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Topic: John Bachman


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In the News (Mon 4 Jun 12)

  
  Sacramento Lawyer: John Bachman
John's family and friends will tell you that in addition to his sense of humor he is marked by a strong sense of optimism and determination.
John was rushed to the hospital and when his medical team had determined what had happened John's family was told that he probably would not survive.
John's heart was accustomed to working at elevated levels and that conditioning allowed it to cope with demands made on it, particularly right after the aneurism.
www.sacbar.org /members/saclawyer/sept_oct2003/bachman.html   (992 words)

  
 More About the John Bachman Group
John Bachman was born on Feb. 4, 1790 in Rhinebeck, New York.
In 1814, he was ordained as a Lutheran minister, and called to serve the church of St. Johns, in Charleston, S.C. There, he met a number of naturalists associated with the South Carolina Medical College.
Bachman wrote a large portion of the manuscript and edited all of it.
southcarolina.sierraclub.org /bachman/jb.htm   (210 words)

  
 ELCA Family History Answer to 1813 question   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Bachman displayed sympathy, wisdom and power as a pastor and was a leader in the organization of the Southern church.
Bachman joined the South Carolina Synod at its second convention and was its president for many years, leading in the establishment of the theological seminary at Lexington (later at Newberry) and Newberry College.
Bachman was the first leader after Muhlenberg to urge the preparation of a common order of service.
www.elca.org /communication/timeline/1813.html   (331 words)

  
 St. John's Lutheran Church, Charleston, SC - History of the Church
John Bachman was born a Swiss farmer's son in Rhinebeck, New York.
Bachman played a crucial role in the emergence of St. John's as one of the most important Lutheran churches in South Carolina.
Bachman's wife, Harriet, died in 1846, and two years later he married his sister-in-law Maria, who had lived with the family throughout the first marriage to help with the children.
www.stjohnscharleston.org /history/bachman.html   (632 words)

  
 John Bachman - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Bachman (February 4, 1790 - February 24, 1874) was an American naturalist.
He was a proponent of secular and religious education and helped found Newberry College and the Lutheran Theological Southern Seminary, as well as the South Carolina Lutheran Synod.
To enhance public understanding of John Bachman's accomplishments, the Newberry College Alumni Association held a major international John Bachman Symposium in April 2006, the beginning of the College's 150th anniversary celebration.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Bachman   (308 words)

  
 crew   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
John graduated from the University of Georgia with a BA in Political Science and an ABJ in Broadcast News.
John's to goal is to "be there when history happens", and hopes his reporting will take him around the world.
John did live in Tampa for 8 years, and is very happy to be near the beach.
www.news12now.com /crew/John_Bachman.html   (222 words)

  
 Newberry College John Bachman Symposium - April 2006
Two of Bachman's fourteen children, Maria Rebecca Bachman and Mary Elizabeth Bachman, married Audubon's sons, John Woodhouse and Victor Gifford respectively, but both died within a few years of their marriage, Maria Rebecca after giving birth to two daughters (Lucy and Harriet), Mary Elizabeth dying childless.
A tour of Charleston, SC with a visit to St. John’s Lutheran Church where Bachman was minister for 56 years and where he and some members of his family are buried; we also visited the Charleston Museum (has many Bachman holdings).
John Bachman’s surname—"Backman" or "Bachman" (as in Johann Sebastian Bach).
www.minniesland.com /lounge_Susan_Davis_Bachman_Symposium.html   (923 words)

  
 Official Cape Romain Bird Observatory Web Site
In late March, 1833 the renowned naturalist Reverend John Bachman (pronounced "back-man") was traveling home to Charleston from his friend Major Lee's in Colleton County, SC.
Since he suspected the bird was new to science, Reverend Bachman shot it for preservation as a museum specimen.
This correspondence recounts Bachman's collecting of the first male specimen of Bachman's Warbler, which he presented to his friend Audubon to paint.
www.crbo.net /Bachman.html   (560 words)

  
 ArtNotes: John James Audubon
On his 1831-1832 trip, he spent time in Charleston, South Carolina where he met the Reverend John Bachman who became a close friend and important ally in helping Audubon to establish a reputation as a credible naturalist.
Bachman wrote the text for Audubon's second series, "The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America," which, published in three volumes between 1845-1848, made the reputation of the senior Audubon.
Bachman's sister-in-law, and later his second wife, Maria Martin, also assisted in painting the backgrounds and plants.
www.ready-to-hang.com /LCP_ArtNotes/John_Audubon_Bio.htm   (586 words)

