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Topic: Francis B Douglass


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 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: White, E to F
James White; son of Edward Douglass White (1795-1847).
James White; father of Edward Douglass White (1845-1921).
John Edward White; son of E. Homer White and Llela Amis Morgan White; nephew of
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/white3.html   (711 words)

  
 African American Registry: Nathan Mossell gave much to Philadelphia!
Though Nathan Mossell died in 1946, in 1948 Douglass Hospital merged with another predominantly Black hospital, Mercy, and in 1955 the new Mercy-Douglass Hospital building opened on Woodland Avenue, between 50th and 51st Streets, in West Philadelphia.
From Canada, Nathan <b>Francisb> Mossell had shown great academic promise at Lincoln University, where he was the winner of the Bradley Medal in Natural Science.
*The birth of Nathan Mossell in 1856 is celebrated on this date.
www.aaregistry.com /detail.php3?id=1536   (711 words)

  
 gmr67douglass.txt
<b>Francisb> D. Bailey, of Jackson, and Miss Narcissa W. Douglass, of the former place.
Randolph-Butts County GaArchives Marriages.....Douglass, Narcissa W. - Bailey, <b>Francisb> D. July 1 1856 ************************************************ Copyright.
ftp.rootsweb.com /pub/usgenweb/ga/randolph/vitals/marriages/gmr67douglass.txt   (711 words)

  
 Black History Month Spotlights
Sadie Alexander's most accomplished relative on the Mossell side was her father's brother, Dr. Nathan <b>Francisb> Mossell physician and co-founder of the Frederick Douglass Hospital (founded 1895), which later merged with Mercy Hospital to form Mercy-Douglass.
NATHAN <b>FRANCISb> MOSSELL (1856-1946) Nathan Mossell, who received the Doctor of Medicine degree in 1882, became the most prominent of the first Black students.
SADIE TANNER MOSSELL ALEXANDER (1898-1989) In 1921, she was one of the first two Black women in the U.S. to obtain a Ph.D. In the fall of 1924, she entered the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
www.seattleschools.org /schools/tops/community/blackhistory/spotlights-04.html   (711 words)

  
 Photo: Nathan <b>Francisb> Mossell, M.D. 1882, University of Pennsylvania Archives
Nathan <b>Francisb> Mossell, M.D., 1882 (1856-1946), was the first African-American to graduate from Penn's Medical School.
Box 1844, folder labelled "Mossell, Nathan <b>Francisb> 1882 M.D."
In 1895 Dr. Mossell was a co-founder of the Frederick Douglass Hospital, which later merged with Mercy Hospital to form Mercy-Douglass.
www.archives.upenn.edu /img/ar/mossellnf.html   (711 words)

  
 Gordan Donaldson - Boganmeldelse.com
Genealogy of a Douglass-Donaldson family: Ancestors and descendants of David Stuart Douglass and Louise Elinor Donaldson married in Menands, NY 1915,...
Walter J. Salmon Jay W. Lorsch Gordan Donaldson John Pound Jay A. Conger David Finegold Lawler Edward E. Paperback.
The Scholar Adventurer: A Tribute to John D. Gordan (1907-1968 on the Eightieth Anniversary of His Birth With Six of His Essays)
www.boganmeldelse.com /Gordan-Donaldson   (711 words)

  
 Mercy-Douglass Hospital Records
The Frederick Douglass Hospital was established at 15th and Lombard Streets in 1895 (incorporated in 1896) with Dr. Nathan Mossell serving as the first Superintendent and Medical Director.
The hospital instituted the first approved negro nurse training school in Philadelphia the same year under the supervision of Minnie Clemon, the first black nurse to graduate from the Training School for Nurses of the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
p.13 Nathaniel F. Mossell, Superintendent and Medical Director of Frederick Douglass hospital upon its founding in 1895.
www.nursing.upenn.edu /history/collections/mercdoug.htm   (711 words)

  
 §37. <b>Francisb> Andrew March. XXV. Scholars. Vol. 18. Later National Literature, Part III. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21
Fowler by his teaching and Webster through his writings are said to have “exercised a dominant influence” on the mind of <b>Francisb> Andrew March (1825–1911), a graduate of Amherst and after 1855 a professor at Lafayette College.
March there taught Latin and Greek, French and German, botany, law, political economy, “mental philosophy,” and the Constitution of the United States—all this as professor of the English Language and Comparative Philology.
As a classical scholar himself, March undertook the general editorship (1874–77) of the Douglass Series of Christian Greek and Latin writers, in which the two principal volumes were March’s Latin Hymns and Gildersleeve’s Justin Martyr.
www.bartleby.com /228/0237.html   (711 words)

