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Topic: John Thomas Lupton


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In the News (Thu 4 Dec 08)

  
  TN Encyclopedia: JOHN THOMAS LUPTON
Chattanooga capitalist and philanthropist John Thomas Lupton was born near Winchester, Virginia in 1862.
Lupton received a law degree from the University of Virginia and settled in Chattanooga in 1887, following a visit to the home of a fellow student, Lewis Coleman.
Lupton served as vice-president of the newly chartered Coca-Cola Bottling Company and became the most successful of the three bottling pioneers.
tennesseeencyclopedia.net /imagegallery.php?EntryID=L057   (520 words)

  
  John Thomas Lupton - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Thomas Lupton (1862-1933) was an American lawyer, businessman and philanthropist.
Lupton, alongside lawyer Joseph Whitehead and Benjamin F. Thomas, was a primary investor in the Dixie Coca-Cola Bottling Company, the first Coca-Cola bottling plant in America.
Lupton gave significant financial support to a number of southern colleges and universities, Oglethorpe University and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga have both named buildings on their campuses in his honor.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Thomas_Lupton   (196 words)

  
 John Thomas Lupton
Lupton became secretary and treasurer of the Lookout Mountain Land Company, and held the position while said company was active.
Lupton have one son, age twelve, Thomas Cartter Lupton.
Lupton is a man in the prime of life, and the community may hope to see him enjoy many more years of usefulness.
www.hctgs.org /Biographies/bio_lupton_john.htm   (347 words)

  
 UTC College of Business
Lupton, a native of Virginia and graduate of the University of Virginia with a degree in law, came to Chattanooga in 1886 - the same year that Coca-Cola was formulated in Atlanta.
Lupton was made Vice President and Treasurer of the medicine company, a position he held until 1906 when he decided to devote his time to other interests.
Lupton was one of the organizers of the Volunteer State Life Insurance Company, Chairman of the Board of the Dixie Mercerizing Company, and vice-president and treasurer of the Stone Fort Land Company.
www.utc.edu /Academic/Business/HarrisChair/1999.php   (1943 words)

  
 Person Page 5
John Tufnell was born circa 1863 at Skeffington, Leicestershire.
Thomas was buried and recorded as being the infant son of Thomas and Ann of Wheat Street in the parish register on Sunday, 11 August 1833 at St George's Parish Church, Leicester, Leicestershire.
She married William Lewin, son of Thomas Lewin and Elizabeth Neal, on Monday, 11 July 1814 at All Saints Parish Church, Cossington, Leicestershire, William was from the parish of Wanlip and Ann was of this parish.
www.btinternet.com /~taylor_paul/piggins-p/p5.htm   (6450 words)

  
 EarlyChicagoHOME
(1811-1842) chartered in New York State in 1808 by John Jacob Astor and launched in 1811; the company’s headquarters were in Michilimackinac, with agents in Chicago and elsewhere in the Midwest.
female Negro slave of John Kinzie in 1812, serving as cook and housemaid; wife of Henry, also one of Kinzie`s slaves; survived the massacre of 1812 in the boat with the Kinzies, but lost her husband in the trade [see Black Jim] for Captain Heald`s release.
John Bates (1832); David Carver (1833); James A. Marshall, M.D., W. Montgomery (1835); Augustus Garrett (1835); and Mr.
www.earlychicago.com /encyclopedia.php   (3440 words)

  
 Thomas Betts Document   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
The name of Thomas Betts appears in May, 1672, at the head of a list of oufrteen residents of Norwalk, who petitioned for and received a grant of land "for the beginning of a plantation near the back side of Norwalk." This plantation was afterwards known as Wilton, where many of his descendants lived.
Thomas Betts represented the town of Norwalk in the General Assembly of the Colony, at Hartford, in the sessions of May, 1692, and October, 1694.
Thomas Betts, Jr., was born in England in 1627, and arrived on the INCREASE from London in 1635; married Rhoda St. John, daughter of Hon.
www.betts.info /thomas.html   (3749 words)

