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Ruggles and died
C. Ruggles Smith was the son of Dr. John Hall Smith, founder of Middlesex University, who had died in 1944.
After returning to Connecticut, Ruggles became ill and died.
* March 11-Carl Ruggles, composer ( died 1971 )
Ruggles died of cancer at his Hollywood home in 1970 at the age of 84.
Ruggles died on September 2, 1852 and was buried in Saint Clairsville Union Cemetery, Saint Clairsville, Belmont County, Ohio USA.
Ruggles died in 1972 in Santa Monica and was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.
* October 8 – John Ruggles, awarded for improved driving wheels ( died 1874 ).
Currier had three wives: Christina Wilson whom he married in 1846 and who died in 1858 ; Anne " Annie " Elizabeth Crosby ; and Hannah Wright, daughter of Ruggles Wright, whom he married in 1868.

Ruggles and on
It is perhaps the need to balance the social and scientific aspects of archaeoastronomy which led Clive Ruggles to describe it as: "... field with academic work of high quality at one end but uncontrolled speculation bordering on lunacy at the other.
Wilson was born in Staunton, Virginia on December 28, 1856 as the third of four children of Joseph Ruggles Wilson ( 1822 – 1903 ) and Jessie Janet Woodrow ( 1826 – 1888 ).
As Ruggles attempts to adjust to this rough new community, he learns to live life on his own terms, achieving a fulfilling independence as a result.
Ruggles of Red Gap was adapted as a radio play on the July 10, 1939 episode of Lux Radio Theater, the December 17, 1945 episode of The Screen Guild Theater and the June 8, 1946 episode of Academy Award Theater, all with Charles Laughton and Charlie Ruggles reprising their film parts.
* Ruggles of Red Gap on Lux Radio Theater: July 10, 1939
* Ruggles of Red Gap on Screen Guild Theater: December 17, 1945
* Ruggles of Red Gap on Academy Award Theater: June 8, 1946
Among Laughton's biggest movie-hits were The Barretts of Wimpole Street, Mutiny on the Bounty, Ruggles of Red Gap, Jamaica Inn, The Hunchback of Notre Dame and The Big Clock.
Then came The Barretts of Wimpole Street ( 1934 ) as Norma Shearer's character's malevolent father ( although Laughton was only three years older than Shearer ); Les Misérables ( 1935 ) as Inspector Javert ; one of his most famous screen roles in Mutiny on the Bounty ( 1935 ) as Captain William Bligh, co-starring with Clark Gable as Fletcher Christian ; and Ruggles of Red Gap ( 1935 ) as the very English butler transported to early 1900s America.
In 1937 he recorded Lincoln's Gettysburg Address on a 10-inch Columbia 78, having made a strong impression with it in Ruggles of Red Gap.
Laughton won the New York Film Critics Circle Awards for Mutiny on the Bounty and Ruggles of Red Gap in 1935.
Stars featured in the film included Charlotte Henry as Alice, W. C. Fields as Humpty Dumpty, Edna May Oliver as the Red Queen, Cary Grant as the Mock Turtle ( Grant's star was still on the ascent at the time ), Gary Cooper as the White Knight, Edward Everett Horton as The Hatter, Charles Ruggles as The March Hare, and Baby LeRoy as The Joker.
Hawks got character actors Charlie Ruggles on loan from Paramount Pictures to play Major Horace Applegate and Barry Fitzgerald on loan from the The Mary Pickford Corporation to play the gardener Aloysius Gogarty.
C. Ruggles Smith, desperate for a way to save something of Middlesex University, learned of a New York committee headed by Goldstein that was seeking a campus to establish a Jewish-sponsored secular university, and approached Goldstein with a proposal to give the Middlesex campus and charter to Goldstein's committee, in the hope that his committee might " possess the apparent ability to reestablish the School of Medicine on an approved basis.
The first land purchase in the township was recorded on June 20, 1833 by Eli Ruggles of Brookfield, Connecticut, while accompanied by his brother-in-law, Amos Williams, and Nathaniel Noble, an acquaintance who lived nearby in Dexter.
Carl ( Charles Sprague ) Ruggles was born in East Marion, Massachusetts, on March 11, 1876.
Theodore Ruggles Timby, inventor of the revolving turret used on the U. S. S.
Stopes arrived in North America before Christmas to start her research and on 29 December she attended a dinner in St. Louis, Missouri, where she met Reginald Ruggles Gates.
Her television specials included " Meet Me in St. Louis ", " Young at Heart ", " Feathertop ", " The Danny Thomas Show 1967 ", " The Victor Borge Show ", " Ruggles of Red Gap " on Producers ' Showcase and " Hooray for Love ".
In 1912 Ruggles moved to New York and began writing an opera based on the German play “ The Sunken Bell ” by Gerhart Hauptmann.
Known for his profanity, Ruggles was also anti-semitic ; for example, he wrote to Henry Cowell about, " that filthy bunch of Juilliard Jews ... cheap, without dignity, and with little or no talent ," especially picking on Arthur Berger.
He was survived by a large family, including his son Ruggles Wright who would go on to invent the timber slide.

Ruggles and October
* October 20 – Timothy Ruggles, American-born Tory politician ( d. 1795 )
Charles " Carl " Sprague Ruggles ( March 11, 1876 – October 24, 1971 ) was an American composer of the American Five group.
John Ruggles ( October 8, 1789June 20, 1874 ) was an American politician from the U. S. state of Maine.
Timothy Dwight Ruggles ( October 20, 1711 – August 4, 1795 ) was an American military leader, jurist and politician.
Ruggles was born on October 20, 1711 to Rev.
After serving as Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1763, he was selected as a delegate to the first colonial ( or Stamp Act ) congress of 1765 meeting in New York on October 7, Ruggles was elected its president.

Ruggles and 24
From there he went by steamboat to " Quaker City " ( Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ) and continued to the safe house of abolitionist David Ruggles in New York ; the whole journey took less than 24 hours.

Ruggles and 1971
* 1876 – Carl Ruggles, American composer ( d. 1971 )
* March 11 – Carl Ruggles, American composer ( d. 1971 )
* Carl Ruggles ( 1876 – 1971 ), American composer

Ruggles and due
Madison Avenue was not part of the original New York City street grid established in the Commissioners ' Plan of 1811, and was carved between Park Avenue ( formerly Fourth ) and Fifth Avenue in 1836, due to the effort of lawyer and real estate developer Samuel B. Ruggles, a graduate of Yale University who had previously purchased and developed New York's Gramercy Park in 1831, who was in part responsible for the development of Union Square, and who also named Lexington Avenue.
He teutonized his name to ' Carl ' at an early age ( partially due to his great admiration for German composers, especially Richard Wagner and Richard Strauss ), and though he never legally changed it, signed all documents and works in his adult life “ Carl Ruggles ”.
In 1831 Samuel B. Ruggles, a developer and advocate of open space, proposed the idea for the park due to the northward growth of Manhattan.
The daughter of a prominent Colonial American lawyer, justice and military officer, Bathsheba Ruggles had an arranged marriage to a wealthy farmer, Joshua Spooner, prior to her father's banishment from Massachusetts in 1774, due to his British Loyalist stance.

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