  
 Edward D White
Edward Douglass White was born on November 3, 1845, in Lafourche Parish, Louisiana.
In 1874, White won election to the state Senate, and was appointed to the Louisiana Supreme Court because of his support for the successful gubernatorial election of <b>Francisb> T. Nicholls.
When White was confirmed that same day, December 12, 1910, he became the first Associate Justice to be promoted directly to the position of Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court.
www.multied.com /Bio/rec/EdWhite.html   (753 words)

  
 §37. <b>Francisb> Andrew March. XXV. Scholars. Vol. 18. Later National Literature, Part III. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21
Fowler by his teaching and Webster through his writings are said to have “exercised a dominant influence” on the mind of <b>Francisb> Andrew March (1825–1911), a graduate of Amherst and after 1855 a professor at Lafayette College.
March there taught Latin and Greek, French and German, botany, law, political economy, “mental philosophy,” and the Constitution of the United States—all this as professor of the English Language and Comparative Philology.
As a classical scholar himself, March undertook the general editorship (1874–77) of the Douglass Series of Christian Greek and Latin writers, in which the two principal volumes were March’s Latin Hymns and Gildersleeve’s Justin Martyr.
www.bartleby.com /228/0237.html   (753 words)

  
 <b>Francisb> Locke, Sumner/Smith Co., TN
William Moore to James Gibson, John Douglass, James Gardner, John Barr, James Hibbits and <b>Francisb> Locke as trustees appt.
Here is a mystery person: <b>Francisb> Locke appeared in Sumner Co., TN by 1799 and seems to disappear after 1803.
Re: <b>Francisb> Locke, Sumner/Smith Co., TN Carole Gibson 6/07/04
genforum.genealogy.com /locke/messages/1618.html   (109 words)

  
 Past Governor Clayton Douglass Buck, Sr.
was born the son of <b>Francisb> N. and Margaret Douglass Buck on March 21, 1890 at "Buena Vista" near New Castle, De.
During Governor Buck's administration dial phones first came to Delaware, passenger ships from Delaware to Philadephia were halted, and the first downstate woman to be elected to the General Assembly, Estelle Tschudy of Smyrna, took her seat.
Governor Buck died on January 27, 1965 at the age of 74.
www.russpickett.com /history/buckbio.htm   (531 words)

  
 Lafourche.com: The Area
In addition, former Gov. <b>Francisb> T. Nicholls of Thibodaux served as chief justice of the state Supreme Court from 1892-1904 and as an associate justice from 1904-1911.
The area has produced three governors of Louisiana: Henry Schuyler Thibodeaux, founder of Thibodaux, 1824; Edward Douglas White of Thibodaux, 1835-1839 (father of the chief justice); and <b>Francisb> T. Nicholls of Thibodaux, 1877-1880 and 1888-1892.
Edward Douglass White served on the Louisiana Supreme Court from 1879-1880 before his service as a U.S. senator and U.S. Supreme Court justice.
lafourche.com /area.htm   (1078 words)

  
 Ancestors of <b>Francisb> (Frank) Davis
She was the daughter of John Douglass and Sarah Dunn.
William Davis (Source: (1) Janelle Dixon, Gen. Correspondent, March 1998; "Roster of South Carolina Patriots" by Bobby Gilmer Moss; "The Patriots at Kings Mountain" by B. Moss., (2) Genealogy by Joseph E. Hart, Jr.
She was born May 04, 1799 in Kershaw District, South Carolina, and died September 11, 1870 in Tishomingo County, Mississippi.
www.annebabin.com /francisdavis.html   (458 words)

  
 Antislavery Literature: SiteMap
<b>Francisb> Bok's Escape from Slavery and Contemporary Slave Narratives
National Park Service website for Douglass' historic home in Anacostia, District of Columbia.
University of Mainz academic study group on history of slavery; German-language site.
antislavery.eserver.org /sitemap   (458 words)