  
 Article 1: Bibliography of John Bachman
John Bachman (1790-1874) is best known as the co-author with John James Audubon of The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America.
The 1888 biography of Bachman stated that he made “contributions in the Southern Agricultural Journal, published as editorials, from 1835 to 1840.”(Bachman 1888: 435.)This publication was evidently the Southern Agriculturalist, and Register of Rural Affairs; Adapted to the Southern Section of the United States(see 1833A1 and 1833B2).
Bachman’s most important insight was that the varieties of men were produced by causes similar to those that produced varieties of domesticated animals, and in this, hismost important book, he established the point conclusively.
www.cofc.edu /~waddelle/Bibliography.htm   (5236 words)

  
 A naturalist in the Old South. John Bachman (1790-1874) (Food for thought) -
The bare facts of John Bachman’s life are impressive, but it is the man himself who attracts you, creating a desire to tramp the fields with him or to spend time by his fireside.
Next year Newberry College will honor John Bachman with a symposium entitled “Nature, God and Social Reform in the Old South: The Life and Work of the Rev. John Bachman.” He may have lived over 130 years ago, but we would have been glad to have him as an A Rocha member.
John Bachman and the Charleston Circle of Naturalists, 1815-1895.
en.arocha.org /usathought/index2.html   (1195 words)

  
 Audubon's Quadrupeds of North America - folio
Bachman's daughters both died of consumption, Maria in 1840 (after bearing two daughters) and Mary Eliza in 1841, but the strain and pain of these untimely deaths did not ultimately lessen Bachman's commitment to his friends.
Bachman was disappointed by the paucity of concrete data to come out of the trip, and was further frustrated by the Audubon family's inability to supply him with needed references and information.
The letterpress for the Imperial Folio Edition was written by John Bachman, with portions based on Audubon's field journals, and with the assistance of Maria Martin (his sister-in-law and second wife) and Victor Audubon.
www.minniesland.com /study_Imperial_Folio.html   (2758 words)

  
 H-Net Review: Alex O. Boulton on Science, Race, and Religion in the American South: John ...
Bachman's work was unique among the members of the Charleston circle, and of most American scientists of the day, in advocating a biblical view of an essential unity of mankind.
Bachman believed that fls, while not originally inferior to whites, had fallen due to climate and circumstance so low as to be permanently stamped with their inferior characteristics.
He could have discussed Bachman's African American protege, Daniel Alexander Payne who, when his school for fls in Charleston was closed, traveled North, and became first a Lutheran minister, then a leading member of the AME church, and ultimately the president and the principle founder of Wilberforce University.
www.h-net.org /reviews/showrev.cgi?path=11915984671702   (1870 words)

  
 John Bachman: Personal Background Main
Bachman was so intent on doing an accurate job with the mammmals text that he devoted ten years to writing it--and declined the presidency of the University of South Carolina lest it interfere with his work.
The friendship between John Bachman and John James Audubon was only intensified by the marriage of Audubon sons to Bachman daughters: John Woodhouse Audubon wed Maria Rebecca Bachman in 1837, and Victor Gifford Audubon married Mary Eliza Bachman a short time later.
Bachman was severely beaten and had an arm permanently paralyzed by Union soldiers, and his scientific collections and library--slated for delivery to Newberry College--were destroyed by Sherman’s Army.
www.johnbachman.org /HPersonalBackgroundMain.html   (1489 words)

  
 Celebrating a Renaissance Man   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
John Bachman was a Lutheran minister, a theologian, author, educator, and social activist.
Bachman’s work did not stop with his work with Christianity and the Lutheran church; he was also interested in natural history.
Bachman’s interest in natural history did not stop with just exploration of the woods in Charleston, but he also published books on rabbits, and contributed to the study of birds.
www.newberry.edu /@newberry/may05/bachmanlife.htm   (437 words)

  
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Bachman's sister-in-law Maria Martin, a gifted artist, assisted Audubon with the botanical background to a number of paintings, and two of Audubon's sons married Bachman daughters.
Bachman, C. John Bachman, the pastor of St. John's Lutheran Church, Charleston.
Bachman here testifies to his earlier acquaintance in Philadelphia with Alexander Wilson and to the impact Audubon's visit made on him.
www.sc.edu /library/spcoll/audubon/audubon8.html   (421 words)

  
 John James Audubon
A thorough scholar, Bachman was intellectually and emotionally involved with the study of natural history.
Bachman was an amateur in natural history, but was accepted as a reputable colleague by naturalists in both America and England.
Truly, Bachman had been working with mammals before Audubon started his efforts, and it is Bachman who is properly credited with a majority of the new species.
www.bobpickett.org /john_james_audubon.htm   (3557 words)

  
 St. John's Lutheran Church
Dr. John Bachman, from Rhinebeck, New York, became St. John's pastor in 1815, and directed the construction of the current church.
Bachman was pastor until 1874, including the tumultuous years surrounding the Civil War.
John's Lutheran Church is located at 5 Clifford St., at the intersection of Archdale St. The building is open to the public Monday-Friday, 9:00am to 4:00pm.
www.cr.nps.gov /nr/travel/charleston/stj.htm   (401 words)

