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Topic: Henry Carey


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In the News (Sun 3 Jun 12)

  
  Henry Carey - Search Results - MSN Encarta
Carey, Henry Charles (1793-1879), American economist, known for his advocacy of protective tariffs.
Henry Carey may refer to: Henry Charles Carey (1793–1879), American economist; Henry Carey (writer) (1687–1743), dramatist and songwriter; Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon (1525...
Henry Carey by an unknown artist In the collection of the estate of the 8th Earl of Berkeley
encarta.msn.com /Henry_Carey.html   (185 words)

  
  Henry Carey Hunsdon - LoveToKnow 1911
This title became extinct on the death of the 2nd earl, John, in 1677, and a like fate befell the barony of Hunsdon on the death of the 8th baron, William Ferdinand, in June 1765.
Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Spencer of Althorp, and wife of the 2nd Lord Hunsdon, is celebrated as the patroness of her kinsman, the poet Spenser; and either this lady or her daughter Elizabeth was the author of the Tragedie of Marian (1613).
His son and successor, Henry (1596-1661), is known as a translator of various French and Italian books.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Henry_Carey_Hunsdon   (423 words)

  
 NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Henry Carey
Henry Carey was the eldest son of Mathew Carey, an Irish freedom fighter who was recruited to the intelligence networks established by Benjamin Franklin, and sent to Philadelphia to run what was then the largest printing operation in North America.
Carey's first major statement of his new position was the 1845 pamphlet Commercial Associations in France and England, followed in 1848 by the book, Past, Present, and Future.
Henry's mother, Lady Mary Carey (born Mary Boleyn), was mistress to King Henry VIII of England, beginning sometime in 1520.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Henry-Carey   (276 words)

  
  From Revolution to Reconstruction: Biographies: Henry Carey
Henry Carey was the eldest son of Mathew Carey, an Irish freedom fighter who was recruited to the intelligence networks established by Benjamin Franklin, and sent to Philadelphia to run what was then the largest printing operation in North America.
Carey's first major statement of his new position was the 1845 pamphlet Commercial Associations in France and England, followed in 1848 by the book, Past, Present, and Future.
Carey became one of the most prominent supporters of the new Republican Party, as it struggled into existence, then national dominance, in the last half of the 1850s.
www.let.rug.nl /~usa/B/hcarey/henryc1.htm   (684 words)

  
  Henry Carey (writer) at AllExperts
Henry Carey was born in London and The Gentleman's Magazine said in 1795 that he was the illegitimate son of George Savile, 1st Marquess of Halifax.
Carey was an admirer and subscriber to the operas of Handel, but he, like John Gay and Alexander Pope, thought that the operatic stars were absurd.
Although Carey complained that his enemies were calling him "Ballad-maker," the work was praised later by Charles Burney, and in the 19th century opinion of Carey's clear, simple, and memorable ballad tunes went even higher.
en.allexperts.com /e/h/he/henry_carey_(writer).htm   (2462 words)

  
 Westminster Abbey - The Library and Archives - People Buried or Commemorated - Henry Carey, Baron Hunsdon
The monument to Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon (1525-1596) in St John the Baptist’s chapel is the tallest in the Abbey at thirty-six feet high.
Henry was the only son of William Carey (or Cary) (d.1529) and Mary, daughter of Thomas Boleyn (or Bullen), Earl of Wiltshire, and sister of Anne.
In 1545 Henry Carey married Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Morgan of Arkestone in Herefordshire.
www.westminster-abbey.org /library/burial/carey.htm   (371 words)

  
 Henry_Carey,_1st_Baron_Hunsdon   (Site not responding. Last check: )
He was the son of Sir William Carey, Gentleman of the Privy Chamber and Esquire of the Body to King Henry VIII of England, and his wife Mary Boleyn, who had once been a mistress of the King.
Henry's royal aunt was beheaded in the summer of 1536, on false charges of treason and adultery.
The victorious Henry was appointed Warden of the East Marches and represented the Queen in signing a treaty with the Regent on October 23 1571.
copernicus.subdomain.de /Henry_Carey%2C_1st_Baron_Hunsdon   (1257 words)

