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Topic: Joseph Rogers Underwood


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In the News (Mon 4 Jun 12)

  
 [No title]
Rogers was the longest liver of that meritorious and enterprising class of men who penetrated the wilderness of Kentucky, and spent their time in locating and surveying lands.
Rogers believed that the distinctions made among men, arising from the offices they filled, without regard to their intellectual and moral attainments and qualifications, were often unjust.
Rogers has often told the writer, that there could be no such things as visits from the spirits of the dead, and holding intercourse with the living; for said he, if such a thing could be, I know my brother John would have kept and fulfilled his promise.
www.rootsweb.com /~kygenweb/kybiog/barren/rogers.e.txt   (941 words)

  
 Joseph Rogers Underwood
His family being in adverse circumstances, he was adopted by his maternal uncle, Edward Rogers, a soldier of the Revolution, who had emigrated to Kentucky in 1783 Removing to that state in 1803, the boy was educated in various schools and was graduated at Transylvania in 1811, after which he studied law in Lexington, Kentucky.
Underwood was wounded, and with the remnant of Dudley's regiment was forced to surrender.
Underwood established the "Kentucky Intelligencer" in Bowling Green, but transferred this journal to Louisville, and consolidated it with the "Post." In 1881 he removed to Covington, and organized a daily newspaper publishing company in Cincinnati, Ohio, where in 1882 the "Daily News," of which he was general manager, began to be issued.
www.famousamericans.net /josephrogersunderwood   (692 words)

  
 Handbook of Texas Online: ROGERS, WILLIAM PELEG
William Peleg Rogers, lawyer, political activist, and Confederate officer, son of Timothy Lincoln and Mary (Miles) Rogers, was born on December 27, 1819, in Georgia, during a visit there by his parents, who were living in Alabama at the time.
Rogers was one of the first to scale the walls of the fort at Monterrey on September 21 and again performed well during the climactic victory at Buena Vista on February 1847.
Rogers shouted, "Men, save yourselves or sell your lives as dearly as possible." A few seconds later he was struck by multiple rifle shots, killing him instantly.
www.tsha.utexas.edu /handbook/online/articles/view/RR/fro64.html   (1156 words)

  
 FIFTH GENERATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
John UNDERWOOD was born on 22 Feb 1767.
Frances ROGERS was born on 19 Mar 1768 in, King and Queen, VA. She died on 26 Aug 1809.
Joseph Rogers UNDERWOOD was born in 1791 in, Goochland, VA. He died in 1873.
home.cfl.rr.com /budinfl/taylor/d927.htm   (68 words)

  
 Thomas Rogers
Thomas Rogers, second son in the third generation of the Rogers family, was born in 1408 at Ashington, Somerset in one of the Roger-Furneaux mansions.
John Rogers, of 'Deritend' the second son of Katherine de Courtenay and her husband Thomas Rogers was born at Bradford On Avon in Wiltshire.
Joseph, the eldest, would have been about 14 when he came on the Mayflower with his father but there is no evidence he had been in Leyden so he could have joined up with his father in England where he had been living with his younger brothers and his mother.
www.richmondancestry.org /rogers.shtml   (4732 words)

  
 Yolo County Obituaries - RJ through ROL   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Rogers was retired after 20 years of service from the Woodland School District, where she worked as a dispatcher/trainer in the Transportation Department.
Rogers is survived by her husband of 53 years, Joseph Rogers Jr.
Rogers is also survived by her brother Robert Taylor Walter and his wife Joyce of Laughlin, Nev., and nieces Patty Briseno, Susan and Duane Waller and nephew William Robert Walter.
www.cagenweb.com /yolo/yolobits/rj-rol.htm   (12958 words)

  
 The Faces behind the numbers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Anderson was chased and stabbed in the chest by a man she had been arguing with in the 1400 block of 77th Avenue.
Brian Rogers, 37, was arrested at a hospital where he was being treated for cuts and was charged with murder.
Underwood was shot in a car outside a liquor store in the 2400 block of High Street and died three blocks away after driving to his mother's home.
www.sfgate.com /cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/12/29/MN224517.DTL&type=printable   (3265 words)

