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Topic: Albert Sidney Johnson


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In the News (Thu 17 Dec 09)

  
 News & Information
His son, Albert Sidney Johnson Jr., is a political science professor and vice president emeritus at the college.
Johnson was born February 2, 1898, in Ailey, Ga., the oldest child of Mr.
Johnson was Chair of the Judiciary and Agriculture Committees in the House.
www.bpc.edu /news_and_info/news/2006/2006-08-aug/8-22_new_lecture_series_starts_at_bpc_sept_19.html   (768 words)

  
  Johnson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johnson is a common Scandinavian and English surname meaning "son of John".
Johnson is the second most common surname in the United States.
Robert Wood Johnson, the identically-named father and son who headed the Johnson and Johnson Corporation.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Johnson   (470 words)

  
 Albert Sidney Johnston - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Albert Sidney Johnston (February 2, 1803 April 6, 1862) was a career U.S. Army officer and a Confederate general during the American Civil War.
Considered by some to be the finest general in the Confederacy, he was killed early in the war at the Battle of Shiloh.
Although Albert Johnston was born in Kentucky, he lived much of his life in Texas, which he considered his home.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Albert_Sidney_Johnston   (1179 words)

  
 Andrew Johnson - The History Beat - SearchBeat.com
Johnson's conciliatory policies towards the defeated rebels and his vetoes of civil rights bills embroiled him in a bitter dispute with the radical faction of Congress, leading the House of Representatives to impeach him on March 3, 1868.
Johnson was a Representative and a Senator from Tennessee and a Vice President and 17th President of the United States.
Johnson was an unsuccessful candidate for election to the United States Senate in 1869 and to the House of Representatives in 1872.
history.searchbeat.com /andrewjohnson.htm   (822 words)

  
 Albert Sidney Lee Johnson biography
Sidney Johnson, 70, farmer, dies at home this morning, of Coffman, at 6:30 AM after a serious illness of eight months.
In the will for Sidney Johnson, entered into the records on 19 Oct 1936 by the clerk of Taylor Co., WV, he left all his property to Anna as long as she remained unmarried.
The obit for Robert L Johnson was in a notebook of obits put together by the Taylor Co., WV Genealogical Society that was in the Taylor Co., WV Library in Grafton.
www.rootsweb.com /~wvtaylor/families/Johnson_AlbertSidneyLee.htm   (2709 words)

  
 History of Western NE & Its People, Cheyenne County
As he had promised, the judge left Sidney after the church was founded and went to the Black Hills; later he became a changed man and a pillar of the Methodist church in the home he adopted.
The church is growing and is representative of Sidney and Cheyenne county.
From Sidney has radiated that civilization and progressive spirit that has changed the Panhandle from a wilderness to the home of a rich farming community, today a wide reach of land that is rich and fertile.
www.rootsweb.com /~neresour/OLLibrary/hwnep/voli/hwnep194.html   (2627 words)

  
 Our Ancestors of South Hampton Roads   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Johnson was born in Buckingham County, Va. She had retired as head of the budget department at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard after 30 years.
Johnson was a native of Norfolk, and was preceded in death by her father, Dr. Harry B. Mendelsohn.
Johnson was born in Windsor, N.C., and was employed at Perdue Farms.
digginforkin.tripod.com /SHRds/d146.html   (4129 words)

  
 Albert Johnston
Albert Sidney Johnston was born in Washington, Kentucky, on 2nd February, 1803.
Albert Sidney Johnston ignored the wound and continued fighting until the heavy loss of blood led to him losing consciousness and bleeding to death.
General Albert Sidney Johnston, who commanded the Confederate forces at the beginning of the battle at Shiloh, was disabled by a wound on the afternoon of the first day.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /USACWjohnsonA.htm   (492 words)