  
 Interview with jack Lupton
Lupton: A good long time ago, but I didn't know the nature of the animal until we ran into St. Paul and several of the other cities, and really since the trustees changed the psychology and the direction of Lyndhurst at my father's death in 1977 to become something that it had never been before.
Lupton: You know, I really don't think it is. I think you don't have to have much more than that good-sized nucleus of two or three thousand people that showed up at Venture that really have Chattanooga on their heart to really make a community hum and move forward.
Lupton: Maybe the key word is the willingness to take a risk and to be wrong with a lot of things that we've done.
cita.chattanooga.org /mb/LuptonI.htm   (2902 words)

  
 John Bouton to Nina Shaw
JOHN BOUTON, son of the Count Nicholas Bouton, was a Huguenot and during the existence of the great persecution fled to England, where the Government were offering to send emigrants to America, on condition they would swear allegiance to the Crown of England.
John was in Norwalk, 1655, and was one of the earliest proprietors, though his name does not appear in the Ludlow agreement.
Thomas Lupton was on the south, who sold to Platt in 1665, and in 1674 Bouton purchased of Platt.
www.dunfeeinfo.com /bouton_to_dunfee.htm   (10470 words)

  
 Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery | Christian Classics Ethereal Library
Colet's lectures on the New Testament continued for five years, until in 1504 he was made Dean of St. Paul's proceeding D.D before he left Oxford.
Lupton, sur-master of the school; two treatises on the "Hierarchies" of Dionysius (1869); "An Exposition of St.
LUPTON (London, 1883), was the foundation of most of his biographies published before the end of the seventeenth century.
www.ccel.org /ccel/herbermann/cathen04.html?term=John%20Colet   (658 words)

  
 Lupton, Thomas Goff --  Encyclopædia Britannica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
The son of Lebanese immigrants, U.S. radio, screen, and television comedian Danny Thomas was born Muzyab Rakhoob on Jan. 6, 1914, in Deerfield, Mich. He starred in the 1950s and 1960s television situation comedy Make Room for Daddy (renamed The Danny Thomas Show in 1957), winning an Emmy award in 1955.
Pope John XXII canonized him in 1323, and Pius V declared him a doctor of the church in 1567.
The dramatist and poet Thomas Godfrey was a playwright and poet in colonial America.
www.britannica.com /eb/article?tocId=9049400   (675 words)

  
 Nathaniel Thomas Lupton
LUPTON, Nathaniel Thomas, chemist, born in Frederick county, Virginia, 19 December, 1830.
He was graduated at Dickinson college in 1849, spent two winters in Heidelberg, studying chemistry under Bunsen, and was professor of chemistry and geology in Randolph Macon college in 1857-'8 and in the Southern university, Greensborough, Alabama, in 1858-'71.
Professor Lupton is a member of scientific societies, was vice-president of the American chemical society in 1880, chairman of the section on chemistry of the American association for the advancement of science in 1877, and vice-president of that association in 1880.
www.famousamericans.net /nathanielthomaslupton   (425 words)

  
 §24. Thomas Dekker. XVI. London and the Development of Popular Literature. Vol. 4. Prose and Poetry: Sir Thomas ...
Prose and Poetry: Sir Thomas North to Michael Drayton.
The tract also illustrates the intellectual exuberance of the age, which, even in burlesque, assimilated the imagery and sentiment of different ages and civilisations.
But, before Donald Lupton’s London and Country Carbonadoed (1632), none, apparently, are touched with the fascination of London streets.
bartleby.com /214/1624.html   (1611 words)

  
 Thomas Lupton ( - ) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
Thomas Lupton, Warkworth Castle on the River Coquet.
Thomas Lupton, Dartmouth Castle on the River Dart.
John Singleton Copley - Thomas Amory II c.
wwar.com /masters/l/lupton-thomas.html   (432 words)

  
 Oglethorpe University : About Us : Tour : Lupton Hall
Lupton Hall, built in 1920 and named for Chattanooga Coca-Cola bottler John Thomas Lupton, is one of the three original buildings on the present Oglethorpe University campus.
The offices of Admission, Advancement, Financial Aid, and the Registrar are also located in Lupton Hall.
The cast-bell carillon in the Lupton tower has 42 bells which chime the quarter hours.
www.oglethorpe.edu /about_us/tour/lupton_hall.asp   (85 words)