  
 ENGLISH ANCESTRY OF THOMAS ROGERS   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Joseph was likely the eldest because he came with his father to Plymouth in 1620, while the birth orders of the others is suggest by the tax list.
That William Rogers in 1585 appointed his brother Edward an overseer shows that William was also a son of the elder William and one of the seven children.
She also believed that William [1] Rogers of Long Island and James [1] Rogers of New London were sons of the Pilgrim Thomas [1] Rogers.
www.geocities.com /thomasrogerssociety/trleiden.html   (3057 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Silas Rogers, of Worchestershire, England, emigrated to America early in the early part of the seventeenth century, and settled in King and Queen County.
Giles, son of John Rogers, died in Albermarle County, Virginia, or across the border in North Carolina.
Joseph Rogers Underwood, who married Eliza McConn Trotter, the granddaughter of Rev. David Rice, is a descendant of George Rogers.
www.rootsweb.com /~kygenweb/kybiog/barren/rogers.s.txt   (205 words)

  
 Numerals, Numeration, and Numerical Notation Bibliography
Chincotta, Dino, Geoffrey Underwood, Kartini Abd Ghani, Eliana Papadopoulou, and Maja Wresinski.
Greenberg, Joseph H. Numeral classifiers and substantival number problems in the genesis of a linguistic type.
Joseph, G.G. The Crest of the Peacock: Non-European Roots of Mathematics.
phrontistery.info /nnsbib.html   (8653 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Underwood family of Kentucky and Virginia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Joseph Rogers Underwood (1791-1876) — also known as Joseph R. Underwood — of Glasgow,
Warner Lewis Underwood (1808-1872) — also known as Warner L. Underwood — of Kentucky.
John Cox Underwood (1840-1913) — also known as John C. Underwood — of Kentucky.
politicalgraveyard.com /families/2112.html   (453 words)

  
 Some Descendants of Jean de la Fontaine - pafg27.asp - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Uriah was born on 7 Jul 1808 in NC.
Thomas E. Rogers was born on 23 Oct 1832.
Simon married (1) Matilda Underwood Tippins on 16 Mar 1843.
www.juch.org /fontaine/pafg27.asp   (1077 words)

  
 Amazon.com: I'll Be Seeing You (1945): DVD   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Here Ginger Rogers and Joseph Cotton play two very average and identifiable people, one a victim of the world war currently engulfing the world, and the second an unfortunate victim of one action that had serious consequences, situations any individual could find themselves in.
Ginger Rogers especially as the woman out on Christmas leave from prison proves once and for all what a fine dramatic actress she truly was among all her other screen talents.
Joseph Cotton, a Selznick contractee delivers another interesting performance here and makes his Zachary Morgan a very human individual fighting a terrible affliction and then having to learn to deal with his unexpected love for Mary.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B0002KPHXI?v=glance   (3318 words)

  
 Insanity (Surnames A-B)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The trial of Abner Rogers for murder "was famous for the successful introdcution of the plea of insanity in the U.S. The defense submitted a wealth of information concerning cases of insanity and extensively cited medicolegal literature on the subject.
Rogers was found 'not guilty by reason of insanity,' but ordered confined to the State Lunatic Hospital.
Contains Joseph Draper's "The Responsibility of the Insane Outside of Asylums"; Daniel Clark's "A Report on Cerebro-Spinal Pathology"; J. Andrews' "Case of Charles Stockley, Convicted of Murder.
www.gach.com /Gach/l1323-01.htm   (4381 words)

  
 The Filson Historical Society - Manuscripts & Photos - Guide 501-600
The bulk of the collection consists of her letters, 1898-1904, to Edward Bok discussing photographs of her, her mother not liking publicity and not allowing her house to be photographed, possibly writing a book using her diaries, and her husband's and son's activities.
Mainly papers of Judge Henry Pirtle of Louisville, Ky., and of Dr. Coleman Rogers (1781-1855), physician of Louisville and Cincinnati, Ohio, and Pirtle's father-in-law.
Papers are centered around Edmund Rogers and his nephew/foster son Joseph Rogers Underwood (1791-1876), a U.S. congressman and senator from Kentucky.
www.filsonhistorical.org /guide6.html   (5419 words)

