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Topic: George H. Moses


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In the News (Tue 22 Dec 09)

  
 American Journal of Economics and Sociology, The: Moses—Henry George's inspiration - Religious Foundations of Social Policy
Moses gains great respect in the eyes of Henry George for rejecting God's offer to replace the existing Israelites with a new nation composed of Moses and his descendants.
Moses declines the Divine offer in favor of preserving the present, albeit sinful, people, and receives George's praise for "his unselfish desire to make humanity better, happier, nobler" (George 1878:23).
This is what George means when he speaks of Moses "subordinating to the good of his people the natural disposition to found a dynasty which in his case would have been so easy" (George 1878:23).
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m0254/is_5_60/ai_82469388   (1565 words)

  
 Scott County in the Civil War
Company E, veterans: Capt. Andrew J. Finch, Lieutenants Napoleon W. Pavey, William Shirk; sergeants, John Jorsyth, Thomas B. Piersol; corporals, William Lewis, William Ammond, Charles Emeigh; privates, George Bigelow, Thomas Barrett, John Flanagan, Solmon Knapp, George Mooney, Jesse R. Pratt, Nelson L. Post, Nicholas Rusch, William Stokes, Daniel Shook, James Swin and James Ward.
Twelfth infantry: This included William McManus, of Company A; Jacob Graham and Ira Swain of Company E, and James B. McGill, of Company H. Fifteenth infantry: Company A contained privates William Hershberger, James H. King, John Miller and George Knight.
In Company A, Scott county was represented by private Alexander Osburn: in Company E, by privates Chandler W. Ellsworth and William D. Earhart: in Company H by Sergeant David K. Webster.
iagenweb.org /civilwar/county/scott/cw_chap21.htm   (9772 words)

  
 genconspec1883.htm
The Brethren in Christ were represented by the following delegates: George W. Wright, Moses Blackburn, George W. Wright, Moses Blackburn, George B. Waitman, Daniel Walter, John Rasor, Samuel McDonald, Peter Walter, Isaiah Smail.
After a season of prayer, the conference was organized, electing Samuel McDonald, President; Daniel Brenneman, Secretary; and Moses Blackburn, Assistant Secretary.
W. Wright the discipline of the Brethren in Christ.
www.bfchistory.org /genconspec1883.htm   (771 words)

  
 Alexander Hamilton Bridge (I-95 and US 1)
When the Highbridge Interchange connecting the Washington (Heights) Bridge with the George Washington Bridge (via the old 178th Street and 179th Street tunnels) opened in 1952, Robert Moses, the New York City arterial coordinator, anticipated that it would not be long before a parallel span had to be constructed alongside the Washington Bridge.
The existing congestion on the bridge is further exacerbated by truck traffic merging across several lanes from the Major Deegan Expressway (I-87) to the roadway leading to the upper deck of the George Washington Bridge; trucks have been prohibited from the lower deck of the George Washington Bridge since September 11, 2001.
The eight-lane Alexander Hamilton Bridge (which narrows to six lanes east of the Major Deegan Expressway ramps) currently carries approximately 175,000 vehicles per day (AADT) across the Harlem River.
www.nycroads.com /crossings/alexander-hamilton   (771 words)

  
 genesisoriginal.html
Foote notes: ìMany centuries before the book of Genesis was written, even before the supposed date of Moses, the Babylonian cosmogony existed with all the chief features of the Hebrew creation story.
It was palmed off, like the priestly law, as the work of Moses; but the very historical books of the Jews, containing as they do not single allusion to the one of the other [the Hebrew cosmogony or the ëpriestly lawí given by Moses] are ample proof of the imposture.î [p.
Foote further notes that the ìChaldean order..., in the main, is marvelously like that of the Jews, and as the latter is clearly derived from the former, its ëinspirationí is a perfect absurdity...î [p.
www.bobkwebsite.com /genesisoriginal.html   (1903 words)

