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William and Lyon
), George Jean Nathan and Alexander Woollcott were honored in odd quarters, and the whole Booth Tarkington, Willa Catheter ( sic ), ) Pearl, Buck,, Amy Lowell, William Lyon Phelps atmosphere lay thick as Los Angeles smog
* 1943 – World War II: First Québec Conference of Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and William Lyon Mackenzie King begins.
B. M. Hertzog and Canada's Prime Minister at that time, William Lyon Mackenzie King.
In Canada, a similar situation took place in 1925 wherein Governor General Lord Byng of Vimy appointed Arthur Meighen after William Lyon Mackenzie King refused to resign the premiership ( known as the King-Byng Affair ).
He was in 1946 appointed as governor general by George VI, king of Canada, on the recommendation of Prime Minister of Canada William Lyon Mackenzie King, to replace the Earl of Athlone as viceroy, and he occupied the post until succeeded by Vincent Massey in 1952.
With the cessation of hostilities, Alexander was under serious consideration for appointment to the post of Chief of the Imperial General Staff, the British army's most senior position beneath the sovereign, but he was invited by Canadian prime minister William Lyon Mackenzie King to be his recommendation to the King for the post of Governor General of Canada.
The Viscount and Viscountess Alexander of Tunis are greeted by Prime Minister of Canada William Lyon Mackenzie King | Mackenzie King upon the viceregal couple's arrival in Ottawa, 12 April 1946
Seated: Stanley Baldwin ( Prime Minister of the United Kingdom | United Kingdom ), King George V, William Lyon Mackenzie King ( Prime Minister of Canada | Canada ).
Macdonald served 19 years as Canadian Prime Minister ; only William Lyon Mackenzie King served longer.
It was not until he was nearly 60 that St-Laurent finally agreed to enter politics when Liberal Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King appealed to his sense of duty in late 1941.
* 1837 – Canadian journalist and politician William Lyon Mackenzie calls for a rebellion against the United Kingdom in his essay " To the People of Upper Canada ", published in his newspaper The Constitution.
Accordingly, rebellion in favour of responsible government rose in both regions ; Louis-Joseph Papineau led the Lower Canada Rebellion and William Lyon Mackenzie led the Upper Canada Rebellion.
For example William Lyon Mackenzie King, after losing his seat in the same general election that his party won, briefly " governed from the hallway " before winning a by-election a few weeks later.
William Lyon Mackenzie King, the 10th Prime Minister of Canada ( 1921 – 1926 ; 1926 – 1930 ; 1935 – 1948 )
Some remained in politics: Mackenzie Bowell continued to serve as a senator ; R. B. Bennett moved to the United Kingdom after being elevated to the House of Lords ; and a number led Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition in the Canadian parliament: John A. Macdonald, Arthur Meighen, William Lyon Mackenzie King, and Pierre Trudeau, all before being re-appointed as premier ( Mackenzie King twice ); Alexander Mackenzie and John Diefenbaker, both prior to sitting as regular Members of Parliament until their deaths ; Wilfrid Laurier dying while still in the post ; and Charles Tupper, Louis St. Laurent, and John Turner, each before they returned to private business.
As Opposition leader, Bennett faced off against the more experienced Liberal Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King in Commons debates, and took some time to acquire enough experience to hold his own with King.
By defeating William Lyon Mackenzie King in the 1930 federal election, he had the misfortune of taking office during the Great Depression.
After the Lower Canada Rebellion led by Louis-Joseph Papineau in 1837, and the Upper Canada Rebellion led by William Lyon Mackenzie, Lord Durham was appointed governor general of British North America and had the task of examining the issues and determining how to defuse tensions.
William Lyon Mackenzie King, PC, OM, CMG ( December 17, 1874 – July 22, 1950 ), also commonly known as Mackenzie King, was the dominant Canadian political leader from the 1920s through the 1940s.
His maternal grandfather was William Lyon Mackenzie, first mayor of Toronto and leader of the Upper Canada Rebellion in 1837.
w: William Lyon Mackenzie King | W. L.