  
 Stock Maven Classic Films Movies Actor: Douglass Dumbrille
Starring: Errol Flynn, Paul Lukas, Lucile Watson, Faye Emerson, James Flavin, Douglass Dumbrille, Dennis Hoey, Sheldon Leonard, Odette Myrtil, <b>Francisb> Pierlot, Jean Sullivan, Frederic Brunn
Starring: Warner Baxter, Myrna Loy, Walter Connolly, Helen Vinson, Douglass Dumbrille, Raymond Walburn, Lynne Overman, Clarence Muse, Margaret Hamilton, Frankie Darro, George Cooper, George Meeker, Jason Robards Sr.
Starring: Gary Cooper, Jean Arthur, George Bancroft, Lionel Stander, Douglass Dumbrille, Raymond Walburn, H.B. Warner, Ruth Donnelly, Walter Catlett, John Wray
www.stockmaven.com /films/DouglassDumbrille.htm   (396 words)

  
 Emil Walter Haury, May 2, 1904—December 5, 1992 By Raymond Harris Thompson, Caleb Vance Haynes, Jr., and James Jefferson Reid Biographical Memoirs
In 1937 Douglass, astronomer Edwin <b>Francisb> Carpenter (1898-1963), and Haury were co-founders of the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research at the University of Arizona, with Douglass as its first director.
Douglass, who had his own problems working with a creative and wealthy employer (Percival Lowell), had warned Emil that it was often difficult in small, private organizations to deal with differences in an impersonal and objective manner.
The Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research has expanded beyond the dating of archaeological sites to become an international center of biological, hydrological, and climatic research that is addressing the very problems that stimulated Douglass to begin his studies of tree growth almost a hundred years ago.
stills.nap.edu /html/biomems/ehaury.html   (396 words)

  
 Dland3n.txt
Johnson, Cleveland Johnson, Edmond Johnson, Edward Johnson, F.D? Johnson, <b>Francisb> S. Johnson, Henry B. Johnson, I.B. Johnson, I.P.G. Johnson, Isaac Johnson, J.D. Johnson, Jno.
Dorman, James P. Dorman, Mark W. Dortsch, Albert Doss, J.O. Doss, James B. Doss, James M. Dossey, Thomas F. Dotts, William Dougherty, James Douglas, Robert Douglass, Sandy Dovey, Wm.
Williams, Yancy Williamson, Elizabeth Williamson, James H. Williamson, John E. Williamson, Thos.
www.arkansasresearch.com /Dland3n.txt   (396 words)

  
 DUMC Library - Chronology of Achievements of African Americans in Medicine
Nathan <b>Francisb> Mossell founds the Frederick Douglass Memorial Hospital and Training School for Nurses.
James <b>Francisb> Shober earns his M.D. from Howard University School of Medicine, Washington, D.C. Dr. Shober later becomes the first known Negro physician with a medical degree to practice in North Carolina.
Washington, D.C.: Howard University, established for the purpose of educating Negro doctors, opens to both Negro and White students, including women.
www.mclibrary.duke.edu /hmc/exhibits/blkhist/bhmtime.html   (396 words)

  
 pass8-11.txt
1796, Oct. 17, Doyle, <b>Francisb>, and Sarah Douglass.
1778, Sept. 10, <b>Francisb>, Sidney, and <b>Francisb> Joden.
1780, Jan. 2, Galen, <b>Francisb>, and Margarett Campbell.
searches.rootsweb.com /usgenweb/archives/pa/philadelphia/church/pass8-11.txt   (396 words)

  
 bucksocial.txt
Social Register's 1923: Buck Mr & Mrs C Douglass (Wilson-Alice H du Pont) Phone No 77 "Rokeby" Wilmington Del Buck Mr & Mrs F Douglass (Marione E Richey) Pa'07 Phone No 176 27 The Strand New Castle Del Mr & Mrs <b>Francisb> N (C Margaret Douglass) Wil.
Phone No 52 The Strand New Castle Del 1927: Buck Mr & Mrs C Douglass (Wilson - Alice H du Pont) Wil.
Phone No 52 216 Delaware Av New Castle Del 1932: Buck Mr & Mrs C Douglass (Wilson-Alice H du Pont) Wil.
searches.rootsweb.com /usgenweb/archives/pa/philadelphia/history/family/bucksocial.txt   (171 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Buck
Buck, Charles <b>Francisb> (1841-1918) — also known as Charles F. Buck — of New Orleans, Orleans Parish, La. Born in Durrheim, Baden,
Buck, Daniel — of Mankato, Blue Earth County, Minn. Democrat.
Buck, Raymond Elliot (1894-1971) — also known as Raymond E. Buck — of Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Tex. Born in Fort Worth,
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/buck.html   (764 words)