  
 Greene County, Ohio History
George Townsley ; sheriff, James Popenoe; treasurer, Hugh Hamill; commissioners, John Sterritt, Stephen Bell, Samuel Shaw; surveyor, Moses Collier; prosecuting attorney, John Alexander; associate judges, John Clark, Samuel Kyle, David Huston.
Clerk of court, Josiah Grover; recorder, Josiah Grover; recorder, George Townsley; sheriff, James Popenoe; treasurer, Samuel Newcomb; commissioners, William Buckles, Simeon Dunn, and Samuel Gowdy; surveyor, Moses Collier; prosecuting attorney, John Alexander; infirmary directors, George Townsley, William McKnight, and G. Galloway; associate judges, John Clark, Samuel Kyle, and David Huston.
Clerk of court, Josiah Grover; recorder, Josiah Grover; auditor, Peter Pelham ; sheriff, John Smith ; treasurer, Tensley Heath ; commissioners, David Conley, Peter Pelham, and John Sterritt; surveyor, Moses Collier; prosecuting attorney, John Alexander; associate judges, John Clark, Samuel Kyle, and David Huston.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Greene/GreeneOfficials-926.htm   (1903 words)

  
 Index to Death and Marriage Notices in the Vineyard Gazette, 1884 - 1939 A - K
Francis d 12/30/32 Cooper, Lorraine m 10/17/38 Cooper, Moses d 12/29/33 Copeland, George d 01/24/23 Corbett, Catherine m 06/21/29 Corbin, Charles F. d 03/26/37 Corbin, Nona d 07/25/33 Coriell, William W. d 07/27/37 Cornell, Enoch C. d 03/06/02 Cornell, Dr. George d 10/14/20 Correia, Mrs.
Elizabeth d 09/24/37 Araugo, Bartholomew d 07/19/32 Araujo, Frances m 05/15/25 Araujo, Jules m 01/08/26 Araujo, Mary d 04/27/34 Archer, Lois m 09/16/38 Armado, Joseph d 05/24/35 Armitage, George m 06/27/18 Armsby, Adeline d 01/08/32 Armstrong, Mrs.
Ernest d 09/30/38 Armstrong, Marguerite m 03/16/22 Arno, S. d 07/27/34 Arnold, Antoinette m 03/31/33 Arnold, Grace m 10/02/25 Arnold, John R. m 10/04/29 Arnold, Mrs.
history.vineyard.net /vgind1.htm   (5995 words)

  
 edsanders.com - Robinson Genealogy
Children of George Frederick ROBINSON were: +32 i.
Moses ROBINSON Governor of Vermont was born in 1741.
Oris or Otis V. ROBINSON was born on Jul 25 1838 in Calais, VT. He died on Sep 15 1863 in Calais, VT of typhoid fever, was a farmer..
www.edsanders.com /gen0007.htm   (1707 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Moses
Moses, George Higgins (1869-1944) — also known as George H. Moses — of Concord,
Moses, Frank — of Marshall, Calhoun County, Mich. Democrat.
Moses, David — of Wichita, Sedgwick County, Kan. Democrat.
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/moses.html   (539 words)

  
 LAKE GEORGE-SCHUYLERVILLE-CAMBRIDGE MEET
       1     Aust, Ashley                                                     Lake George                                                       1:05.74                              2
       9     Moses, Rebecca                                             Cambridge                                                            1:23.17                              2
     11     Moses, Rebecca                                             Cambridge                                                            3:19.55
armorytrack.com /out02/lakegeorge.htm   (539 words)

