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Topic: Charles Emory Smith


  
  Harless Homepage - Person Page 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
     Charles Edgar Smith was born on 1 November 1873 at Newport, Giles County, Virginia.
Charles Edgar Smith married Lucy Ann Meredith, daughter of Joseph Robert Meredith and Mary Helen Martin, 15 September 1896 at Newport, Giles County, Virginia.
     Charles Emory Smith was born on 24 August 1900 at Newport, Giles County, Virginia.
www.genealogy-quest.com /Harless-Homepage/tree/p1.htm   (1649 words)

  
 Augusta Georgia: football@ugusta: Falcons owner Rankin Smith dies 10/25/97
Smith, 72, died on Sunday, Oct. 26, 1997 of heart failure at Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta.
Smith, owner and chairman of the board of the Falcons, died of heart failure at Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta, where he had been admitted Friday night, the team announced.
Smith was the prime force in getting the stadium built, hinting that he would take his team to another city if forced to continue playing at his outdated home.
chronicle.augusta.com /stories/102797/fb_smithobit.html   (924 words)

  
 American President   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Charles Emory Smith grew up in upstate New York, graduating from the Albany Academy in 1858 and later from Union College in 1861.
With the outbreak of the Civil War, Smith used his writing talents to serve as the military secretary to Brigadier General John Rathbone; he was later promoted to a role in the office of the adjutant general of the Army.
Of his time as postmaster general, postal historian Gerald Cullinan noted that Smith "was an effective politician but a miserable administrator," finding that under his tenure, "corruption ran riot in the Post Office Department." Charles Emory Smith would serve until the end of McKinley's presidency, dying in January of 1908.
www.americanpresident.org /history/theodoreroosevelt/cabinet/postmaster/postmaster/email.html   (207 words)

  
 TheHistoryNet | Aviation History | Emory Bronte and Ernie Smith: Flew From California to Hawaii in 1927   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Smith, born in Reno, Nev., had moved with his family to San Francisco in time to experience the great earthquake of 1906.
Smith was elated about the trip ahead, but he was also apprehensive about the ability of the plane to fly 2,100 miles nonstop, since this Travel Air model had never faced such a challenge.
In the past two weeks, his sponsors had allowed their internal disagreements to be reported in the press, giving rise to speculation that the entire enterprise was disorganized and in danger of failing before he even got the plane into the air.
www.historynet.com /ahi/blsmithbronte   (1510 words)

  
 Charles Smith - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Cornelius Smith (born 1975), University of New Mexico and Portland Trail Blazers
Charles Smith (lawyer), New Hampshire lawyer, mediator in the Dominican Republic in 1914
Charles Emrys Smith (born 1949), Dr. Charles Smith, British academic, economist, educator, author.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Charles_Smith   (293 words)

  
 Hymnology: Charles Wesley
Charles Wesley, an English clergyman, poet, and hymn writer, was born at Epworth, Lincolnshire, England, on December 18, 1707.
Charles remained faithful to the Church of England and was angered when John began ordaining preachers for service in Scotland and America.
Charles Wesley wrote approximately 6500 hymns, many of which are among the finest hymns in the English language.
www.smithcreekmusic.com /Hymnology/Wesleys/Charles.Wesley.html   (917 words)

  
 Organ Conference
Steven Smith is currently in his fifth season as assistant conductor of The Cleveland Orchestra, his fourth season as music director of the Cleveland Orchestra Youth Orchestra, and his third year as music director of the Santa Fe Symphony and Chorus.
Recent guest-conducting appearances by Smith include debuts with the symphony orchestras of Detroit, Houston, Taiwan, and Hong Kong, and engagements with the orchestras of Akron, Memphis, Kansas City, and Kalamazoo.
From 1996-98, Steven Smith was associate conductor of the Kansas City Symphony.
www.oberlin.edu /con/bkstage/200205/stevensmithbio.html   (376 words)

