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Topic: Mordecai Bartley


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Ohio Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mordecai Bartley was the father of Thomas W. Bartley, Ohio's 17th governor.
Bartley served in the Ohio General Assembly from 1816 to 1818.
Bartley served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1823 to 1831.
ohiobio.org /governors/mbartley.htm   (113 words)

  
 Mordecai Bartley - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mordecai Bartley (December 16, 1783 - October 10, 1870) was a Whig politician from Ohio.
Bartley succeeded his son, Thomas W. Bartley as governor, one of only a few instances of this happening in the United States in high offices.
Elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1822, Bartley served four terms before declining to be renominated in 1830.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mordecai_Bartley   (189 words)

  
 Ohio Historical Society | Ohio Governors
At that time he was succeeded as governor by his father, Mordecai Bartley, a succession which is unique in Ohio and at least rare in the history of state governments.
In 1809 Mordecai Bartley came from Fayette County, Pennsylvania, to Jefferson County, Ohio, where Thomas was born on February 11, 1812.
A strong Van Buren man and a leader of the antibank Democrats, the younger Bartley had lost the nomination for governor at the Democratic state convention to David Tod by a single vote, and thus narrowly escaped opposing his father, the Whig candidate for the office of governor, in the campaign of 1844.
www.ohiohistory.org /onlinedoc/ohgovernment/governors/bartleyt.html   (710 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Thomas W. Bartley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Bartley was succeded in office by his father, Mordecai Bartley, one of only a few instances of this occurring in high elected office in the United States.
Bartley sought renomination under the Democratic Party, but lost at the state convention by a single vote - avoiding a contest against his father, who accepted the Whig nomination.
Bartley later served a contentious term on the State Supreme Court from 1852-1859.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Thomas-W.-Bartley   (242 words)

  
 Mordecai - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Mordecai   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mordecai or Mordechai (מָרְדֳּכַי, Standard Hebrew Mordoḫay, Tiberian Hebrew Mordŏḵay - the son of Jair, of the tribe of Benjamin.
Some interpret this verse to mean that Mordecai himself was exiled by Nebuchadnezzar, others interpet it to mean that his great-grandfather Kish was exiled making Mordecai three generations removed from the time of Jeconiah's exile.
Mordecai resided at Susa, the metropolis of Persia.
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Mordecai.html   (500 words)

  
 Biographies - B   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mordecai Bartley was a dignified man in appearance, mild mannered in both action and word, a gentleman of the old school and all his life in Ohio possessed, and deservedly so, the confidence, the respect and the love of his fellow-men, and all this in a marked degree.
Mordecai Bartley was an even-tempered man, but of rugged integrity, not brilliant but a patient worker for his fellow men and a devout lover of his country and its institutions.
Bartley, Thomas W. In chronicling the death of Judge Thomas W. Bartley, which occurred on Saturday evening at 8 o'clock at his residence at Washington City, it is proper that we give a brief sketch of the life of him whom Richland County feels proud to claim as one of her own.
www.rootsweb.com /~ohrichla/BiographyShelf/B.htm   (15877 words)

  
 Ohio Historical Society | Ohio Governors
Mordecai Bartley, eighteenth governor of Ohio, was inducted into office on December 3, 1844, to succeed his son, Acting Governor Thomas Welles Bartley.
The Bartleys' English forebears settled in Loudoun County, Virginia, in 1724, whence Mordecai's father, Elijah, moved to Fayette County, Pennsylvania, where Mordecai was born on December 16, 1783.
Bartley declined renomination for a second term and retired from public life to his home and business interests at Mansfield, where he lived out his eighty-seven years until his death on October 10, 1870.
www.ohiohistory.org /onlinedoc/ohgovernment/governors/bartleym.html   (924 words)

  
 [No title]
Mordecai was born the 16th of December, 1783.
Bartley, having retired from Congress, and being engaged in mercantil and agricultural pursuits, was nominated for Governor.
Bartley's friends were not in favor of Ohio filling her quota.
searches.rootsweb.com /usgenweb/archives/oh/history/abbott/chapt41.txt   (5359 words)

  
 Search Encyclopedia.com
Kaplan, Mordecai Menahem Kaplan, Mordecai Menahemmôr´dĬkīand180; menäkh´em kăp´len, 1881-1983, American rabbi, educator, and philosopher, b.
Noah, Mordecai Manuel Noah, Mordecai Manuelmôr´dĬkī, nō´e, 1785-1851, American journalist and politician, b.
Mordecai Mordecaimôr´dēkī, môrand180;dēkā´ī, cousin and guardian of Esther.
www.encyclopedia.com /searchpool.asp?target=Mordecai+Bartley   (383 words)