  
 Curry vs Stonehill
FUMBLES: Curry-Raphael Zammit 1-1; Moses Curry 1-1; Tim Philbrook 1-0; Jim Pascarelli 1-0.
4-34 2-19 RUSHING: Curry-Raphael Zammit 27-115; Moses Curry 10-49; Jarrad Jordan 2-7; Jim Pascarelli 1-minus 5; J.T. Eakins 1-minus 8; Tim Philbrook 4-minus 9.
Curry: 1-Charles Gibbs, 10-Chris Kane, 17-Pat Anderton, 20-J.T. Eakins, 29-Jason Brown, 32-Jarrad Jordan, 33-Brad Dick, 35-Matt Rapoza, 36-Kevin Durand, 46-Bob Horan, 48-Norell Veal, 51-J. Pauquette, 54-Eric Worcester, 58-Stephen Richard, 82-Stephen Sera, 89-Chris Graham.
www.stonehill.edu /athletics/curry_vs_stonehill.htm   (539 words)

  
 George Washington Carver
Moses Carver and his wife raised George and his brother as their own children, George being a sickly child he was not required to work in the fields with Moses, but was allowed to work with Mrs.
George Washington Carver was born in 1860 (apx) in a little town south of Joplin Missouri called Diamond.
He was born to a slave woman on the farm of Amos Carver it was never known for sure who his father was but he was believed to be slave on a near by farm.
www.theveggiepatch.net /george_washington_carver.htm   (423 words)

  
 276-9.txt
Torrens and Henry Moore Taylor, Alexander T. Taylor, G.L. Taylor, G.L. Taylor, George W. Taylor, H.H. Taylor, Josephine W. Taylor, Josephine W. Taylor, Louis F. Taylor, Louis F. Taylor, Moses Taylor, Moses Taylor, R.H. Taylor, R.O. Taylor, Richard Taylor, Robert Taylor, Robert J. Taylor, Robt.
Austin Vann, George Vann, George Vansickle, Alves A. Vanysith, J.I. Vaughan, Geo.
Nichols, George M. deceased's heirs and legal representatives Nichols, George M. deceased's heirs and legal representatives Nichols, M.F. Nichols, M.F. Nichols, Wiley Nichols, Wiley Nipper, L.H.A. Nix, Elbert Nix, Wm.
www.arkansasresearch.com /276-9.txt   (423 words)

  
 266-1.txt
Alexander, W.W. Alexander, William Alexander, William W. Allen, Councel Allen, Delia Allen, Felix C. Allen, Felix C. Allen, Felix C. Allen, Felix C. Allen, George Allen, H.R. Allen, Pleasant Allen, Robert L. Allen, Thos.
Scott, George W. Scott, Hannibal Scott, Harmon J. Scott, Ida Scribner, Joseph H. Scribner, Joseph H. Scruggs, Samuel Scrugs, John Searcy, Mose Sebastian, Charlie Segars, Jerry Self, Jno.
Dodd, Alexander G.W. Dodge, Charles J. Dodson, Sam'l Dollar, J.B. Dolphus, Lucy Donavan, Patrick Donnelly, J.E. Donnelly, T.J. Donohoo, J.N. Donohoo, J.N. Donohoo, J.N. Dooley, P.C. Dotson, Leevenia Dotson, Lonnie Dougherty, John C. Doughty, David Douglass, James Dowdy, Jesse Downen, J.B. Downen, Thos.
www.arkansasresearch.com /266-1.txt   (423 words)

  
 Simpson Family History
George Johnston; Thomas Poor for Taylors work; Sarah Simpson's part of the estate deld her; To George Simpson, James Halley; Samuel Canterbury, Thomas Windsor, Moses Simpson, Richard Simpson, each 36.3.0 lbs; 11 negroes delivered all devisees; (1763) John Grahams rent; (1765) Moses Simpson, Geo.
Ann Gist stated in her 1769 deposition that “the next two eldest Brothers of John Simpson and Sons of John Simpson Scotsman died about 50 years ago (as well as she remembers).” This suggests that both Thomas and George Simpson died around 1719, although Ann admitted that it was a rough estimate.
George Simpson, one of the executors of Richard Simpson, decd., exhibited this account..
simpsonhistory.com /notes/scotsman.html   (5260 words)