  
 Emory Healthcare | | Emory heart center first visit | "
Emory's heart specialists literally wrote the book on cardiology - the medical textbook, The Heart, first published in l967 - and built the foundation for cardiovascular care in Georgia by developing training programs that produce 85 percent of the practicing cardiologists and heart surgeons in the state.
In 1942, Emory physicians Eugene Stead, MD, and James Warren, MD, brought national recognition to Georgia and to Emory by establishing the state's first cardiac catheterization lab.
Emory was one of 15 centers in the U.S. and Canada to test the device - developed by Medtronic - as part of the MIRACLE study.
www.emoryhealthcare.org /departments/heart/about_us/firsts.html   (763 words)

  
 Goldsboro News-Argus | Weddings: Smith-Heath
The bride is the daughter of the Rev. Justin and Melinda Heath and the granddaughter of Jean and Henry Rickman of South Boston, Va., and Charles and Joyce Gautier of Mount Olive.
The groom is the son of Cecil Smith of Faison and Johnny and Paulette Powell of Mount Olive and the grandson of the late Emmett and Shirley Ballree of Mount Olive and the late Jack and Viola Smith.
Lee Ann Smith of Mount Olive served her sister as matron of honor, while Crystal Hyatt of Mount Olive, friend of the bride, was maid of honor.
www.newsargus.com /weddings/archives/2006/07/02/smithheath/index.shtml   (602 words)

  
 smith - smi29.htm   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Jesse Harrison Smith (Dorcas Jane Crenshaw, Elizabeth S Gassaway, Dorcas Smith, Joseph, Job) was born 26 Apr 1872 in Franklin Co., GA. He died 1 Jan 1944 in Erick, OK and was buried in Carter cemetery, Beckham Co., OK.
Emmett Emory Smith was born 6 Oct 1897 in Decatur, TX.
Allie Ola Smith (Dorcas Jane Crenshaw, Elizabeth S Gassaway, Dorcas Smith, Joseph, Job) was born 30 Nov 1875 in Gainsville, GA. She died 19 Nov 1964 in Clayton, NM.
hometown.aol.com /oldp2/smith/smig29.htm   (1422 words)

  
 U.S. Ministers and Ambassadors to Russia
Colonel Charles Stewart Todd, from Kentucky, served with the Kentucky Militia in the War of 1812 and with General William Henry Harrison in his victory over the Indian leader Tecumesh.
A resident of Pennsylvania, Charles Emory Smith was born in Mansfield, Connecticut.
Smith later served as Director of the Central Intelligence Agency under President Truman from 1950 to 1953.
www.usembassy.ru /links/ambassadors.php   (6755 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Smith, C to D
Smith, Charles Aurelius (1861-1916) — of South Carolina.
Smith, Charles Bennett (1870-1939) — of New York.
Son of Reuben Smith and Clarissa G. (Pease) Smith; married, June 16, 1892, to Anna Cora Smith.
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/smith2.html   (1808 words)

  
 Emory Law School: Charles A. Shanor
Charles A. Shanor was president of the student government association at Rice University and a Rhodes Scholar.
Before joining the Emory faculty in 1975, he served as law clerk to Judge Elbert P. Tuttle of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and practiced with the Atlanta law firm of Sutherland, Asbill, and Brennan.
After three years as General Counsel to the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in Washington, D.C., he returned to Emory in 1990, where he teaches and writes about the areas of employment discrimination, labor law, and constitutional law.
www.law.emory.edu /cms/site/index.php?id=1220   (233 words)

  
 Faculty in Residence : Accommodations : Osborn L. Smith
Osborne L. Smith, a member of Emory’s second graduating class (1842), served as a high school principal before returning to Emory as a professor of Latin.
During Smith’s presidency, he oversaw the construction of four new buildings on campus, despite the economic difficulties at Emory and in the nation in general.
Smith was always more at home in the classroom than as an administrator, and served as president for just four years before returning to his faculty position.
www.emory.edu /HOUSING/FIR/osmith.html   (218 words)