  
 buck-clare-n.txt
Surviving are her husband, <b>Francisb> H. Buck, and these brothers and sisters: Sister M. Patricia of Sisters of St. Joseph.
OBIT: Clare N. (DOUGLASS) BUCK, 1954, Altoona, Blair County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by SER Copyright 2004.
She was born Aug. 30, 1894, in Gallitzin, a daughter of Thomas and Annie (Harkins) Douglass.
searches.rootsweb.com /usgenweb/archives/pa/blair/obits/buck-clare-n.txt   (112 words)

  
 A Finding Aid to the Peter Hurd and Henriette Wyeth Hurd Papers, 1917-1989, in the Archives of American Art
Edinburgh Regional College - Eiseman, Douglass W. Eisenstaedt, Alfred - Elms Gallery
Ed - Alexander, George W. Alford, J. - Aller, Robert
Houston Chronicle - Hulse, Max D. Humble Oil and Refining Company - Hurley, Wilson D. Hutchins, Susan, 1923-1928
www.aaa.si.edu /findaids/hurdpete/hurdpete.htm   (112 words)

  
 Great Britain and the American Civil War, by Ephraim Douglass Adams.
Adams in 1913 a restriction had been imposed by the Foreign Office to the effect that while studied for information, citations and quotations were not permissible since the general diplomatic archives were not yet open to students beyond the year 1859.
Adams died, and the work was indefinitely suspended, probably wisely, since any completion of the "Life" by me would have lacked that individual charm in historical writing so markedly characteristic of all that Mr.
Charles Moore, Chief of Manuscripts Division, Library of Congress, for the use of the Schurz Papers containing copies of the despatches of Schleiden, Minister of the Republic of Bremen at Washington during the Civil War.
www.gutenberg.org /dirs/1/3/7/8/13789/13789-h/13789-h.htm   (112 words)

  
 Life of Charles Adams,
Adams was collaborating with Charles <b>Francisb> Adams, Jr.
Ephraim Douglass Adams was born in Decorah, Iowa, on December 18, 1865.
Professor Adams taught European history for his first six years at Stanford, but in 1908, with the reorganization of the department, he took over recent American history, and especially British-American relations.
www-sul.stanford.edu /depts/spc/sgml/sc0142.sgm   (112 words)

  
 BrothersJudd.com - Review of <b>Francisb> Fukuyama's Our Posthuman Future: Consequences of The Biotechnology Revolution
-REVIEW : of The Great Disruption: Human Nature and the Reconstitution of Social Order, by <b>Francisb> Fukuyama (Douglass C. North, Reason)
When, some thirteen years ago now, <b>Francisb> Fukuyama published his famous essay The End of History, he argued that Man had basically reached the end form of government in the liberal democratic state.
-INTERVIEW: <b>Francisb> Fukuyama: Globalization "This is an interview with <b>Francisb> Fukuyama, a professor of public policy at George Mason University in the USA.
www.brothersjudd.com /index.cfm/fuseaction/reviews.detail/book_id/988   (4974 words)

  
 sc0142.xml
Ephraim Douglass Adams was born in Decorah, Iowa, on December 18, 1865.
Adams was collaborating with Charles <b>Francisb> Adams, Jr.
The Adams papers also include correspondence pertaining to the establishment of the National Archives (J. Franklin Jameson).
www-sul.stanford.edu /depts/spc/xml/sc0142.xml   (686 words)

  
 sc0142.xml
Adams was collaborating with Charles <b>Francisb> Adams, Jr.
Ephraim Douglass Adams was born in Decorah, Iowa, on December 18, 1865.
He then joined the history department of the University of Kansas, and eventually became professor of European History, resigning to accept an appointment at Stanford in 1902.
www-sul.stanford.edu /depts/spc/xml/sc0142.xml   (686 words)

  
 Civil War History Books
Inside the Army of the Potomac: The Civil War Experience of Captain <b>Francisb> Adams Donaldson
Lincoln's Tragic Admiral: The Life Of Samuel <b>Francisb> Du Pont (Nation Divided)
The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave (Barnes & Noble C : An American Slave (B&N Classics Trade Paper)
www.spinics.net /civilwar.php   (8534 words)

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