  
 Ancestors of the Kay, Star, Steel(e) & Stock families - Person Page 16
Herbert John Downham was born on 21 May 1872 at 7 Victoria Terrace, Pennywell Road, Bristol.
John Abraham Pavord was born before 4 April 1879 at Barrington, Somerset.
Frederick Thomas John Blanchard was an auxiliary postman.
www.stockfamily.nildram.co.uk /p16.htm   (1522 words)

  
 Henry County Obituaries   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Lupton was a member of the Bethany Church in Kansas City, but attended the Urich Baptist Church and the Creighton United Methodist Church.
Lupton was preceded in death by her daughter, Dorothy Briggs in 1973, two brothers Ray and Robert Hooker, and a sister Audrey Houk.
Lupton was born at Clinton, Mo., and was a resident of Urich, Mo. about twenty-five years before he moved to Kansas City twelve years ago.
www.rootsweb.com /~mohenry/obituary/l06obit.htm   (3759 words)

  
 John Martin - A Timeline of his Life 1789-1854
John also financially supports brother Richard who is also in London at this time with the Grenadier Guards.
John is now working prolifically into the early hours of the morning.
John Constable (R.A.) is supportive of the surly J.M. over R.A. issues and compares himself to JM who he holds in the '...
www.swaddleh.freeserve.co.uk /time/jmtime.htm   (4541 words)

  
 American Texts
Edited by the Rev. Edward Macomb Duff, A.M., Rector of St. Thomas' Church, Buffalo, N.Y. Milwakuee: The Young Churchman, 1900.
By the Reverend Gordon B. Wadhams and the Reverend Thomas J. Bigham, Jr.
The Establishment of the American Branch of the Guild of All Souls, An historical address by the Reverend Thomas J. Davis, delivered at the Easter Meeting of the Guild, Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, New York, 20 April 1963.
anglicanhistory.org /usa   (938 words)

  
 Family History, Lupton Chart 0600 Thomas Lupton and Matilda Dackombe   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
I am told that the father of George LUPTON was a John LUPTON.
After Thomas fulfilled his time as a State Representative for Missouri, he and his family also moved to the the State of Washington.
After her father died she moved with her mother to Aurora, Missouri to be close to Thomas and his family.
web.ukonline.co.uk /the.nook/charts/lupto600.htm   (642 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: John Thomas Lupton   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
The wave shape (known as the dynamic ribbon device) present on all Coca-Cola cans throughout the world derives from the contour of the original Coca-Cola bottles.
Meanings of franchise: Full rights of citizenship given by a country or a town, especially suffrage (political franchise) In a wider sense: any right or privilege granted by constitution or statute.
Lupton gave significant financial support to a number of southern colleges and universities, Oglethorpe University and the University of Tennessse at Chattanooga have both named buildings on their campuses in his honor.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/John-Thomas-Lupton   (424 words)

  
 5/20/2004 - Probasco, Chapin Recount Benwood History - Happenings - Chattanoogan.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Thomas coming back to Chattanooga and getting two other local attorneys, J.B. Whitehead and John Thomas Lupton, to put up the money for the bottling venture.
He noted that the Johnstons long led the Thomas bottling operation and later acquired 85 percent of all the Coke bottlers.
Probasco said in 1904 a nephew of Thomas, George Hunter, came to Chattanooga from Maysville, Ky., at the age of 17.
www.chattanoogan.com /articles/article_50840.asp   (554 words)

  
 The Gene Pool: JTR's Colorful Family History
Thomas BEALS was the son of John BEALS II and Sarah BOWATER.
Thomas Beals died on August 28, 1801 near the spot of burial and was buried there three days later in a coffin hewed out of a white walnut log.
Thomas JESSUP was married to Mary BEALS (dau.
www.rootsweb.com /~genepool/bealthom.htm   (4301 words)

