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Sumner and was
Sir Henry Sumner Maine, a hundred years before Communism was a force to be reckoned with, wrote his brilliant legal generalization, that `` the progress of society is from status to contract ''.
Seward's initial reaction to the Trent affair, however, was too bellicose, so Lincoln also turned to Senator Charles Sumner, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and an expert in British diplomacy.
" In keeping with that sentiment, Lincoln led the moderates regarding Reconstruction policy, and was opposed by the Radical Republicans, under Rep. Thaddeus Stevens, Sen. Charles Sumner and Sen. Benjamin Wade, political allies of the president on other issues.
Boston's Logan Airport lies across Boston Harbor in East Boston, and before the Big Dig the only access from downtown was through the paired Callahan and Sumner tunnels.
However, in 1926, James B. Sumner showed that the enzyme urease was a pure protein and crystallized it ; Sumner did likewise for the enzyme catalase in 1937.
The term ethnocentrism was coined by William G. Sumner, upon observing the tendency for people to differentiate between the in-group and others.
Charles Darwin's theory of evolution was appealing to some economists, sociologists and political scientists ( most notably Walter Bagehot and William Graham Sumner ) who adapted and rationalized the invisible hand by incorporating the popular idea of the survival of the fittest.
He was soon transferred to the newly formed 1st Cavalry Regiment ( 1855 ) at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas Territory, where he became regimental quartermaster and commissary officer under the command of Col. Edwin V. Sumner.
The year 1997 was a busy time for Voight in which he appeared in six films, beginning with Rosewood, based on the 1923 destruction of the primarily black town of Rosewood, Florida, by the white residents of nearby Sumner.
On 1 March 1940, Ribbentrop received Sumner Welles, the American Under-Secretary of State, who was on a peace mission for President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and did his best to abuse his American guest.
Sumner ultimately took the role, as the guitar was an easier instrument to play while singing.
Composed primarily by Sumner and Morris, " Prime 5 8 6 "/" Video 5 8 6 " was an early version of " 5 8 6 " that contained rhythm elements that would later surface on " Blue Monday " and " Ultraviolence ".
According to Sumner, " Get Ready was guitar-heavy simply because we felt that we'd left that instrument alone for a long time.
In June 2009, Bernard Sumner formed a new band called Bad Lieutenant with Phil Cunningham ( guitar ) and Jake Evans ( guitar and vocals ), that completed an album, Never Cry Another Tear, which was released on 5 October 2009.
" The central role of proteins as enzymes in living organisms was not fully appreciated until 1926, when James B. Sumner showed that the enzyme urease was in fact a protein.
Edison's patent specified that the audio recording be embossed, and it was not until 1886 that vertically modulated engraved recordings using wax coated cylinders was patented by Chichester Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter.
According to Sumner Tainter, it was through Gardiner Green Hubbard that Bell took up the phonograph challenge.
The annexation treaty was defeated by the Senate in 1871 and led to unending political enmity between Sumner and Grant.
Perhaps the most well-remembered teacher was William Graham Sumner, professor from 1872 to 1909.
In 1937 catalase from beef liver was crystallised by James B. Sumner and Alexander Dounce and the molecular weight was worked out in 1938.
The doctrine was also invoked by U. S. Under-Secretary of State Sumner Welles in a declaration of July 23, 1940, that announced non-recognition of the Soviet annexation and incorporation of the three Baltic states — Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania — and remained the official U. S. position until the Baltic states gained formal international recognition as independent states in 1991.