  
 DOES THIS PERSON EXIST ---- George H. WARD. died at sea 11 Sept. 1845Sept
Here is why I am suspitious of Elizabeth MOSES; the following General Affidavit was found in the Rhode Island Military Pension Files of my ancestor, George H. He speaks of a "distasteful woman" that his father married after the death of his mother.
In George W. Keach's File he states that he was married to Elizabeth B. Moses
George H. Keach was searching for his specific date of birth.
www.jenforum.com /ward/messages/12224.html   (5260 words)

  
 George Washington Carver
Carver was born to Mary and Giles on the Susan and Moses Carver plantation.
George was raised by Moses and Susan Carver.
George Carver was elected this in November of 1916.
www.east-buc.k12.ia.us /00_01/BH/gwc/gwc.htm   (908 words)

  
 George Washington Carver
George Washington Carver (1864-1943) started his life as a slave and ended it as a respected and world-renowned agricultural chemist.
Merely a babe in arms, Carver was ransomed for a $300 racehorse by Moses Carver, a German farmer.
In 1908 he returned to the West to visit his 96-year-old guardian, Moses Carver, and to visit the grave of his brother, James, in Missouri.
www.africawithin.com /bios/george_carver.htm   (1134 words)

  
 National American Woman Suffrage Association Papers (Library of Congress)
George A. Rock, Jo Roderick, Virginia Roewer, George E. Roewer, Rosa H. Rogers, Anne K. Rogers, Edith E. Rogers, Elizabeth Rogers, Emma W. Rogers, Fanny Rogers, Lily (3 folders) Rogers, Meyric R. Rogers, Reynold Rollins, Joseph Roosevelt, Eleanor Ross, Ishbel Rowe, L. BOX 27 REEL 18 Roworth, Harriet J. Rubin, Joseph Russell, Frances Russell, Mrs.
John J. Janney, O. Edward Janney, R. Jarvis, Mary E. Jeffrey, Jeannette A. Jennings, Mary M. Johns, J. Johns, Laura M. Johnson, Augusta B. Johnson, Ethel M. Johnson, H. Johnson, Mrs.
More recent leaders are represented by Ida Husted Harper, Mary Garrett Hay, Belle Case La Follette, E. Sylvia Pankhurst, Maud Wood Park, Mary Gray Peck, Jeannette Rankin, and Rosika Schwimmer.
www.loc.gov /rr/mss/text/nawsa.html   (1119 words)

  
 Directory of Pages each page represents one object in the collection
William H. Johnson / Dr. George Washington Car / ca.
Samuel Joseph / PORTRAIT BUST of George I / Signed and dated 1831
Juran / Buddhist Retreat by Strea / 960 - 980
www.davidrumsey.com /amico/amico6_list0.html   (3821 words)

  
 Townhall.com :: Columns :: George Washington Carver's affirmative action by Marvin Olasky
Today, it's pleasant to see Moses Carver's house, the walnut trees he planted, and the fields and creeks where George came to see God's revelation in nature's order.
If George Washington Carver, born near Joplin, is remembered at all during February's Black History Month, it will be largely for his favoring of one food.
I trusted to God and pressed on." Here, reared by Moses and Susan Carver, a white couple, Carver grew up on the land that now makes up the National Monument.
www.townhall.com /columnists/marvinolasky/mo20030128.shtml   (784 words)

  
 Newsweek: Carver: MISSOURI'S MAN FOR ALL SEASONS.(George Washington Carver National Monument)(Brief Article)@ HighBeam Research
A short time later, George was returned to the Moses Carver farm, never to see his mother again; the identity of his father was never known.
An orphan, George was reared by his slave owners Moses and Susan Carver.
In the early 1860s (exact date unknown), George Washington Carver was born into slavery on a farm in tumultuous Missouri during the Civil War.
highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1G1:20645574&...   (232 words)

  
 Civil Rights Movement Veterans -- Bibliography
Civil Rights Marches (Cornerstones of Freedom), by Linda George and Charles George.
The struggle for civil rights in the Mississippi Delta and the role of the state in maintaining segregation and repressing the Movement.
Civilities and Civil Rights: Greensboro, N.C. and the Sruggle for Freedom, by William Henry Chafe.
www.crmvet.org /biblio.htm   (232 words)