  
 The Filson Historical Society - Manuscripts & Photos - Guide 701-780
The bulk of the collection is composed of her articles, essays, and speeches regarding early Louisville, Portland, and Shippingport; Louisville newspapers; canal companies; shipping on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers; ships and ship building; salt production; and coal mining.
Also included are commissions; licenses, including an 1800 distilling license; land records; personal and household accounts, 1859-1892, of Jacob F. Weller; correspondence and records, 1854-1890, of Weller and Parker, and Jacob F. Weller, Louisville wholesale grocer and commission merchant; records, 1885-1887, re: erecting a building at 632 Fourth Ave, in Louisville; and estate records.
Petition to the Convention of Virginia requesting the right of Fincastle County to send their elected representatives, John Gabriel Jones and George Rogers Clark, to the convention, dated at Harrodsburg, 20 June 1776.
www.filsonhistorical.org /guide8.html   (4639 words)

  
 Oscar Wilder Underwood
The act drastically reduced tariff schedules and transferred many articles to the free list but was only in force briefly because of the outbreak (1914) of World War I. In the Senate (1915–27) he was a leading exponent of President Wilson's foreign policy.
Underwood was a prominent contender for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1912 and 1924.
Joseph Rogers UNDERWOOD - UNDERWOOD, Joseph Rogers (1791—1876) Senate Years of Service: 1847-1853 Party: Whig...
www.infoplease.com /ce6/people/A0850014.html   (228 words)

  
 Mizell Genealogy
Tippens was a son of Phillip and Mary Underwood Tippens of North Carolina.
Joseph Mizell Born 05/22/1862 Died 05/15/1937 Married Fannie Aronold Joseph was engaged in the mercantile business in Arcadia, Fla. He was one of the original stockholders in the American National Bank, which was merged with the bank that was later known as the Citizens and Trust Company.
C.L. Knight and Joseph Mizell assisted the county surveyor in laying out the route of the highway from Tampa to Wall Springs, a portion of which is now known as "Memorial Highway ".
www.angelfire.com /ut/geneology12/genealogy.html   (18453 words)

  
 Misc. Kent County, Delaware Obituaries & Death Notices
Grygo was born on Jan. 12, 1920, in Philadelphia, the son of the late Joseph Grygo and Stella Graverska Grygo.
Rogers was a volunteer for the Meals on Wheels Program and was on the board of directors for the Modern Maturity Center while living in Dover.
She was employed by Richards and Robbins for many years and later became underwood, retiring in 1978 as a meat processor.
www.obitcentral.com /obitsearch/obits/de/de-kent144.htm   (3209 words)

  
 FULTON COUNTY INDIANA
The Rev. Joseph DUX will officiate and burial will be in the Kewanna I.O.O.F. cemetry.
Monday at the St. Joseph Church, Mishawaka, with burial in the St. Joseph cemetery, Mishawaka.
In 1895 she was married to Joseph M. LUNSFORD, who died in 1922.
www.fulco.lib.in.us /Tombaugh/Obituaries/Html/1955.htm   (17696 words)

  
 [No title]
Roger Delke 1000a 423 20 Oct 1689 VPB 8 p6 Nath.
Capt Roger Potter 100a 557 20 Aug 1760 VPB 33 p838-8 Thomas Pretlow 170a SNCo.
Thompsons Land on NE side of Cypress 458 20-21 Jul 171 Book 6 p204 Joseph Wall of the same 200a on S side of main Blackwater Swamp 527 5 Sep 1749 VPB 28 p643-6 Allen Warren 250a Surry County on the N side of fl Water Swamp 273 1 Nov 1669 VPB 6 p263 Tho.
users.rcn.com /deeds/Surry.txt   (4097 words)

  
 James Lassiter
P184 F 507 Joseph Oates of Chowan Co. to William Pugh of Edgecombe Co. May 20, " in the seventeenth year of the Reign of Sovreign…George".
Benjamin Hill C/C. p267 F 507 Joseph Oates of Chowan Co. to William Pugh of Edgecombe Co. May 20, " in the seventeenth year of the Reign of Sovreign…George".
Estate to be divided between Joseph, Joh and Sarah Pinner, orpahns of John Pinner decd.
pages.prodigy.net /blankenstein/james_lassiter.htm   (2516 words)

  
 Memoirs and sketches of the life of Henry Robinson Pollard; an autobiography: a machine-readable transcription.
Joseph was born in 1701; married Priscilla Hoomes, of “The Mansion,” near Bowling Green, Caroline County; and was sheriff of King and
The grandson, Joseph Pollard (son of William), was a soldier in the Revolution and was at the surrender at Yorktown.
Robert Nelson was the “Joseph” of the family, noted for his beauty as a child, but probably wanting in the marked independence and self-reliance that attended the character of the older members of the family.
lcweb2.loc.gov /gc/lhbcb/10851/10851.sgm   (17774 words)