  
 SIDNEY G. GILBREATH PAPERS
Sidney Gordon Gilbreath, first president of East Tennessee State Normal School (ETSNS), was born on April 13, 1869 at Hiwassee College, Madisonville, Monroe County, Tennessee.
Johnson City High School students: 10-2 thru 10-3, 10-6.
Johnson, J. Fred: 9-4 thru 9-5, 11-2 thru 11-4, 12-3, 13-1, 14-5, 15-2, 15-5.
www.etsu.edu /cass/Archives/Collections/UFindaid/u17.htm   (1688 words)

  
 Johnson
Johnson came to Gilroy in the early '50s, and was prominently identified with the early life of the town.
Laverne Johnson Mohlar (sic), who passed away early Wednesday morning at her home in Sunnybrook district, the blow is certainly a heavy one on the surviving husband who is left with five small children, the youngest being a babe in arms only six months old, and the oldest ten years old.
Johnson are daughters of the Pimentels, and with their families enjoyed the Christmas holidays at the family home on West San Carlos Street.
www.angelfire.com /tx/robershotte/Johnson.html   (6520 words)

  
 Johnson   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Albert Sidney Johnson, General of the United States
In addition, there is the Johnson Act and the Johnson County War.
Johnson is also sexual slang for a penis.
www.encyclopedia-1.com /j/jo/johnson.html   (148 words)

  
 Albert Sidney Johnson - I (The Nation, September 26, 1878)
Albert Sidney Johnson - I (The Nation, September 26, 1878)
The place of the late military personnel Albeit Sidney Johnston among the military officers who fought for the Confederacy in the Great Rebellion is a peculiar one.
By common consent he is treated as one of the leading characters of the war, yet his careers in it was brief and marked only by disasters to the cause he had espoused.
www.thenation.com /archive/detail/14093047   (115 words)

  
 The Nation, 09/26/1878 - Albert Sidney Johnson - I
The place of the late military personnel Albeit Sidney Johnston among the military officers who fought for the Confederacy in the Great Rebellion is a peculiar one.
By common consent he is treated as one of the leading characters of the war, yet his careers in it was brief and marked only by disasters to the cause he had espoused.
...ALBERT SIDNEY JOHNT'ON.-I* ^rHPl place of Albert Kidney Johnstoii among Hie mililiiry otiicers who fought for tlie Conicdoracy in the, Great Rebellion is ii pccidiar '.me...
www.nationarchive.com /Summaries/v027i0691_10.htm   (1710 words)

  
 Albert Sidney Johnston Camp #
U.S. President Andrew Johnson proclaimed the insurrection in Tennessee at an end on June 13th.
On April 2, 1866, President Andrew Johnson proclaimed the insurrection ended in all the former Confederate States except Texas.
It was not until August 20, 1866, that Johnson proclaimed and declared the insurrection in Texas at an end.
www.scvcamp67.org /camp/war_end.htm   (320 words)

  
 Dexter Daily Statesman: Story: Albert Sidney Johnson, Jr.
Albert Sidney Johnson, Jr., son of the late Albert Sidney Johnson, Sr., and Anna Mae Smith Johnson, was born on June 10, 1925, at Bernie and died at his residence in Bernie on Friday, Dec. 26, 2003, at the age of 78.
Johnson was a retired farmer, a member of the Bernie Masonic Lodge, Malden American Legion, Dexter Elks Lodge #2439 and a resident of Bernie.
Survivors include two sons, Bill Johnson of Bernie and Bob Johnson of Dexter; one daughter, LaDawn Owens of Bernie; one sister, Virginia Battles of Bernie; four grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
www.dailystatesman.com /story/1058444.html   (169 words)

  
 My Family   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
ALBERT GENTRY was born on 17 Jul 1837 in MONTGOMERY, MO. He died in LAWTON, OK. Parents: JONATHAN J. and ELIZABETH MCFARLAND.
ALBERT GENTRY was born on 20 Jul 1877 in CA.
ALBERT BENJAMIN GENTRY was born on 2 Jun 1862 in CHARLOTTESVILLE, LOUISA, VA. Parents: ALBERT HUDSON GENTRY and MARY SOMERS.
haggard.surnames.com /web/d188.htm   (1061 words)