  
 George Bliss
George Bliss and Hannah Clark of Springfield, MA Hon.
Moses Bliss and Abigail Metcalf of Springfield, MA Hon.
Thomas Bliss and Margaret Hulins of England and Springfield, MA Samuel Bliss and Mary Leonard of Springfield, MA Ebenezer Bliss and Mary Gaylord of Springfield, MA Jedediah Bliss and Rachel Sheldon of Springfield, MA Hon.
www.usgennet.org /family/bliss/bios/ma/george2.htm   (232 words)

  
 Moses Wisner - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moses Wisner (June 3, 1815–January 5, 1863) was a politician and soldier from the U.S. state of Michigan.
Wisner Township, Michigan in Tuscola County is named after Moses Wisner.
He studied law while working at the law firm of his brother, George W. Wisner, and Rufus Hosmer.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Moses_Wisner   (346 words)

  
 rosen.htm
He is survived by his widow, Kathryn Rosen, his daughter, Bonnie Rosen Moses, wife of Perry Moses, III and their children, Michelle and Perry Moses, IV, of Sumter, by his daughter, Dr. Deborah Rosen, of Slidell, Louisiana; and his son, Louis Rosen, South Carolina Court Administrator, and his two children, George and John Rosen.
Louis Rosen held court in a firm and disciplined manner, and always with the courtliness of a Southern gentleman.
Judge Rosen was a member of the American Bar Association, the South Carolina Bar Association and the Orangeburg County Bar Association.
www.law.sc.edu /memory/rosen.htm   (346 words)

  
 Moses Gomberg
In 1884 his father, George Gomberg, was accused of anti-Czarist activities and the family fled to Chicago.
After enduring much hardship, Moses entered the University of Michigan and graduated with a B.Sc in 1890.
This summary is based on the obituary and list of publications published in the Journal of the American Society, 1948, Volume 69, page 2921.
cpesw3.mols.sussex.ac.uk /motm/gomberg1.html   (346 words)

  
 100 Great Black Britons -George of Lydda
George rapidly became a saint in Palestine and was held on equal footing with Moses, Elijah and St. Michael.
George is believed to have come from Cappadocia (in modern Turkey) and was raised in Palestine, and held the important rank of tribune in the Roman army.
St George on his white horse came to be regarded as the quintessential Christian soldier, whose protection was increasingly invoked in the Near East as the Christian communities were attacked by the Saracens.
www.100greatblackbritons.com /bios/george_of_lydda.html   (346 words)

  
 Black Pioneers of Oregon
George Bush was a veteran of the War of 1812, a former employee of the Hudson's Bay Company who had been as far west as the Pacific Coast as early as the 1820s, and a wealthy farmer and rancher in western Missouri before becoming an Oregon Trail emigrant in 1844.
George Bush remained in The Dalles with the party's cattle, rejoining them in the spring when the cattle could be ferried across the river.
The story is also told that George Bush had trapped the Puget Sound area as an HBC employee in the 1820s, and he knew exactly where he was going from the moment he left Missouri.
www.endoftheoregontrail.org /blakbios.html   (2449 words)

  
 Black - Cleveland/Rutherford/Old Tryon
George Fraser Black, former director of the New York Public Library and author of "Surnames of Scotland," said the Black surname was common in St. Andrews and Prestwick, Scotland, in the 15th and 16th centuries and was very common in Edinburgh in the 17th century.
Moses Black appears in the 1810, 1820 and 1830 Rutherford County Census but is not listed in Rutherford or adjacent counties in 1800 or 1840.
(George, who was Hugh's father, was a justice of the peace and member of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, a predecessor to today's county commissions, and was a signer of the Tryon Resolves, which predated the Declaration of Independence by nearly a full year.)
www.angelfire.com /tn/blackfamily   (1820 words)

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