Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Fitz Hugh Ludlow" ¶ 47
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Ludlow and
Briggs factory at Doncaster was surplus to Ford s requirements and it was sold to Fisher and Ludlow.
They took full blame for Stone s death, and offered Governor Roger Ludlow payment for his death.
Milton s masque Comus was first performed in the Great Hall in 1634 and the tradition of a performance is continued each June and July when a Shakespearean play is performed in the open air within the Inner Bailey, as part of the successful Ludlow Festival.
Furthermore, former Connecticut Chief Justice Simeon E. Baldwin upheld the claim in Norris Osborn s History of Connecticut in Monographic Form, declaring that never had a company of men deliberately met to frame a social compact for immediate use, constituting a new and independent commonwealth, with definite officers, executive and legislative, and prescribed rules and modes of government, until the first planters of Connecticut came together for their great work on January 14th, 1638-9 .” Drafted primarily by Roger Ludlow, it was clearly the first compact between a government and the people to uphold the Rev.
Tyco s success was largely attributed to ambitious acquisitions of Simplex Technology, Grinnell Fire Protection Systems, Armin Plastics and the Ludlow Corporation.
However, a little further on, a small, lightly defended Gorkhali stockade was seen, which the British grenadiers in Ludlow s force, having found easy victories earlier that day, entreated to be allowed to attack in order to avenge the humiliation they had suffered at Nalapani.
* Keohane, Ellen, " Ludlow nightclub is not music to neighbors ears ", 2005-11-01
In 1888 what is now known as Katz s Delicatessen was established on Ludlow Street in New York s Lower East Side by the Iceland brothers.
* October 16, 1999-Near Ludlow, California: Amtrak s westbound Southwest Chief passenger train, en route from Chicago to Los Angeles, was derailed while crossing the Mojave Desert northeast of Los Angeles when the train reached a section of track that had been damaged by the 7. 1-magnitude Hector Mine earthquake, which had occurred 24 minutes prior to the derailment.
Henry Ludlow s father was a pioneer temperance advocate, according to one source adopting and advocating its principles before any general and organized effort for them .” Henry himself, in one of his few preserved sermons, attacked Great Britain for her cruel oppression of her East India subjects, often starving ... and forced to cultivate opium on land they need to supply themselves with bread ...” and defended China for resisting a traffick which was sapping, by its terrible effects upon her citizens, the very foundation of her empire ...”
Nott s philosophy would have an influence on Ludlow, but perhaps more immediately his assertion that f I had it in my power to direct the making of songs in any country, I could do just as I pleased with the people .”
It may be a testimony to Nott s feelings toward Ludlow — both toward his philosophy and his writing talent — that he asked Fitz Hugh to write a song for the commencement ceremony of his 1856 class.
During these visits, Ludlow made upon myself the trial of the effects of every strange drug and chemical which the laboratory could produce .” A few months before, Bayard Taylor s Putnam s Magazine article The Vision of Hasheesh had been devoured by Ludlow, and so when the cannabis-based tetanus remedy called Tilden s extract came out he had to try some.
Ludlow s endeavor to end his addiction ” to cannabis is puzzling.
Ludlow s account was probably flavored by the tale of opium addiction which formed the model for his book: Thomas DeQuincey s Confessions of an English Opium-Eater.
But Ludlow s addiction ” is curiously missing signs of physical withdrawal symptoms — terrible nightmares are about the worst symptom he specifies.
The book was a success, going through a few printings in short order, and Ludlow, although he published both the book and his earlier article The Apocalypse of Hasheesh anonymously, was able to take advantage of the book s notoriety.
It was probably through the Vanity Fair staff that Ludlow was introduced to the New York City bohemian and literary culture, centered around Pfaff s beer cellar on Broadway and Saturday night gatherings at Richard Henry Stoddard s home.