  
 Grandview Memorial Obituaries   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Smith was a native of Fort Mead, FL.
June Smith Childers of Conyers, GA; one sister, Peggy Jo McEwen of Tampa, FL; one granddaughter, Brook Childers; and several nieces and nephews.
She is survived by a sister, Ruth H. Fender of Wytheville; seven nieces and nephews, Clayta Bryant of Wytheville, Linda Bowden of Chatham, Va, Charles Hoppers of Walnut Cove NC, Carol Freedle, Janie Duncan, Ann Woodie and Harold Hoppers, all of Sparta; and two special friends, Juanita Combs and Marie Truitt.
ls.net /~grandview/april03.html   (2029 words)

  
 Charles Ferguson Smith - LoveToKnow 1911   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
CHARLES FERGUSON SMITH (1807-1862), American soldier, graduated from West Point Academy in 1825, and a few years later became an instructor there, rising eventually to be commandant.
On the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861 he accepted a commission as brigadier-general of Union volunteers, and found himself under the command of Grant, who had been his pupil at West Point.
This difficult situation was made easy by Smith's loyalty to his young chief, and the old soldier led his division of raw volunteers with success at Fort Donelson.
www.1911ency.org /S/SM/SMITH_CHARLES_FERGUSON.htm   (265 words)

  
 Charles Emory Smith Collection
Charles Emory Smith, born 18 February 1842, in Mansfield, CT, was the son of Emory Boutelle and Arvilla Topliff (Royce) Smith.
The family relocated to Albany, NY when Charles was seven and he attended public schools and the Albany Academy, from which he graduated at sixteen.
Of particular interest are three letters to Smith from President Theodore Roosevelt, including Roosevelt's acceptance of Smith's resignation as Postmaster General of the United States.
www.lib.uconn.edu /online/research/speclib/ASC/findaids/SmithCE/MSS19880034.html   (415 words)

  
 Fuller Theological Seminary
Each lecture was followed by interaction with the audience and on the final day, a panel of Fuller faculty members responded to Smith's assertions.
Using the concept of narrative as theology, Smith told the stories of historical figures to illustrate his points about God.
Through the lives and actions of these figures, Smith demonstrated how God blesses his people--sometimes by using acts of human defeat to bring about his triumph, or by causing us to surrender our desires to his timing.
www.fuller.edu /alumni_ae/E-News/2005-03/Smith.asp   (195 words)

  
 Mail System Down the Tube
Smith's prediction that the new century would bring daily house-to-house mail delivery in every section of the country came true by 1910.
Smith foresaw miles of underground tubes to be built crisscrossing U.S. cities to replace mail carriers.
The $8 million system was launched after Smith, an itinerant newspaper editor, Republican stalwart and former ambassador to Russia, was appointed postmaster general by President William McKinley.
www.capsu.org /library/documents/0010.html   (1099 words)

  
 Charles Emory Smith - LoveToKnow 1911 (via CobWeb/3.1 planetlab2.isi.jhu.edu)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Charles Emory Smith - LoveToKnow 1911 (via CobWeb/3.1 planetlab2.isi.jhu.edu)
CHARLES EMORY SMITH (1842-1908), American journalist and political leader, was born in Mansfield, Connecticut, on the 18th of February 1842.
This page was last modified 19:16, 27 Oct 2006.
www.1911encyclopedia.com.cob-web.org:8888 /S/SM/SMITH_CHARLES_EMORY.htm   (181 words)

  
 Faculty in Residence : Accommodations : Luther M. Smith
Luther M. Smith was the first Emory College alumnus to serve as its president.
Smith encouraged the growth and development of the campus religious life and emphasized the “character-building” nature of Emory College.
In a curious coincidence, Luther Smith was succeeded as president of Emory College by Osborn L. Smith, who was not related to President Smith.
www.emory.edu /HOUSING/FIR/lsmith.html   (199 words)