Sumner and friend
He was opposed in this effort by Dr. Howe ’ s old friend and fellow abolitionist, Sen. Charles Sumner.
When he was the age of 3, in 1959, his parents divorced and he and his brothers were brought up by his maternal grandmother Alicia Acton ( born Chapman ; 1896 – 1968 ) until 1962, when his mother re-married Ernest W. Hook .. Like his band-mate Bernard Sumner, he took his step-father's surname, although in contrast of his friend he kept it, even more, he created his nickname, Hooky, from it.
From February 1767 to the close of 1771 he served under Robert Sumner ( by that time a personal friend ) as head assistant at Harrow, where he had Richard Brinsley Sheridan among his pupils and enjoyed an income of about £ 100 p. a., consisting of £ 50 salary and about the same amount in fees from private pupils.
alt = Senator Sumner and his good friend Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The following day, President Grant, feeling betrayed by Sen. Sumner, immediately retaliated by recalling Sumner ’ s close friend, J. Lothrop Motley, Ambassador to Britain.
In the 1850s Child responded to the Senate beating of her good friend Charles Sumner by writing her poem entitled “ The Kansas Emigrants .” The outbreak of violence in Kansas brought about a certain change in Child ’ s opinion of the use of violence.
Longfellow wrote to his friend Charles Sumner a few days later: " As to having ' taken many of the most striking incidents of the Finnish Epic and transferred them to the American Indians '— it is absurd ".
Longfellow's friend Charles Sumner said he had met a woman who " has read ' Evangeline ' some twenty times and thinks it the most perfect poem in the language ".
State Senator Greg Sumner ( William Devane ), an old college friend of Mack's who was running for US Senator, received the endorsements of Mack and Karen, as well as Abby, who wanted to buy herself a senator.
On July 14, 1881, Garrett visited Fort Sumner to question a friend of the Kid's about the whereabouts of the outlaw.
Other notable people buried in this cemetery include: the native Hawaiian patriot and former delegate to the United State Congress, Robert William Wilcox ; Princess Eugenie Ninito Sumner of Tahiti, wife of High Chief John Keolaloa Sumner, and friend of
He enlisted Kit Carson, the one-time friend of the Navajo, to round them up by destroying their crops and livestock, and forcing them on The Long Walk to Fort Sumner.
After the war's end, he stayed in the army and served in the cavalry during the Indian Wars as did his brother Civil War brevet brigadier general Edwin Vose Sumner, Jr. Samuel's name commemorates his father's mentor and friend, Samuel Appleton Storrow ( 1787 – 1837 ), previously a Judge Advocate Major in the U. S. Army.

Sumner and Samuel
When the grant lapsed, the town was rechartered by Governor Benning Wentworth on July 13, 1763 as Gilsum, combining the surnames of two proprietors, Samuel Gilbert and his son-in-law, Thomas Sumner.
Brigadier General Samuel Sumner assumed command of the cavalry and Wood took the second brigade as Brigadier General.
* Samuel S. Sumner ( 1842 – 1937 ), American general
Gen. Samuel S. Sumner.
Sumner attended the Boston Latin School, where he counted Robert Charles Winthrop, James Freeman Clarke, Samuel Francis Smith, and Wendell Phillips, among his closest friends.
A bachelor for most of his life, Sumner began courting Alice Mason Hooper, the daughter of Massachusetts Representative Samuel Hooper, in 1866 and the two were married that October.
Jacob F. Kent commanded the 1st Division, Henry W. Lawton commanded the 2nd Division, and Joseph Wheeler commanded the dismounted Cavalry Division but was suffering from fever and had to turn over command to General Samuel S. Sumner.
* Cavalry Division ( Dismounted ) – Major General Joseph Wheeler, Division Executive Officer Samuel S. Sumner ( 1st Brigade ) was in command of the division when the battle began as General Wheeler was ill. Wheeler returned to the front once the battle was underway.
** 1st Brigade – Brigadier General Samuel S. Sumner, Brigade Executive Officer Colonel Henry K. Carroll ( 6th Cav ), consisted of the 3rd U. S. Cavalry, 6th U. S. Cavalry and 9th U. S. Cavalry.
Brady photographed and made portraits of many senior Union officers in the war, including Ulysses S. Grant, Nathaniel Banks, Don Carlos Buell, Ambrose Burnside, Benjamin Butler, Joshua Chamberlain, George Custer, David Farragut, John Gibbon, Winfield Hancock, Samuel P. Heintzelman, Joseph Hooker, Oliver Howard, David Hunter, John A. Logan, Irvin McDowell, George McClellan, James McPherson, George Meade, Montgomery C. Meigs, David Dixon Porter, William Rosecrans, John Schofield, William Sherman, Daniel Sickles, Henry Warner Slocum, George Stoneman, Edwin V. Sumner, George Thomas, Emory Upton, James Wadsworth, and Lew Wallace.
Gen. Samuel S. Sumner.
On November 23, 1824, Cushing married Caroline Elizabeth Wilde, daughter of Judge Samuel Sumner Wilde, of the Supreme Judicial Court.
He was appointed by John Bird Sumner, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and consecrated on 15 December 1861, at the suggestion of Samuel Wilberforce and Queen Victoria, as the church's first bishop of the Kingdom of Hawaii.
After graduating from Harvard, Sumner took charge of the Roxbury school, where he remained for two years while he apprenticed law under Samuel Quincy, the provincial solicitor general.
In 1795 some factions of the Federalist Party sought to promote Sumner as a candidate for governor, but he was not formally nominated, and Governor Samuel Adams was reelected.
) In recognition of their long-standing friendship, Sumner would later name one of his sons Samuel Storrow Sumner.
They had six children together: Nancy, Margaret Foster, Sarah Montgomery, Mary Heron, Edwin Vose Jr., and Samuel Storrow Sumner.
Samuel Storrow Sumner ( 1842 – 1937 ) was a United States Army general during the Spanish-American War, Boxer Rebellion, and Philippine-American War.

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