  
 Ohio Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Bartley studied law in Mansfield, Ohio and Washington D.C. He served as prosecuting attorney for Richland County.
Bartley served as acting Ohio governor after the resignation of Wilson Shannon.
Mordecai Bartley, served as the 18th governor of Ohio.
ohiobio.org /governors/bartley.htm   (69 words)

  
 Bud Bartley Homes   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Bartley succeeded his son, Thomas W. Bartley as governor, one of only a few instances of thi 3: ted, David Spangler, declined the nomination.
Thomas W. Bartley 1: was succeded in office by his father, Mordecai Bartley, one of only a few instances of this occurring 3: the United States Whig PartyWhig nomination.
Bartley resigned from the House of Representatives on 1 5: Category:1878 deathsBartley, Thomas Houghton 6: Category:New Zealand politiciansBartley, Thoma...
www.swingdancemusic.com /send/22922-bud%20bartley%20homes.html   (676 words)

  
 Mordecai Bartley -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mordecai Bartley (December 16, 1783 - October 10, 1870) was a (A member of the Whig Party in the United States in pre-Civil-War times) Whig politician from (A midwestern state in north central United States in the Great Lakes region) Ohio.
Bartley was born in (Click link for more info and facts about Fayette County, Pennsylvania) Fayette County, Pennsylvania.
Elected to the (The lower legislative house of the United States Congress) United States House of Representatives in 1822, Bartley served four terms before declining to be renominated in 1830.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/M/Mo/Mordecai_Bartley.htm   (290 words)

  
 Mordecai Bartley - TheBestLinks.com - December 16, Ohio, October 10, United States, ...
Mordecai Bartley - TheBestLinks.com - December 16, Ohio, October 10, United States,...
Mordecai Bartley, December 16, Ohio, October 10, United States, United States...
Elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1822, Bartley served four terms before declining to be renominated in 1830.
www.thebestlinks.com /Mordecai_Bartley.html   (233 words)

  
 Mordecai Bartley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mordecai Bartley (de diciembre el 16 de 1783 - de octubre el 10 de 1870) era político del whig de Ohio.
Bartley tuvo éxito a su hijo, Thomas W. Bartley como gobernador, uno solamente de algunos casos de esto que sucedía en los Estados Unidos en oficinas altas.
Bartley sirvió un solo término a partir de 1844-1846 antes de retirarse de nuevo.
www.yotor.net /wiki/es/mo/Mordecai%20Bartley.htm   (224 words)

  
 History of Spring Mills by A.J. Baughman
Mordecai Bartley, one of the many distinguished men for whom Richland county was noted in the grand old past of her history.
Mordecai Bartley was a lawyer by profession; had been a soldier in the war of 1812; was a member of congress from 1823 to 1831, and was elected governor of Ohio in 1844, as a Whig, over David Tod [Todd], the Democratic nominee.
Mordecai Bartley succeeded his son, Thomas W. Bartley, as governor of Ohio, the only instance of the kind in American history.
www.rootsweb.com /~ohrichla/Hist-SpringMills.htm   (1754 words)

  
 Thomas W. Bartley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Bartley era succeded en la oficina de su padre, Mordecai Bartley, uno solamente de algunos casos de esto que ocurría en oficina elegida alta en los Estados Unidos.
Bartley buscó el renomination bajo partido democrático, pero perdió en la convención del estado por un solo voto - evitando una competencia contra su padre, que aceptó el nombramiento del whig.
Bartley sirvió más adelante un término discutible en el Tribunal Supremo del estado a partir de 1852-1859.
www.yotor.net /wiki/es/th/Thomas%20W%20Bartley.htm   (236 words)

  
 Mordecai Bartley   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
MORDECAI BARTLEY, performed a great service, in that he was the first person to propose in congress conversion of the Section Sixteen lands into a permanent fund for support of the common schools, and by his influence secured passage of law to this end.
Mordecai Bartley, thirteenth governor of Ohio, was born in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, in 1783 and in 1809 settled near Mingo.
He was adjutant of the Jefferson County regiment in the War of 1812, and afterwards settled in Richland County.
www.rootsweb.com /~ohjeffer/doylebioindex/mbartley.html   (99 words)

  
 Letter from Gen. Edward Hamilton to former Ohio governor Mordecai Bartley, Jan. 1, 1850. -   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Letter from Gen. Edward Hamilton to former Ohio governor Mordecai Bartley, Jan. 1, 1850.
President Taylor appointed him Secretary of Oregon Territory, to where he traveled by ship in January 1850 and served from August 1850 to May 1853.
Mordecai Bartley, also born in Virginia, was governor of Ohio 1844-1846.
www.antiqbook.com /boox/alm/18500.shtml   (186 words)

