excessive living, and his drinking probably hastened his death, which occurred in London on 20 June 1787.
* June 26 – Arthur Middleton, American politician ( d. 1787 )
A second daughter, Sophie Hélène Béatrice de France, was born on 9 July 1786, but died on 19 June 1787.
Due to the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War that went disastrously for the Dutch, the Patriot party staged a revolt against the authoritarian regime of stadtholder William V that was struck down through the intervention of William's brother-in-law Frederick William II of Prussia in June 1787.
* Sophie-Hélène-Béatrix, who died in infancy ( 9 July 1786 – 19 June 1787 )
Joseph Fraunhofer, ennobled in 1824 as Ritter von Fraunhofer ( 6 March 1787 – 7 June 1826 ) was a German optician.
In June 1787 his energetic wife Wilhelmina tried to travel to the Hague.
Nils Gabriel Sefström ( 2 June 1787 – 30 November 1845 ) was a Swedish chemist.
Along this river ( at Bonrepas ) Wilhelmina of Prussia, wife of William V, was stopped on June 28, 1787 by patriots from Gouda and then brought to a farm on the Goejanverwelle Lock.
Scattered resistance continued until June 1787, with the single most significant action being an incident in Sheffield in late February, where 30 rebels were wounded ( one mortally ) in a skirmish with government troops.
He was a delegate to the Continental Congress from 1782 until 1783, and also from 1785 until 1787, serving as its president for five months from June 6 to November 5, 1786 after the resignation of John Hancock.
Gorham frequently served as Chairman of the Convention's Committee of the Whole, meaning that he ( rather than the President of the Convention, George Washington ) presided over convention sessions during the delegates ' first deliberations on the structure of the new government in late May and June 1787.
Arthur Middleton ( June 26, 1742 – January 1, 1787 ), of Charleston, South Carolina, was a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence.
Franz Xaver Gruber ( 25 November 1787 – 7 June 1863 ), was an Austrian primary school teacher and church organist in the village of Arnsdorf.
After attending the Royal High School for six years, he studied at the University of Glasgow from 1787 to May 1789, and at Queen's College, Oxford, from September 1791 to June 1792.
In June 1783, he received his discharge from the army and settled in Gardiner, Maine, then part of Massachusetts, where he was made a brigadier general in the militia in 1787 and major general in 1789, He was appointed as the first U. S. marshal for the District of Maine under the new Constitution by President Washington.
He attained flag rank on 24 September 1787, became Vice Admiral 1 February 1793, and was promoted to Admiral 1 June 1795.
He traveled on April 2, 1786, to the modern-day Dubrovnik ( a vassal city of the Ottoman Empire, then better known with other, Italian name Ragusa ), and then to Constantinople in Turkey ( until September 23, 1786 ), Russia, ( from September 26, 1786 until September 7, 1787, slightly under one year ), Sweden, ( in Stockholm as from September 10, 1787 until November 2, 1787 ), Norway, from November 10, 1787 until departing from Karlskrona in Sweden from December 17, 1787 ), Denmark ( from September 23, 1787 until March 10, 1788 after being received in Denmark orders of capture from Spain no later than January 22, 1788 ), the Free Hanseatic Town of Hamburg, ( from ( April 1, 1788 until the April 27, 1788 ), the Free Town of Bremen, ( leaving on April 27 ), Holland, ( from around the May 2, 1788 until around June 16, 1788 ), some actual Belgian towns and German cities along the Rhine river, Swiss Basel, ( arrival July 30, 1788, and then again after touring German-speaking Switzerland on October 12, 1788 ), Swiss Geneva ( arrival September 25, 1788 ), and France, ( entry around the 3rd and 4th weeks of September 1788, two stays in Marseilles, the second departing there towards Bordeaux on February 26, 1789 via inland waterways ), travels to Rouen, Le Havre and Paris around May 5, 1789, getting papers as " Mr. Meeroff from Livonia " to arrive in Dover, ( England ) and then London on June 19, 1789, taking lodgings at the house of his British friend, " A Barlow ", at 47 Jermyn Street ).