  
 THOMAS JOHN HOPWOOD
Thomas John (Jack) Hopwood was born December 24, 1896 at 19 Kilburn Square, in the Hendon District of London, England.
His mother Jessie Elizabeth Hopwood (nee Traish) and her husband Thomas Henry Hopwood were married at the parish church of St. James Clerkenwell in East London on December 23, 1895.
He is buried in the Calvary section of Ocean View cemetery at Burnaby British Columbia.
www3.telus.net /public/a3a87173/thomas_john_hopwood.htm   (2135 words)

  
 thomas lupton engraver | Commercial And Industrial Engravers.
Lupton, Thomas Goff English mezzotint engraver and miniatures painter who was the first artist to use soft steel plates in the art of engraving.
Thomas Goff Lupton (1791-1873), Engraver Sitter in 1 portrait
Thomas Lupton, Thomas Chalmers, DD, LLD, and FRSE, 18th - 19th century The Columbus Museum - Thomas Annan - Engraver · Thomas Annan - Exhibitions
www.one2one-engravers.co.uk /thomas_lupton_engraver.html   (194 words)

  
 Family History, Settlement made on the Marriage of Miss Matilda Dackombe with Mr Thomas Lupton Sectionm 24 of the ...
And the said testator did thereby direct that it should not be lawful to or for any or either of them his said daughters to anticipate, charge, sell or otherwise part with or incumber the life estate of interest so by him given and bequeathed to each of them under that his will.
AND WHEREAS a marriage hath been agreed upon and is intended shortly to be had and solemnized between the said Thomas Lupton and Matilda Dackombe.
AND that immediately upon the appointment of any such new trustee or trustees the said trust monies and premises shall be duly assigned and transferred to or otherwise vested in such new trustee or trustees either solely or jointly with the then surviving or continuing trustee of these presents upon the trusts hereinfore declared.
web.ukonline.co.uk /the.nook/dacinfo/settle.htm   (270 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: John Colet
Colet's lectures on the New Testament continued for five years, until in 1504 he was made Dean of St. Paul's proceeding D.D before he left Oxford.
At the death of his father in 1505 he inherited a fortune, which he devoted to public purposes.
LUPTON (London, 1883), was the foundation of most of his biographies published before the end of the seventeenth century.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/04098a.htm   (634 words)

  
 Summary of 1881 Census of Lupton, Westmorland, England
Summary of 1881 Census of Lupton, Westmorland, England
Lupton Hall: George DODGSON, wife, grandson (SMITH), 4 servants (MASON, ATKINSON, ALLEN, WILSON), boarder (CHADWICK)
Lupton High: Thomas MASON, wife, 4 children, 2 servants (MUSCHAMP, CLEMENT), mother-in-law (DUGDALE)
www.genuki.org.uk:8080 /big/eng/WES/KirkbyLonsdale/Lupton1881Census.htm   (313 words)

  
 New York City Area Bluegrass Music Scene
Guitarist, composer, arranger, producer, John is associated with many recordings, among them "River Suite for Two Guitars" with guitarist Tony Rice, "Reflections" with mandolinist, Butch Baldassari, and the Grammy-nominated "Dawg '90" with the David Grisman Quintet.
And when John began playing guitar, it was usually in a lower Manhattan picking session or cafe society jam with artists like Bob Dylan, Rory Block, Jorma Kaukonen or Ramblin' Jack Elliot.
John Herald became known as lead singer and guitarist in the Greenbriar Boys, the first touring professional bluegrass group in the Northeast.
www.banjoben.com /directory.htm   (5310 words)

  
 The Proceedings of the Old Bailey, London 1674 to 1834
See original THE PROCEEDINGS ON THE King's Commissions of the Peace, and Oyer and Terminer, held for the City of LONDON, andc.
John Harvey, Henry Cook, Samuel Squire, William Davis, Jeremiah Wheat, Charles Sherburne, Joseph Malpas, Thomas Lupton, William Hornblower, Solomon Pelliter, John Bundy, Thomas Smith,
Benjamin Goodwin, Thomas Boone, William Foster, William Thoyts, William Steele, John Carter, Edward Gatlon, Jeremiah Oseland, Enoch Grigg, Arthur Granger, Edward Grange, Edward Curtis,
www.oldbaileyonline.org /html_units/1740s/f17430907-1.html   (177 words)

  
 Thomas Lupton ( - ) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
Thomas Lupton, Thomas Chalmers, D.D, L.L.D, & F.R.S.E., 18th - 19th century
Thomas King, Thomas Parr, aged 152 years, 18th century
Thomas Rowlandson, Chesterfield Travestie or School for Fine Manners (London: Thomas Tegg, 1808), 1808
wwww.wwar.com /masters/l/lupton-thomas.html   (312 words)

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