Prime Minister of Canada | Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King becomes the first person to take the Oath of Citizenship ( Canada ) | Oath of Citizenship, from Chief Justice of Canada | Chief Justice Thibaudeau Rinfret, in the Supreme Court of Canada | Supreme Court, 3 January 1947
William Lyon Mackenzie King greeting Barbara Ann Scott, who won a gold medal in figure skating at the 1948 Winter Olympic Games, at Ottawa
A high school was built in his honor in 2009 and was named William Lyon Mackenzie King Secondary School.
King was mentioned in the book Alligator Pie by Dennis Lee as the subject of a nonsensical children's poem, which reads " William Lyon Mackenzie King / He sat in the middle and played with string / He loved his mother like anything / William Lyon Mackenzie King.

William and Phelps
In addition, a Frenchman visiting Utah at the time the alphabet was being developed reported that William W. Phelps " worked out the letters.
* William Preston Phelps
Sir William Pulteney, a British baronet and English land speculator, along with his partners in the Pulteney Association, purchased a of the former Phelps and Gorham Purchase in 1790.
* Edson Cemetery: burial site of Jack Kerouac, John McFarland, Passaconaway and William Preston Phelps.
* William Preston Phelps, artist
William Walter Phelps
The largest estate built in Teaneck belonged to William Walter Phelps, the son of a wealthy railroad magnate and New York City merchant.
William W. Bennett, overseer of the Phelps Estate, was selected as chairman of the first three-man Township Committee, which focused in its early years on " construction of streets and street lamps ( originally gaslights ), trolley lines ( along DeGraw Avenue ), telephones and speeding traffic.
* William W. Phelps ( 1792 – 1892 ), best known for his legacy of LDS hymns, many of which appear in the current edition of the LDS Hymnal.
In 1863, John C. Phelps, a director of the DL & W, leased a portion of the Avondale property from William Reynolds and Henderson Gaylord, Plymouth natives.
The ranch was built and owned by the half-brother of President William Howard Taft, Charles Phelps Taft.
* William Preston Phelps ( 1848 – 1917 ), artist, was known as " The Painter of Mount Monadnock "
American architect William Phelps Eno favored small traffic circles.
* William Phelps Eno ( 1858 – 1945 ), American businessman
Expecting to die, W. Daingerfield Phelps III ( William Boyd ) decides to fulfill his fondest desire: to beat up his sergeant since training camp, Peter O ' Gaffney ( Louis Wolheim ).
* William Boyd-W. Dangerfield Phelps III
* Phelps, M. William ( 2008 ).
Other nineteenth century performances include Charles Kean's in 1848 at the Haymarket Theatre, Samuel Phelps ' in 1857 at the Sadler's Wells Theatre and William Poel's in 1892 and 1896.
His parents were Captain William Miller, a veteran of the American Revolution, and Paulina, the daughter of Elnathan Phelps.
In 1792, Morris's London agent, William Temple Franklin, grandson of Benjamin Franklin, sold of the Phelps and Gorham Purchase east of the Genesee River to The Pulteney Associates.
The Salamander Letter was supposedly " written " by Martin Harris to William Wines Phelps, an early convert in the Latter Day Saint movement.
Supposedly written by Martin Harris to William Wines Phelps, the letter presented a version of the recovery of the gold plates that contrasted markedly with the church-sanctioned version of events.
For example, in one of his major works, Économie et Intérêt ( 1947 ), he introduced the first overlapping generations model ( later popularized by Paul Samuelson in 1958 ), introduced the golden rule of optimal growth ( later popularized by Edmund Phelps ) or described the transaction demand for money rule ( later found in William Baumol's work ).
Phelps Dodge Corporation was an American mining company founded in 1834 by Anson Greene Phelps and William Earle Dodge, Sr .. On March 19, 2007, it was acquired by Freeport-McMoRan and now operates under the name Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc.

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