June and Shawnee
The origins of Plymouth ( also known as Shawnee and Shawneetown ) date back to the creation of the Susquehanna Company in Windham, Connecticut, on June 18, 1753, formed to promote the settlement of certain lands along the Susquehanna in what is now northeastern Pennsylvania.
In June 1780, a mixed force of British and Indians, including Shawnee, Delaware, Wyandot and others, from Detroit invaded Kentucky with cannons, capturing two fortified settlements and carrying away hundreds of prisoners.
Shawnee State offers more than 80 Bachelor's and associate degree programs, and had its first Master's degree graduate in June 2007.
Beginning June 27, 1983 WPRI constructed six miles ( 10 km ) of new railroad from Shawnee Junction.
In June William Johnson traveled to the Iroquois headquarters at Onondaga, and successfully negotiated support for the British side with the Iroquois, Shawnee, and Delaware, forces that Shirley also hoped to use for his expedition.

June and warriors
A colorful incident occurred on June 1, 1868, when one hundred Cheyenne warriors invaded the Kaw Reservation.
As a part of Pontiac's Rebellion, Chippewa and Fox warriors captured the fort on June 2, 1763 during the baggatiway game surprise attack.
On June 1, 1868, about one hundred Cheyenne warriors descended on the Kaw reservation.
A small British force and a larger contingent of Mohawk warriors were then readied for the American attack with the result that most of the American forces were casualties or taken prisoner in the ensuing Battle of Beaver Dams on 24 June.
The contemporary European accounts of the battle describe it as being fought on 12 June 1845 near by Te Ahuahu and that it involve only the warriors of Hone Heke fighting the warriors of Tāmati Wāka Nene.
On 9 June 1868, Ngāti Ruanui warriors escalated their campaign, shooting and tomahawking three settlers felling and sawing timber on the east side of the Waingongoro River, between Hawera and Manaia.
The hostilities disrupted the food production and in order to obtain provisions for his warriors, in early June 1845 Heke went to Kaikohe and on to Pakaraka to gather food supplies.
It was fought entirely between the Māori warriors on 12 June 1845 near by Te Ahuahu at Pukenui-Hone Heke and his warriors against Tāmati Wāka Nene and his warriors.
At the Battle of Te Ahuahu on 12 June 1845 Nene's warriors carried the day.
Possibly the same Seneca warriors attacked Fort Le Boeuf ( on the site of Waterford, Pennsylvania ) on June 18, but most of the 12-man garrison escaped to Fort Pitt.
On June 19, 1763, about 250 Ottawa, Ojibwa, Wyandot, and Seneca warriors surrounded Fort Presque Isle ( on the site of Erie, Pennsylvania ), the eighth and final fort to fall.
So on 12 June 1772, a few hundred Māori warriors set on du Fresne and his fishing crew, who had unsuspectingly arrived in his favourite fishing area in a small " gig ".
On June 17, 1876, Crazy Horse led a combined group of approximately 1, 500 Lakota and Cheyenne in a surprise attack against brevetted Brigadier General George Crook's force of 1, 000 cavalry and infantry, and allied 300 Crow and Shoshone warriors in the Battle of the Rosebud.
Colonel D ' Arcy led 270 officers and men of that battalion together with around 500 warriors from the Soninke tribe to Tubabecelong, attacking the town on 30 June.
Next came the major Battle of Rosebud on June 17 when 1, 500 Cheyenne warriors, led by Crazy Horse himself, defeated a force of 1, 300 Americans under General George Crook.
On 27 June 1874, Isa-tai and Comanche chief Quanah Parker led approximately 250 warriors in an attack on a small outpost of buffalo hunters in the Texas Panhandle called Adobe Walls.
On June 20, 1802 a group of Tlingit warriors from along < u > K </ u > aasda Héen and nearby Crab Apple Island, " painted like demons " and wearing animal masks carved out of wood, attacked the Russian fort.
He served with the 7th Cavalry Regiment under George Armstrong Custer, and was with them at the Battle of Little Bighorn in June of that year, along with fellow Crow warriors White Man Runs Him, Goes Ahead, Hairy Moccasin and others.
The battle was fought on June 9, 1836, between a force of Georgia militia and an attacking party of Creek warriors.
Fueled by stories circulated by Indian participants in the capture of Oswego, this drive was highly successful, drawing nearly 1, 000 warriors from the Pays d ' en Haut ( the more remote regions of New France ) to Montreal by June 1757.
* On June 24, 2005 the World Food Programme suspended its operations because Karamojong warriors looted nearly 50 tons of food ( IOL ).

3.627 seconds.