  
 John Howell 's Genealogue
Witnessed by Silas M. Johnson and S. Johnson J.P. Deed to Samuel A. Howell, 3 November 1857 - Original handwritten Deed from William Veazey & Ezekiel Veazey to Samuel A. Howell conveying 429 acres in Taliaferro County, Georgia.
Albert Sidney Howell letter to Florence Howell Pollard dated 25 March 1974.
Daniel F. Johnson's database of New Brunswick "vital statistics" (mainly announcements of births, marriages and deaths) newspaper articles is now available in full, and online from the Provincial archives web site.
www.jhowell.com /blog   (2973 words)

  
 Terrill - pafg99 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Sidney Albert DOUGLASS [Parents] was born on 6 May 1836.
Sidney married Melinda J. He joined the Confederate Army and served under Gens.
Elvin Sidney DOUGLAS [Parents] was born on 10 Jul 1909.
homepages.rootsweb.com /~wayland/terrill/pafg99.htm   (362 words)

  
 A Guide to the Albert Sidney Burleson papers, 1841-1946
As postmaster general he expanded parcel post and was responsible for the government takeover of telephone, telegraph, and cable during World War I and the initiation of air mail in 1918 at the end of the war.
The Albert Sidney Burleson Papers relate to Burleson's scholastic achievements, his legal career, his Congressional service, and his eight years as Postmaster General during the Wilson Administration.
Albert Sidney Burleson Papers, 1841-1946, Center for American History The University of Texas at Austin.
www.lib.utexas.edu /taro/utcah/00070/00070-P.html   (1033 words)

  
 Wofford College Southern Seen
Confederate forces led by Albert Sidney Johnston and P. Beauregard carried the day on April 6, forcing a larger Union army under U. Grant back to the Tennessee River at Pittsburg Landing.
Shiloh was, after all, a northern victory, and one that cost the South dearly, as it lost both Tennessee and Albert Sidney Johnson there.
Senator Isham G. Harris, Tennessee’s wartime governor who had been at the battle, when visiting the site to help locate the spot where Johnston had been wounded and then the tree under which he died, refused to discuss the battle.
www.wofford.edu /southernSeen/content.aspx?id=13018   (655 words)

  
 johnson information site   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Johnson (a division of Bombardier Recreational Products) is a manufacturer of outboard motors.
This johnson variant index site has been developed to help wayward users find the information they are looking for, no matter how they are mistakenly spelled or mistyped.
If you would like to add to the content of this site, or if you are interested in supporting the efforts of misytped.info by placing your product information on these johnson pages, please contact mistype@gmail.com for details.
www.mistyped.info /johnson.htm   (268 words)

  
 Mill Springs
Johnson may not have had a causative relation to this order from the Secretary of War, but he certainly had knowledge of it, since he bore General Mitchel's letter to General Thomas.
On September 15th General Albert Sidney Johnson assumed command of the Confederate forces in the West, and at once ordered General Buckner with five thousand men from Camp Boone and another camp in the vicinity to proceed by rail and occupy Bowling Green.
Andrew Johnson was with them, and his indignation had added fuel to their as so indiscreet that Thomas seriously contemplated his arrest.
www.aotc.net /MillSprings.htm   (15336 words)

  
 SEMO - Department of History: Carnahan Building - A.S.J. Carnahan
Youngest of a family of 11 children, A.S.J. Carnahan was born January 9, 1897, on a farm near Ellsinore, Missouri.
He attended the Crommertown one-room country school near his family's farm home in Carter County, and in 1914, at the age of 17, began teaching in the Crommertown School, a rural school in his home county.
The funds to construct a "brand new" Social Science Building inside the historic 1902 stone-and-brick shell, were appropriated by the General Assembly upon the recommendation of Missouri Governor Mel Carnahan, and the project was completed in time for the start of the present semester.
www4.semo.edu /history/Carnahan/albert_sydney_johnson_carnahan.htm   (844 words)

