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Topic: Charles H Grosvenor


  
  Grosvenor West   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Grosvenor West (the West wing of Grosvenor Hall) is located in the West Green, between coordinates D-4 and E-4 on the campus map.
In 1986, it was renovated and renamed Grosvenor West.
Grosvenor (pronounced "Grovener" — the "s" is silent) Hall was named in honor of Charles H. Grosvenor, who grew up in Athens, Ohio.
www.ohiou.edu /athens/bldgs/grosw.html   (147 words)

  
 Grosvenor Hall   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Grosvenor Hall is located in the West Green, between coordinates D-4 and E-4 on the campus map.
Grosvenor Hall is home to the College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Grosvenor Hall was the first building of the West Green project, and was therefore originally known as West Green building number 1.
www.ohiou.edu /athens/bldgs/grosv.html   (196 words)

  
 Abram P. T. Elder Papers (Library of Congress)
The National Biographical Society, a commercial firm of which Elder was an official, became involved in Grosvenor's work, eventually assuming control of most or all aspects of its publication, which is noted in correspondence in the Elder Papers and is graphically represented in four-color engravings of title sheets, sample page proofs, and other publishing matter.
Prominent among the correspondents are society officials Charles H. Grosvenor, Robert E.
Letters to and from Elder, Charles H. Grosvenor, Lucy S. Bahnsen, and Richard R. McMahon regarding efforts to publish specialty biographical directories and to promote the National Biographical Society's business.
www.loc.gov /rr/mss/text/elder.html   (847 words)

  
 Marion County, Ohio 1907 History - Bench and Bar
They selected George H. Busby, temporarily, as clerk, but inasmuch as each had a candidate for the place, in the persons of William M. Holmes, Gideon J. Messenger and George H. Busby, the matter was referred to the voters, with the result that Mr.
Charles Sweetser studied law in the office of Thomas W. Powell of Delaware, and began to practice in Delaware in 1832, at the age of twenty-seven.
Charles H. Conley was born February 1, 1874, was graduated from the Marion High School in 1894, attended Ohio State University and graduated from the Cincinnati Law School in 1897.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Marion/History1907/marhisc14.htm   (9318 words)

  
 Handbook of Texas Online:
Grosvenor, on Farm Road 1850 some sixteen miles northwest of Brownwood in western Brown County, was named for Senator Charles H. Grosvenor of Ohio.
In 1980 the estimated population of Grosvenor was thirty-one.
Produced by TSHA in partnership with the University of Texas Libraries
www.tsha.utexas.edu /handbook/online/articles/view/GG/hng36.html   (111 words)

  
 Athens Twp. - 2
Charles H. Grosvenor, born in Pomfret, Connecticut, September 20, 1833, came to Athens county with his father’s family when five years old, and lived in Rome during his youth and early manhood.
Grosvenor has served under my command since November, 1862, and has, on all occasions, performed his duties with intelligence and zeal.” Gen. Grosvenor was promoted to colonel April 8, 1865, and served till the close of the war.
Charles Shipman, for more than twenty years an active and leading citizen of Athens, was born in Saybrook, Connecticut, August 28, 1787.
www.progenealogists.com /athens/athenstownship2.htm   (7708 words)

  
 ohiohistory.org / CIVIL WAR GUIDE PROJECT   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Charles Whittlesey, Camp Chase, Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio.
Letter stating that Charles H. McElroy of Delaware, and brother of Major [James N.] McElroy of his regiment, wanted authority to raise a company for the 20th Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry; and asking if Buckingham could issue Charles H. McElroy such authority directed to Delaware.
Charles Ankele, Major, Headquarters, 37th Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry, Camp Brown, Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio.
www.ohiohistory.org /onlinedoc/civilwar/sa0147/07_8.cfm   (960 words)

  
 Enemies Front and Rear   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Charles H. Grosvenor's brigade in support, approached the Rebel flank from the northeast.
Daniel H. Reynolds' brigade from the right of his division's line to the left in order to counter a Union advance across the Hillsboro Pike.
With Colonel Edward H. Wolfe's brigade also approaching from the west, Redoubt No. 1 was overrun, and Loring's line soon disintegrated.
www.thehistorynet.com /acw/blenemiesfrontrear/index1.html   (1350 words)