  
 No. 891: Maria Martin
Maria Martin was the younger sister of Harriet Bachman, who, in turn, was the wife of the Rev. John Bachman.
John Bachman was an important student of animal, bird, and plant life.
John James Audubon while Audubon was in Charleston.
www.uh.edu /engines/epi891.htm   (451 words)

  
 Bachman's Warbler - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bachman's Warbler (Vermivora bachmanii) was a small passerine bird that inhabited the swamps and lowland forests of the southeast United States.
This bird was discovered in 1832 by the Reverend John Bachman, who presented study skins and descriptions to his friend and collaborator, John James Audubon.
Audubon's folio renderings of a male and female Bachman's Warbler (see right) were painted on top of an illustration of the Franklinia tree first painted by Maria Martin, Bachman's sister-in-law and one of the country's first female natural history illustrators.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Bachman's_Warbler   (262 words)

  
 DallasPioneer.org: Stories of the Pioneers: Pioneers: Bachman, John Branaman
John Bachman was the son of Dr. Daniel Bachman of Delina, Tennessee, (Marshall County).
Margaret and John Bachman became the parents of three boys: W. Fletcher, Daniel, and Samuel Hughes; and four daughters: Zuleika Elmira, Alice Amanda, Mary Ann and Letitia Jane.
John Bachman was a Methodist lay preacher, as well as a farmer.
www.dallaspioneer.org /stories/pioneers.php?ID=233   (457 words)

  
 [No title]
Trinity, a mostly fl congregation and St. John, a mostly white congregation, have new African American pastors.
St. John Lutheran Church a few blocks away is one of the oldest congregations in Saginaw.
John called an African American pastor because, first of all, she was the best available pastor we could find.
www.elca.org /mosaic/summer2000.html   (4113 words)

  
 Bachman Funeral Home, Lancaster County - the oldest family-owned funeral
John's interests include public service organizations, and alternative energy awareness.
The clock case was made by Jacob Bachman in the late 1700's.
The Bachman families' recorded history as funeral providers begins in 1769, in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
www.bachmanfuneral.com /john.htm   (204 words)

  
 John Bachman's Correspondence Regarding API Primate Sanctuary   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
This is the personal home page of John A. Bachman, a former API Primate Sanctuary volunteer who is a long-time animal rights activist.
John was a volunteer at the sanctuary for over three years.
John Bachman's Correspondence With Michelle Thew and Ned Buyukmichi
home.earthlink.net /~jabachman/api.htm   (259 words)

  
 CURRICULUM VITAE for John W   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Bachman, John; Gregory McDonald, B.S.; and OBrien, Ph.D., "A Study of Out-of Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Northeastern Minnesota," JAMA,Vol.
Bachman, John, "New Perspectives on Rural Defibrillation," Annals of Emergency Medicine, April 1988.
Bachman, John, keynote speaker on Obstetrics, University of Toronto, 1994.
www.crmef.org /aafp01/BachmanCV.htm   (992 words)

  
 John James Audubon (1785 - 1851) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
John James Audubon was born in Hatiti to a French sea captain and a chambermaid.
John James Audubon, Douglass" Squirrel, a study for pl. 48 ofViviparous Quadripeds of North America by John James Audubon and Rev. John Bachman (New York: John James Audubon, 1845-1848), circa 1843
Curator of the Whitney Gallery of Western Art Sarah Boehme explains, John James Audubon is associated with artistic images of birds, with conservation issues, and with geographic locations of the Deep South.
wwar.com /masters/a/audubon-john_james.html   (1169 words)

  
 Gwen John (1876 - 1939) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
John is a painter of light and colour, who likes to work in front of his subject.
John Nolan was born in Dublin Ireland in 1958.
John Swope began his career in film and theatre in the early 1930s when, as a student at Harvard University, he joined the University Players theatrical group, which included Henry Fonda, Josh Logan and Jimmy Stewart.
wwar.com /masters/j/john-gwen.html   (1651 words)

  
 Scout.com: John Bachman Update
Bachman admits he will probably redshirt his freshman year, but says that he just wants the chance for playing time.
Bachman has a plan for getting more D1 attention, “I want to work on my strength for the D-1 level.
Bachman is being recruited as an offensive guard.
virginia.scout.com /2/247958.html   (234 words)

  
 John Bachman - Football Recruiting   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Bachman is excited with the new direction the offense appears headed.
As a junior, Bachman was named all-conference on both sides of the ball, and all-WPIAL and honorable mention all-state as an offensive lineman.
Bachman was also honored by being named to the Harrisburg Patriot-News' Platium 33 team.
rivals100.rivals.com /viewprospect.asp?pr_key=27145   (349 words)

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