  
 Henry C. Carey (1793-1879)
Henry Carey was the eldest son of Mathew Carey, an Irish freedom fighter who was recruited to the intelligence networks established by Benjamin Franklin, and sent to Philadelphia to run what was then the largest printing operation in North America.
Carey's first major statement of his new position was the 1845 pamphlet Commercial Associations in France and England, followed in 1848 by the book Past, Present, and Future.
Carey became one of the most prominent supporters of the new Republican Party, as it struggled into existence, then national dominance, in the last half of the 1850s.
www.thelatinlibrary.com /chron/civilwarnotes/carey.html   (858 words)

  
 The Trial of Henry Carey and William Pickett
In Carey's pocket was found a knife which would be identified by the son of the murdered man, as his fathers property, and his boots when compared with the with foot-prints discovered at the scene of the struggle were found to correspond in every particular.
Carey was there, too, but not with me: he slept at the other end of the hovel." Carey said, "I slept on the premises of George Sands with Pickett.
Carey not able to write, made his mark, in the presence of the Governor and one of the wardens of the prison.
rbrothwell.tripod.com /trial/index.htm   (8708 words)

  
 Henry Carey - LoveToKnow 1911
His mother is supposed to have been a schoolmistress, and Carey himself taught music at various schools.
The present tune set to these words, however, is not the one written by Carey, but is borrowed from an earlier song, "The Country Lasse," which is printed in The Merry Musician (vol.
It has been claimed for him that he was the author of "God save the King" (see National Anthems).
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Henry_Carey   (321 words)

  
 From Revolution to Reconstruction: Biographies: Henry Carey
The Dictionary of American Biography states that Carey "made the fundamental departure [from the British economic theorists] of declaring that land derives its value from the capital expended on it," and that workers' wages increase faster than the returns of capital, thus tending towards "a progressive diffusion of wealth among the poorest classes of society."
Carey became a regular contributor to Horace Grails New York Tribune, and began a correspondence with leading political figures on the major issues of economic and finance.
Carey's next book was The Harmony of Interests: Agricultural, Manufacturing & Commercial, published in 1851, and is notable for its repeated and fierce attacks on British economic doctrines.
odur.let.rug.nl /~usa/B/hcarey/henryc1.htm   (684 words)

  
 Henry Carey - LoveToKnow 1911   (Site not responding. Last check: )
His mother is supposed to have been a schoolmistress, and Carey himself taught music at various schools.
The present tune set to these words, however, is not the one written by Carey, but is borrowed from an earlier song, "The Country Lasse," which is printed in The Merry Musician (vol.
It has been claimed for him that he was the author of "God save the King" (see National Anthems).
54.1911encyclopedia.org /C/CA/CAREY_HENRY.htm   (321 words)

  
 HENRY CAREY (1793-1879)
Carey's first large work on political economy was preceded and followed by many smaller volumes on wages, the credit system, interest, slavery, copyright, &c.; and in 1858-1859 he gathered the fruits of his lifelong labors into The Principles of Social Science, in three volumes.
It is, in Carey's view, the overcoming of these difficulties by arduous and continued effort that entitles the first occupier of land to his property in the soil.
Carey, who had set out as an earnest advocate of free trade, accordingly arrived at the doctrine of protection: the coordinating power in society must intervene to prevent private advantage from working public mischief.
yamaguchy.netfirms.com /7897401/carey/carey.html   (854 words)

  
 Henry C. Carey
The son of an Irish immigrant, Henry Carey was a nineteenth-century economist, debater and political muckraker.
Carey lived in Alcazar, just two buildings from the Camden and Amboy railroad through Burlington.
He hated the concept of business monopolies, and wrote a series of letters against the monopoly of the Camden and Amboy beginning in the late 1840's.
08016.com /carey.html   (136 words)

  
 Henry Carey - Encyclopedia.com
Henry is already a legend; Top Cat: Brian Cody say Henry Shefflin, top, is the best.
That Shefflin and Carey are being assessed as amongst...
Carey and fellow hit-men Charlie Carter and Henry Shefflin went on a scoring...
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-CareyH.html   (988 words)

  
 The Website of King Henry VIII - Ask Henry. Questions 1 to 199
Henry means master of the house and was usually a royal name for a first born son, Katherine my first wife and I had a son called Henry but he died very young.
Henry took on the Palace from Wolsey when it was not yet finished; he employed 70 Masons, 80 Bricklayers, 20 Joiners, 45 Carpenters and 200 labourers to finish off the palace to his taste.
Henry was not displeased with this mistake because he only ever saw himself on a day to day basis in a mirror, so he thought they were quite accurate.
www.henrytudor.co.uk /page18.htm   (22708 words)