  
 Neal Grosvenor's Homepage
Here's Neal Raymond Grosvenor, son of Charles and Susan
Neal also has 6 and 18 week ultrasound pictures available.
Contact the site owner, Charles R. Grosvenor Jr.
www.nealgrosvenor.com   (36 words)

  
 18th Ohio Infantry
Oration of General Charles H. Grosvenor Before the Society of the Army of the Cumberland at Its Reunion in Milwaukee, September 20, 1882
It participated in the battle of Stone River, where it lost 183 officers and men, and at Chickamauga, where its gallantry was noticed in general orders.
The Regiment was re-organized in the fall of 1864, under Col. C.H. Grosvenor, and took part in the battle of Nashville with Thomas, where its loss was very severe.
www.ohiocivilwar.com /cw18.html   (791 words)

  
 Nashville
James H. Wilson: "In concluding this report permit me to say that, if the operations just described have been of any avail in the recent campaign, it is due entirely to the concentration of the cavalry and its reorganization as a separate corps.
I have, therefore, to request that the credit awarded it may be used to secure from the War Department the recognition of its separate existence as a corps, and an official approval of the measures already inaugurated for its efficiency.
General James H. Wilson, who had been ordered by General Grant to report to General Sherman,--and of whom General Grant wrote, "I believe he will add fifty per-cent to the effectiveness of our cavalry,"-- had taken command personally of all General Thomas's cavalry, which was trying.
www.aotc.net /Nashville.htm   (18869 words)

  
 Search Results for 4-H - Encyclopædia Britannica
Sheridan, Philip H. highly successful U.S. cavalry officer whose driving military leadership in the last year of the American Civil War was instrumental in defeating the Confederate Army.
Grosvenor, Gilbert H. American geographer, writer, and long-time editor of the National Geographic Magazine and president of the National Geographic Society.
Brief biography of William H. Taft, the twenty-seventh President of the United States of America.
www.britannica.com /search?query=4-H&submit=Find&source=MWTAB   (502 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Charles V * A puritan is a person who pours righteous indignation into the wrong things.
Charles H. Grosvenor * There are some who start their retirement long before they stop working.
Charles M. Schulz * The true worth of a man is not to be found in man himself, but in the colours and textures that come alive in others.
www.gsenet.org /library/18prs/humquots.htm   (24727 words)

  
 General Corespondence Description(Page 1)
By the end of the year Gompers and the AFL were also involved in a movement to deny William H. Taft the Republican presidential nomination.
October correspondence contains H. Miles' report for the Section of Industrial Training of the Committee on Welfare Work, and October and November letters of Otto M. Eidlitz and Gertrude Beeks Easley concern an extensive housing study prepared by the Committee on Labor.
Mexican-American relations are the subject of several memos in mid-July and of later correspondence of John R. Phillips and Ernest H. Greenwood.
www.history.umd.edu /Gompers/gencorr.html   (5543 words)

  
 Amherst College Biographical Record: Class of 1882
David H. Address, 12 Center St., Exeter, N. Blake, Hosea Gordon.
Hinsdale H. S., 1882-83; grammar school E. Greenwich, R. I., 1883-84; Andover T. S., 1885-87; licensed, May 18, 1886; Jefferson Med.
Prepared Worcester H. and private school Marblehead; A. Clerk with Loring and Potter, bankers, Boston, 1880-81; salesman E. Walpole, 1882-; farmer W. Dedham, 1892-; Medfield, 189(?)-.
www.amherst.edu /~rjyanco/genealogy/acbiorecord/1882.html   (666 words)

  
 [No title]
Rather, they visualize in their minds that they are not quitters; they will not allow life's circumstances to push them down and hold them under.
-- Charles Swindoll I cannot even imagine where I would be today were it not for that handful of friends who have given me a heart full of joy.
It can be killed by a sneer or a yawn; it can be stabbed to death by a joke or worried to death by a frown on the right person's brow.
www.somorita.com /QOTD/quote.txt   (24569 words)

  
 GROSVENOR, Charles Henry (1833-1917) Bibliography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Grosvenor, delivered at Hillsboro, Ohio, Saturday, August 24, 1878.
The unlawful calling out of the militia—the law violated by the governor, and his weak apology—the demand upon which the troops were called out—a little Kellogg usupration in Ohio—the other ox is gored.
An open letter to the Honorable C. Grosvenor, in reply to recent attacks on the civil service law and rules.
bioguide.congress.gov /scripts/bibdisplay.pl?index=G000497   (86 words)