  
 FORT SMITH - Online Information article about FORT SMITH
Southern, the Arkansas Central, the Fort Smith and Western, the Midland Valley and the See also:
Fort Smith was incorporated as a town in 1842, and was chartered as a city in 1845.
War Fort Smith was strongly in sympathy with the Confederacy.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /FLA_FRA/FORT_SMITH.html   (630 words)

  
 Smith, Andrew H., M.D. -- Smith, E. Darwin: in Cornell University's Making of America   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Smith, Benjamin, Where a Day is Lost or Gained.
Smith, Charles Stewart, Home Industries and the Wilson Bill.
Smith, Clement L. The American College in the Twentieth Century.
moa.cit.cornell.edu /moa/browse.author/s.178.html   (96 words)

  
 Charleston Daily Mail
Three men were to deliver the mail to rural areas from Charles Town and one each from Halltown and Uvilla.
"Its introduction is invariably followed by a large increase in the circulation of the press and of periodical literature," Smith continued.
A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets and varying prices is diffused and the producer, with his quicker communication and larger information, is placed on a surer footing.
www.dailymail.com /static/specialsections/lookingback/lb06183.htm   (544 words)

  
 National Postal Museum
They were also given to acquaintances of Third Assistant Postmaster General Edwin C. Madden, including a hometown friend of Madden's who was a philatelist and stamp dealer in Detroit.
The first presentation album was sent by mail to former Postmaster General Charles Emory Smith in Philadelphia.
Another was sent to Representative Claude A. Swanson, one of the few members of the Democratic Party to receive an album.
www.postalmuseum.si.edu /resources/6a2x_rooseveltalbums.html   (1236 words)

  
 Contents Lists   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
6 • The Sorrows of a Humorous Lecturer • Charles Battell Loomis • ar; illus.
4 • Military Morals in the Philippines • Charles King • ar; illus.
5 • Billy in Burma • Charles Macomb Flandrau • ss; illus.
users.ev1.net /~homeville/fictionmag/t901.htm   (2863 words)

  
 Charles Emory Smith - Search Results - MSN Encarta
Charles Emory Smith - Search Results - MSN Encarta
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encarta.msn.com /encnet/refpages/search.aspx?q=Charles+Emory+Smith   (61 words)

  
 Inventories and Finding Aids at the American Antiquarian Society
A letter, dated 6 December 1852, from Charles Calistus Burleigh (1810-1878) to Samuel Joseph May (1797-1871) is in regard to Jefferson Lee, "...
He thinks of going to the Elgin settlement..." This letter serves as an introduction of Lee to May. Two letters, dated 12 January and 5 April 1856, are from Charles Emory Smith (1842-1908), of Albany, N.Y., to his uncle Isaac Smith (-), of Leominster, Mass.
In the letters, Smith argues in favor of abolition and the preservation of the Union, while his uncle opposed the latter principle.
www.americanantiquarian.org /Manuscripts/slavery.htm   (1103 words)

  
 Jefferson Bibliography
TJ interpreted criticism of his subsequent actions as partisan malice; he lost his temper and self-control, began to act obstinately and vindictively, and revealed his shortcomings.
Notes: TJ was an educational innovator who aimed to develop an educational system with a distinguished higher institution and a "compact completeness of the entire system from that high point down to the most elementary school in the most remote precinct."
Notes: TJ dealt with throughout; Margaret Bayard of the Federalist Delaware Bayards married Samuel Harrison Smith, editor of The National Intelligencer, and came to admire TJ, described in the preface as "her life's hero."
etext.lib.virginia.edu /jefferson/bibliog/shuf1/shuf1910.html   (3840 words)

  
 [No title]
Mansfield, CT, was the son of Emory Boutelle and
Albany, NY when Charles was seven and he attended public schools and the
Of particular interest are three letters to Smith from President
www.lib.uconn.edu /online/research/speclib/ASC/findaids/SmithCE/MSS19880034.xml   (317 words)

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