  
 Albert S. Johnston Biography
At the beginning of the Civil War it was almost universally agreed that the finest soldier, North or South, was Albert Sidney Johnston.
But his Civil War career was a definite disappointment to the Confederacy.
Grant, writing in his memoirs, considered Johnston as having failed to live up to earlier expectations.
www.civilwarhome.com /ASJohnston.htm   (336 words)

  
 Handbook of Texas Online: JOHNSTON, ALBERT SIDNEY
Albert Sidney Johnston, Confederate general, son of John and Abigail (Harris) Johnston, was born at Washington, Kentucky, on February 2, 1803.
William Preston Johnston, The Life of General Albert Sidney Johnston (New York: Appleton, 1978).
Samuel Manton Willbanks, Public and Military Career of Albert Sidney Johnston (M.A. thesis, University of Texas, 1932).
www.tsha.utexas.edu /handbook/online/articles/view/JJ/fjo32.html   (596 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Carmicle to Carnes
Carnahan, Albert Sidney Johnson (1897-1968) — also known as A.
Grandson of Albert Sidney Johnson Carnahan; son of Jean Carnahan and
Son of Albert Sidney Johnson Carnahan and Mary Kathel (Schupp) Carnahan; married,
www.politicalgraveyard.com /bio/carmicle-carnes.html   (661 words)

  
 List of people from Texas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Albert Sydney Johnston (1803-1862), Confederate General and commander of the Confederate western forces
Lady Bird Johnson (1912-), former first lady (married to President Lyndon B. Johnson)
Michael Johnson (1967-), Olympic gold medalist, World Record holder
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_Texans   (1499 words)

  
 Buy.com - Carolina Shout-Father Of The Stride - James P. Johnson - CD
Buy.com - Carolina Shout-Father Of The Stride - James P. Johnson - CD My Account
Place your order today and be one of the first to receive this product when it arrives!
Terms of Use Copyright 1997-2007 Buy.com Inc., All rights reserved.
www.buy.com /prod/Carolina_Shout_Father_Of_The_Stride/q/loc/109/60514736.html   (257 words)

  
 Shiloh 2
Albert Sidney Johnson, from a photograph at the age of 57, taken in Salt Lake City in 1860.
To such a committee of Congressmen he replied: "If Sidney Johnston is not a general, I have none." General Johnston was too calm, too just, and too magnanimous to misapprehend so natural a manifestation.
Polk's corps, 9136 strong in infantry and artillery, was composed of two divisions: Cheatham's on the left, made up of Bushrod R. Johnson's and Stephens' brigades, and Clark's on his right, formed of A. Stewart's and Russell's brigades.
www.rugreview.com /cw/cwi2.htm   (10236 words)

  
 RootsWeb: KYMASON-L [KYMASON-L] Re: Albert Sidney Johnston (Phillips-McDaniel-McDonald)
Re: [KYMASON-L] Re: Albert Sidney Johnston by Judith Allison Walters < >
Re: [KYMASON-L] Re: Albert Sidney Johnston by Losey, Gerald< >
Re: [KYMASON-L] Re: Albert Sidney Johnston by "Jean Shanelec" < >
archiver.rootsweb.com /th/read/KYMASON/1999-09/0936913202   (376 words)

  
 Iowa in the Civil War - Davenport Times - GAR Encampment - 1900
The “Hornets’ Nest” brigade was composed of the Second, Seventh, Eighth, Twelfth and Fourteenth Iowa Infantry, and the name was attached to it after the battle of Shiloh, in which General Albert Sidney Johnson was killed.
National commander Albert D. Shaw is in the city to attend the encampment.
He expressed himself as well pleased with the arrangements that had been made by the local committee for the entertainment of the G. Major Samuel Mahon, of the Seventh Iowa, is in the city.
iagenweb.org /civilwar/other/gar/times-1900b.htm   (5515 words)

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