  
 Henry CAREY (1° B. Hundson)
This boy was called Henry Fitzroy - the surname traditionally given to royal bastards - and was ennobled, given the title Duke of Richmond.
William Carey died on 23 Jun 1528 and Henry VIII promptly granted Anne Boleyn the wardship of her nephew (and possibly his son), two-year-old Henry Carey.
In 1559, on the accession of Elizabeth to the throne, Henry Carey was ennobled as Baron Hunsdon, with lands in Hertfordshire, Kent, and Hampshire, and becomes Elizabeth's Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners, the Queen's personal bodyguard.
www.tudorplace.com.ar /Bios/HenryCarey(1BHundson).htm   (419 words)

  
 George CAREY (2°B.Hundson)
Born in 1547 to Henry Carey and Anne Morgan, the eldest of ten children; George's paternal grandmother was Mary Boleyn, Anne Boleyn's elder sister, making Queen Elizabeth I and Henry Carey first cousins.
On the accession of Elizabeth to the throne, Henry Carey is ennobled as Baron Hunsdon, with lands in Hertfordshire, Kent, and Hampshire, and becomes Elizabeth's Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners, the Queen's personal bodyguard.
Both Henry and George Carey were patrons of a professional theatre troupe in London, commonly known as the "Lord Chamberlain's Men" - this patronage included William Shakespeare with some lesser lights.
www.tudorplace.com.ar /Bios/GeorgeCarey(2BHundson).htm   (693 words)

  
 The Henry Rollins Show
Henry continues to give us his unique take on the current state of pop culture, politics and everything entertainment, for better or worse.
Henry does speaking dates all over the world every year and, along with the band dates, has averages over one hundred shows a year for twenty-five years.
Henry has also appeared in two specials on IFC: "Henry Rollins: Uncut from NYC" in 2005 (now available on DVD) and "Henry Rollins: Uncut from Israel," which premieres on April 13th at 9 pm ET before this season's first episode of The Henry Rollins Show.
www.ifc.com /series?aId=18032   (579 words)

  
 Joseph Carey 1831-1910   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Joseph Carey was the son of Edward and Rachel Carey.
He and his younger brother Henry Carey, along with his half-sister Mary Ann Bland, were brought up by their mother and stepfather Thomas Bland.
At the Quarter Sessions held at Spilsby on the 10th July 1860, Joseph Carey and Henry Howden were found guilty of stealing forty seven stones of wheat, the property of John Thompson of Frithville.
rbrothwell.tripod.com /jcarey/Joseph.htm   (668 words)

  
 Henry Carey - MSN Encarta
Carey spent much of his life in London, where he made a precarious living from his plays, verses, and tunes.
Carey is famous for his ballad “Sally in Our Alley” (1729), which celebrates the love of a London apprentice.
In “Namby Pamby” (1729) he ridicules the poet Ambrose Philips, who was known for his pomposity and for the fervor of his political convictions.
encarta.msn.com /encyclopedia_762508015/Carey_Henry.html   (150 words)

  
 Henry Carey Ripped Britain's 'Free Trade' Looting System
Henry C. Carey, largely written out of today's ``revisionist'' history books, is to be credited, perhaps more than any other single individual, with pursuing the policies which kept alive the American System.
Henry Carey's background is rooted in republican humanist traditions.
His father, Mathew Carey, was an Irish republican revolutionary, strongly influenced by circles who were, in turn, influenced by Jonathan Swift.
members.tripod.com /~american_almanac/hcarey.htm   (3247 words)

  
 Franklin Fire Insurance Company signed by Henry Carey (Famous Economist) 1835
Henry Charles Carey Henry Charles Carey (December 15, 1793 - October 13, 1879), American economist, was born in Philadelphia.
At the age of twenty-eight he succeeded his father, Mathew Carey (1760-1839) an influential economist, political reformer, editor, and publisher, of Irish birth, but for many years a resident of Philadelphia as a member of the publishing firm of Carey & Lea, which was long the most conspicuous in America.
Carey's first large work on political economy was preceded and followed by many smaller volumes on wages, the credit system, interest, slavery, copyright, etc.; and in 1858-1859 he gathered the fruits of his lifelong labours into The Principles of Social Science, in three volumes.
www.scripophily.net /henrycarey.html   (1449 words)