  
 Barren Co. Court Records
Deed book J: Page 273: Joseph Rogers Underwood and Edm’d Rogers (his uncle) trustees of the will of George Rogers, decd.
To have and to hold the same to the said Underwood, his heirs and assigns forever.
Attest: R. Maupin, Franklin Gorin.” Note: Joseph R. Underwood was a judge and lawyer both in Barren and Warren Co KY.
www.rootsweb.com /~kyafamer/Barren/court_records.htm   (665 words)

  
 Myths About the War
Instead, it claimed, its purpose was to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution and to preserve the Union.
Sooner or later, Underwood declared, "this process would extend itself farther and farther south, rendering slave labor so precarious and uncertain that it could not be dpended upon; and consequently a slave would become almost worthless; and thus the institution itself would gradually, but certainly, perish."
Georgia governor Joseph E. Brown believed that the latter would result within 25 years the courts making slavery illegal.
www.forrestsescort.org /myths.htm   (2461 words)

  
 Ancestry of Philip E. Hildreth - aqw47.htm
Frederick married Mabelle Marie UNDERWOOD on 9 Oct 1895.
Marguerite Marie HILDRETH was born 9 Mar 1897 in Newburyport, MA.
Donald Underwood HILDRETH was born 25 Sep 1898 and died 9 Apr 1978.
www.hildreth.net /philip/genealogy/aqwg47.htm   (571 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Ebenezer Phinney was the son of Mary (Rogers) and John Phinney Jr.
Mary Rogers was the daughter of Joseph Rogers who was the son of Thomas Rogers, the Pilgrim.
When Joseph was 12 years old he went to sea, an occupation followed by his father for 40 years.
home.comcast.net /~linnellfamily/DRL2h.htm   (6896 words)

  
 The Kentucky Library and Museum Online
Item/Collection Note: Joseph Rogers Underwood's image while representing Kentucky in the U. Senate in 1848.
Originally from Virginia, Underwood, (1791-1876), moved to Bowling Green, Kentucky, in 1823.
The Kentucky Library and Museum, Western Kentucky University, 1906 College Heights Blvd. #11092, Bowling Green, KY 42101-1092
www.wku.edu /Library/kylm/collections/online/underwood/pages/1137.html   (63 words)

  
 [No title]
by Roger Herringt 490 0 $aCarpenter, Allan,$d1917-$tEnchantment of America ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22-0006128 Massachusetts, from its glorious past to the present / 490 0 $aCarpenter, Allan,$d1917-$tEnchantment of America ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22-0006130 Minnesota / by Allan Carpenter.
by Roger Herrin 490 0 $aCarpenter, Allan,$d1917-$tEnchantment of America ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22-0006132 Missouri, from its glorious past to the present / by Al 490 0 $aCarpenter, Allan,$d1917-$tEnchantment of America ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22-0006134 Nebraska / by Allan Carpenter.
by Roger Herr 490 0 $aCarpenter, Allan,$d1917-$tEnchantment of America ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22-0006150 Texas, from its glorious past to the present / by Allan 490 0 $aCarpenter, Allan,$d1917-$tEnchantment of America ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22-0006151 Utah, from its glorious past to the present / by Allan 490 0 $aCarpenter, Allan,$d1917-$tEnchantment of America ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22-0006152 Vermont / by Allan Carpenter.
www.infohio.org /downloads/noacsc/Phase2Cleanup/BANK_22_490.TXT   (8776 words)

  
 The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Parish Clerk, by P.H. Ditchfield.
The deference shown by the members of the congregation who did not presume to stir till Sir Roger had left the building was practised in much more recent [pg 65] times, and instances will be given of the observance of this custom within living memory.
Cowper's kindliness of heart is abundantly evinced by his treatment of a parish clerk, one John Cox, the official of the parish of All Saints, Northampton.
The poet was living in the little Buckinghamshire village of Weston Underwood, having left Olney when mouldering walls and a tottering house warned him to depart.
www.gutenberg.org /dirs/1/3/3/6/13363/13363-h/13363-h.htm   (15382 words)

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