  
 Mordecai Bartley
BARTLEY, Mordecai, governor of Ohio, born in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, 16 December 1783; died in Mansfield, Ohio, 10 October 1870.
Bartley was elected to the Ohio senate in 1817, and in 1818 was chosen, by the legislature, registrar of the land-office of Virginia military district school lands.
During the Mexican war, when the president issued his call for troops, Governor Bartley, though opposed to the war, promptly responded, superintending their organization in person.
www.famousamericans.net /mordecaibartley   (388 words)

  
 Richland County, Ohio History
As the State had made no provisions for maintaining the camp here, it was expected that the citizens would raise the money to pay the rent of the ground and provide barracks for the men.
The Herald of August 17 states that "a camp has been selected on the Tingley farm, to be known as Camp Mordecai Bartley," and "that six companies are there busily engaged in preparing it for the reception of the troops of the Thirty-second Regiment."
Camp Mordecai Bartley had been selected on the Tingley farm, and there the Colonel began gathering his regiment, augmented to six companies when the site was selected.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Richland/RichlandChapXXXIII.htm   (4261 words)

  
 Territorial Kansas Online - Browse by Keyword   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The body of the document states that the party which includes Lucy Armstrong intends to recover from the United States government sums of money which are owed to the Munsee Indians, as promised to them in treaties of 1805,1839, 1848.
Lucy Armstrong wrote from Wyandotte, Kansas Territory, to her attorney, Mordecai Bartley, regarding her lawsuit against the U.S. government on behalf of the Munsee Indians.
This document requested that a law directive be created, which would require Skecket's half-sister to turn over the $1280 to her.
lark.cc.ku.edu /cgiwrap/imlskto/index.php?SCREEN=keyword&selected_keyword=Bartley,%20Mordecai   (407 words)

  
 Mordecai Ardon - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Mordecai Ardon   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mordecai Ardon - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Mordecai Ardon.
Here you will find more informations about Mordecai Ardon.
One of his most famous creations are the Ardon Windows, a set of large stained-glass windows displayed prominently in the Jewish National and University Library in Jerusalem, incorporating visual elements from the Kabbala.
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Mordecai-Ardon.html   (109 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Bartletta to Bartolotti
Delegate to Illinois state constitutional convention Gallatin and Saline counties, 1862.
Son of Elijah Bartley and Rachel (Pearshall) Bartley; father of Thomas Welles Bartley.
Bartley, Thomas Welles (1812-1885) — also known as Thomas W. Bartley — of Mansfield,
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/bartlette-bartolotti.html   (443 words)

  
 You should not be viewing this title!   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Opened in August 1861, the training center was known as Camp Mordecai Bartley.
It was named in honor of the Mansfield man who served as governor of Ohio in the 1840’s.
A large spring at the site probably accounted for the selection of that spot as a training center since fresh water supply was a necessity.
www.mrps.org /history.html   (312 words)

  
 OOTP V2 REPORT
Pitching : Ramon Bartley 3B Bert Neidlinger : SINGLES to left DH Andy Fernandez : Neidlinger caught stealing at second.
Pitching : Ramon Bartley C Dewey Dixon : New LF : Tommy Hughes.
Pitching : Walter Bastian SS Mordecai Gazella : New pitcher : Jonah Reid.
www.sportplanet.com /sbb/tbsba/End01League/log1848.htm   (691 words)

  
 Mansfield Reformatory
This massive building resembles an Old World gothic castle and has the world’s largest freestanding cell block standing six tiers high, the structure is even listed in the Guinness’s Book of World Records.
In 1861, long before the grounds would become a reformatory and then a prison, Civil War soldiers used the area as a training camp, Camp Mordecai Bartley it was called.
The camp was named in honor of a Mansfield man who served as governor in the 1840s.
www.hauntedlives.com /Prisons/Mansfield.html   (779 words)

  
 THE MANSFIELD REFORMATORY
The site was once a Civil War training ground known as Camp Mordecai Bartley.
By the 1880s it became known as the Mansfield Reformatory.
The reformatory is located on your left (going north).
www.geocities.com /inhell_2000/mansfield.html   (794 words)

  
 Delphos area's connection to Civil War
At the expiration of their three-month term of enlistment they were discharged.
At the next call for troops, the 15th regiment re-enlisted almost to a man. It was then reorganized at Camp Mordecai Bartley, near Mansfield, after which it moved to Camp Dennison, Sept. 26, 1861.
At the outbreak of the war an Ohio National Guard was formed.
www.delphos-ohio.com /history/Holdgreve/civil_war.htm   (1378 words)

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