  
 Grosvenor, Ohio OH, profile (Athens County) - hotels, festivals, genealogy, newspapers - ePodunk
Grosvenor, OH Grosvenor is in Athens County, in the Athens metro area.
Sections below provide additional information and links about Grosvenor travel and tourism, nearby airports, cemeteries, the Athens County economy, education, environment, genealogy, government, historic sites, libraries, maps, museums, newspapers and other media, nonprofit groups, real estate, recreation, religion, transportation, and weather.
For more information, see our Grosvenor political report.
www.epodunk.com /cgi-bin/genInfo.php?locIndex=16810   (328 words)

  
 Licking County, Ohio History
The survivors to-day are the sternest adherents to the cause for which their comrades died that can be found in our midst, and no political demagogy can swerve them from voting in the future as they shot in the past.
He first enlisted in Captain McDougal's company H, Third Ohio volunteer infantry, in three months' service, in April, 1861, and was discharged at Camp Dennison to give room for three years' men; re-enlisted in Captain Edwin Nichol's company in July, 1861, and re-enlisted as a veteran December 15, 1863, at Prospect Station, Tennessee.
ERWIN H. -He was a member of company F, One Hundred and Twenty-third Ohio volunteer infantry, and sewed two years.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Licking/LickingFile4.htm   (14231 words)

  
 Tomfolio.com: Law and Criminality, Assassinations
Grosvenor, a Republican congressman at the time of this writing, had known McKinley for 25 years.
His biographical sketch of the slain president is followed by editorials from prominent newspapers, tributes from governors, memories of McKinley's boyhood by his mother, etc. Bound in dark green cloth over boards with gilt-stamped spine and upper board lettering, decorated endpapers, fore and bottom edges untrimmed.
Harris had been on the military commission that tried John H, Surratt and concluded that there were "just grounds for charging Jefferson Davis and others for conspiring with John Wilkes Booth to murder Lincoln." Binding of the special G.A.R. edition for the 26th National Encampment.
www.tomfolio.com /bookssub.asp?subid=1884   (3424 words)

  
 [No title]
Moving into the town of Athens, Grosvenor applied for admission to Paramuthia Lodge in February 1858, and was admitted on June 22, 1858.
In 1880, Grosvenor was appointed by Governor (and Brother) Charles Foster to the Board of Trustees of the Soldiers and Sailors Orphan's Home in Xenia., where he sened for a total of eight years.
Renowned as an orator and debater, when Congress was not in session Grosvenor and a leading Democrat Brother Champ Clark often went on the lecture circuit where they would engage in passionate and partisan debates on the leading issues of the day while also traveling and dining together as personal friends.
www.kena.org /Hirams/1998/PHL-FE98.htm   (15343 words)

  
 MASONIC HISTORY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
In the history of Franklin Lodge, prepared by W. Brother H. Cosley, it is stated that the lodge was "constituted" January 28, 1812, which doubtless referred to its organization under a dispensation, as its charter was not granted until January 5, 1815, three years later.
From that time on the lodge has continued to grow and prosper, and the handful of Brethren, who met at the home of Brother John Dodge that November afternoon in 1816, have grown to be a strong lodge of 120 members and one of the acknowledged forces for good in the community.
W.·.; James T. Andrews, S. W.; and Charles C. Paine, J. Its charter was granted at the Annual Communication in December, 1818, and at that Annual Meeting it was represented by Brother Aaron Wheeler.
users.1st.net /fischer/OHMSHT02p3.HTM   (17107 words)

  
 Chickamauga and Chattanooga NMP: An Administrative History (Chapter VI)
Representative Charles H. Grosvenor, a park founder and later Commission Chairman, submitted the bill embracing the maneuvers concept, which, as amended, affected not only Chickamauga and Chattanooga, but all national military parks.
The rationale was to make all the military park lands available for the use of military students, such as West Point cadets, in helping them to gain familiarity with decisive battles.
On April 23 the site was designated Camp George H. Thomas after the Civil War hero who had fought on the ground nearly thirty-five years earlier.
www.cr.nps.gov /history/online_books/chch/adhi6.htm   (2862 words)