  
 Henry Carey Letterbook
Henry Carey, son of the noted Philadelphia publisher Matthew Carey, purchased control of his father's firm in 1821.
The senior Carey was near bankruptcy when his son took control of the publishing house.
The correspondence between Matthew and Henry Carey details the complicated arrangements made to reestablish their business and personal finances.
www.clements.umich.edu /Webguides/Arlenes/C/Carey.html   (92 words)

  
 Henry Charles Carey
Carey, a description of the man's life and career, and writings should first be examined.
Carey=s opposition of the Ricardian Rent Theory is expressed in his APrinciples of Political Economy@.
Carey goes on to state that all classes of people are driven by profit, even at the exclusion of the consumer
www.geocities.com /bigmike_75/essays/philosophy/carey.html   (2903 words)

  
 Luminarium Encyclopedia. The Lord Chamberlain's Men.
After Carey was made Lord Chamberlain in 1585, another company was created from the original Hunsdon's Men and members from several other theatre companies, including the Lord Strange's Men; this new company, Lord Chamberlain's Men, began performing around 1590.
Their home was at first the theatre in Newington Butts, and possibly the Cross Keys Inn in London, before the company is thought to have moved to James Burbage's The Theatre in Shoreditch.
After Henry Carey's death in 1596, his son, George Carey, 2nd Lord Hunsdon, became patron to the company, which again came to be known as Lord Hunsdon's Men.
www.luminarium.org /encyclopedia/chamberlainsmen.htm   (515 words)

  
 RootsWeb's WorldConnect Project: Bowie, Costello, Cox, Engels, Gundlach, Herr, Meyer, Rick, Ryan, Schumacher, Wagner*
Henry Carey, first cousin through his mother (sister of Ann e Boleyn) of Elizabeth I, was created by her Baron Hunsdo n of Hunsdon in Jan 1558/9 shortly after her accession.
If one assumes that Henry Carey's actual father wa s his official one, there is a connection with the Carys Vi scounts Falkland through Henry's uncle Sir John Cary, grand father of the 1st Viscount.
This Mary, wh o was sister to Anne Boleyn (Queen Consort to Henry VIII), is said to have been, at the time of or after her marriag e (4 Feb 1520/1), mistress to the King, who is even suppose d to have been the father of Henry Carey, her son.
worldconnect.rootsweb.com /cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=sueream&id=I94361   (1350 words)

  
 Sir George Carey's biography
Sir John Oglander in his Memoirs commends Carey for his great hospitality when residing in the castle of Carisbrook; and further speaks of his government as a period when the Isle of Wight was at its most flourishing state.
He relates (with much apparent satisfaction) that "in Sir George Carey's time, any attorney coming to settle in the island was, by his command, with a pound of candles hanging at his breech lighted, with bells about his legs, hunted owte of the island".
Both Henry and George Carey were patrons of a professional theatre troupe in London, commonly known as the "Lord Chamberlain's Men" - this patronage included William Shakespeare with some lesser lights.
www.angelfire.com /ca2/tbaldacci/george.html   (842 words)

  
 1ST BARON HENRY CAREY ... - Online Information article about 1ST BARON HENRY CAREY ...
Henry, 4th Baron Hunsdon, was created See also:
His son and successor, Henry (1596-166r), is known as a translator of various See also:
The title of earl of Monmouth became extinct on his death in June 1661.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /HOR_I25/HUNSDON_HENRY_CAREY_1ST_BARON_c.html   (655 words)

  
 The American System vs. British Free Trade Looting
We begin with from the writings and speeches of President Lincoln's economics adviser, Henry C. Carey, and President William McKinley, both before and after he entered the White House in 1896.
Henry C. Carey, adviser to Abraham Lincoln, and perhaps the leading American System economist, wrote extensively exposing the failure of the British free trade approach and demonstrating the success of the American System.
Henry C. Carey, economics adviser to Abraham Lincoln.
www.members.tripod.com /~american_almanac/carey95.htm   (2902 words)

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