Ludlow and writings
It is clear from the writings of both Ludlow, Vane, and historians of the early American period such as Upham, that this is what they were striving for and why they were excepted from the acts of indemnity.
The 2007 version added material from other writings by Gaskell: My Lady Ludlow, Mr. Harrison's Confessions and The Last Generation in England.
His republican sympathies were also evidenced by his editing of the writings of some of the great radicals of the 1650s, including James Harrington, Algernon Sydney, Edmund Ludlow and John Milton.
Ludlow occasionally expressed the racial bigotry of his day in his writings.
Ludlow s writings crop up in a couple of places in pre-marijuana-prohibition 20th century America.
After the prohibition of marijuana, the writings of Ludlow were interpreted by two camps.
Researchers, like pioneering mescaline researcher Heinrich Klüver, looked to Ludlow s seminal writings on the psychedelic experience for insight on the new drugs that were being discovered and synthesized.

Ludlow and about
Ludlow railway station is located about five minutes walk from the town centre.
According to Edmond Ludlow on May 7th, about twelve o-clock we went to take our places in the House, Mr. Lenthal our Speaker leading the way, and the officers of the army lining the rooms for us, as we passed through the Painted Chamber, the Court of Requests, and the lobby itself, the principal officers having placed themselves nearest to the door of the Parliament-House, every one seeming to rejoice at our restitution, and promising to live and die with us.
After serving in home waters learning about convoy protection he was appointed to the newly built Ludlow Castle which he used to blockade the Scottish coast during the Jacobite Rebellion in 1745.
* Commission on Industrial Relations The chairman grilled John D. Rockefeller, Jr. for three days about the 1914 Ludlow massacre.
Bishop's Castle is east of the Wales-England border, about north-west of Ludlow and about south-west of Shrewsbury.
A number of alumni have made meaningful contributions to arts and letters: Joel T. Headley ( 1839 ), author of numerous books about the Adirondack Mountains and early American history ; William James Stillman ( 1848 ), photographer and author ; Fitz Hugh Ludlow ( 1856 ), author of The Hashish Eater ; Andrea Barrett ( 1974 ), winner of the National Book Award ( for Ship Fever ) and the Pulitzer Prize for works of fiction ; and David Markson ( 1950 ), author of titles such as The Ballad of Dingus Magee.
Feeling bad about taking away her time with Ludlow, Lilith and Frasier invite Carla and Ludlow all together for one evening in the restaurant, filled with upper-class environment.
A small monument, the Victor American Hastings Mine Disaster Monument, marks the location, on County Road 44, at 37 ° 20 ' N 104 ° 36 ' W, about 1. 5 Km west of the Ludlow Monument.
Colab activist and experimental filmmaker Coleen Fitzgibbon made in 1980 a video called Ludlow about Ludlow Street.
* Ludlow massacre, the death of about 20 people during an attack by the Colorado National Guard on a tent colony
* Ludlow Massacre ( song ), a song about the massacre
The Ludlow consisted of a very heavy metal table with a flat top about waist high and a depressed slot into which a " stick " was inserted.
A Ludlow slug was just the letters overhanging a central spine about 12 points wide ( T shaped viewed from the end ).
At Ludlow ( England ) itself, two such beds are actually known, separated by about.
Ludlow also wrote about his travels across America on the overland stage to San Francisco, Yosemite and the forests of California and Oregon, in his second book, The Heart of the Continent.
The late 1850s and early 1860s found Ludlow in just about every literary quarter of New York.
Ludlow encountered frequent snide comments about the disintegration of the Union, with some Mormons under the impression that with the flood of immigrants to Utah fleeing the draft, and with the decimation of the male population in war time making polygamy seem more practical, the Mormon state would come out of the American Civil War stronger than either the Union or the Confederacy.
Ludlow s opinions were read with interest back East, and would constitute an appendix to the book he would later write about his travels.
The copper-faced devils ” he called them, and he looked with scorn on the pretty, sentimental, philanthropic prayers ” that constituted much of the contemporary literature about the noble savage .” Ludlow believed the Indian ” was subhuman — an inconceivable devil, whom statesmen and fools treat with, but whom brave and practical men shoot and scalp .”
Charles Ludlow ( about 1790 – 20 October 1839 ) was an officer in the United States Navy during the War of 1812.

0.325 seconds.