  
 [No title]
Autograph document signed ("Wm H. Harrison aid de camp"), four lines, oblong 4to, Headquarters, Greeneville, 27 February 1795, ordering the contractors to supply "22 pounds of meat and flour for the Wyandot Indians."
Autograph letter signed, one and one-half pages, Sherwood Forest, Charles City County, Virginia, 20 January 1852, to Thomas Page, asking to be informed of taxes due on his land in Union.
Note signed ("Wm H Taft") with eleven words in manuscript, answering a request for an autograph, 14 November 1929.
www.artfact.com /artfact/sampleLot.cfm?sample=93   (788 words)

  
 Chickamauga and Chattanooga NMP: An Administrative History (Appendix A)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Alabama--William H. Forney, J.T. Holtzclaw, W.C. Oates, Joseph Wheeler, and S.M.A. Wood.
Arkansas--James H. Berry, Clifton R. Breckinridge, Evander McNair, and L.H. Mangum.
Ohio--H.M. Cist, W.F. Goodspeed, Charles H. Grosvenor, P.P. Lane, J.G. Mitchell, J.G. Taylor, and Ferd.
www.nps.gov /chch/adhi/adhiaa.htm   (247 words)

  
 Charles Harris Whitaker - The Info Page
Charles H Peterson - Eclectic Pragmatism: Is There a God?
Charles H Cary Conference 1999 Institute of Ecosystem Studies Nilon Alan R Berkowitz Charles H Nilon Karen S Hollweg - Understanding Urban Ecosystems - 0387952373
Charles Harris Whitaker - Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue: Architect and Master of Many Arts - 1558351477
www.authorof.com /136312_charles-horngren-srikant-m-datar-george-foster_0130556211costaccountingwithphguidetoecommerceusedbookpricecomparison.html   (106 words)

  
 An American Time Capsule: Three Centuries of Broadsides and Other Printed Ephemera: Titles: 34
Electors of Norfolk: On the first Monday of April, you will be called on to give your votes for three intelligent, honest independent citizens to represent you in the Senate of this Commonwealth...
The following is a verbatum copy of a letter addressed by Thomas McDaniel, of Bennington, to Obadiah H. Platt, editor of the Brattleboro Phoenix, a professed Whig newspaper Bennington, Vt. 25th Oct. 1850.
The undersigned desires to raise a company for the Confederate services, and for that purpose, I call upon the people of the Counties of Jefferson and Hawkins, Tenn., to meet promptly at Russellville on Saturday, July 19th, 1862, and organize a company...
international.loc.gov /ammem/rbpehtml/rbpebibTitles34.html   (2239 words)

  
 [No title]
The following officers were elected and appointed for the ensuing year: Commander in Chief Charles Devens, Massachusetts Senior vice commander in chief John R. Goeble, New Jersey Junior vice commander in chief Edward Ferguson, Wisconsin Surgeon general Hans Powell, New York Chaplain in chief Rev. Aug.
Bennett, Waynesfield, Ohio Chaplain in chief John H. Grate, Atwater, Ohio Adjutant and Quartermaster general John C. Adams, Jonesboro, Ind. National patriotic instructor Wm.
Senior vice commander in chief Charles L. Chappel, California (died in office) Albert Woolson, Minnesota Junior vice commander in chief Albert Woolson, Minnesota James A. Hard, New York Adjutant and quartermaster general John S. Dumser, California.
suvcw.org /garcinc/officers1866-1949.doc   (1255 words)

  
 Werner's Place of jokes, pictures, videos, and trivia
~Charles H. Duell (Commissioner of U.S. Office of Patents, 1899).
All other nations are drinking Ray Charles beer and we are drinking Barry Manilow.
I have learned silence from the talkative, toleration from the intolerant, and kindness from the unkind; yet, strange, I am ungrateful to those teachers.
www.wernersplace.com /quotes.htm   (3078 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Grossberg to Grovas
Grosvenor, Charles Henry (1833-1917) — also known as Charles H. Grosvenor — of Athens,
Grosvenor, Thomas Peabody (1778-1817) — of New York.
Grout, John Henry — also known as John H. Grout — U.S. Consul in
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/grossi-grout.html   (759 words)

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