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Topic: Samuel Dinsmoor, Jr


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In the News (Fri 17 Feb 12)

  
  GOVERNOR SAMUEL DINSMOOR, JR. - Guide to Likeness of New Hampshire Officials and Governors   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Dinsmoor achieved political visibility when in 1825 he was made one of two commissioners to accompany General Lafayette around New Hampshire.
In 1849 the Democrats asked Dinsmoor to be their candidate for governor; he won, and repeated in 1850 and 1851.
Governor Dinsmoor worked with his legislatures to require universal military service in the militia for all white males aged 18-45, but active duty was eliminated except in case of war, invasion or other public emergency.
www.state.nh.us /nhdhr/glikeness/dinssamujr.html   (303 words)

  
 Hollis, Hillsborough County, New Hampshire : Biographies of Early Settlers
Ebenezer Farley, Jr., son of Ebenezer and Betty Wheeler Farley, was born in Hollis, March 4, 1774.
Phineas, Jr., and Sibbel Shattuck, was born in Hollis, September 7, 1792.
Jesse Hardy, Sr., was the son of Phineas, Jr., and Abigail Gage Hardy, was born in Hollis, December 19, 1760.
home.att.net /~mensch-family/Hollis-bios.htm   (9996 words)

  
 The Probert Encyclopaedia - People and Peoples (Sa-Sl)
Samuel Bochart was a French theologian and Oriental scholar.
Samuel Colt of Hartford, Conneticut patented the first successful percussion revolver in England in 1835 and in America in 1836.
Samuel Pickworth Woodward was an English naturalist and expert on invertebrate fossils.
www.fas.org /news/reference/probert/CD.HTM   (8936 words)

  
 John Sullivan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sullivan was born in Somersworth, New Hampshire on February 17, 1740, the third son of the schoolmaster.
He read law with Samuel Livermore of Portsmouth, and began its practice in 1764 when he moved to Durham.
Bell • Pierce • Harvey • Dinsmoor • Badger • Hill • Page • Hubbard • Steele • Colby • Williams • Dinsmoor Jr.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John_Sullivan   (1084 words)

  
 Samuel Dinsmoor (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel Dinsmore may refer to one of several notable men:
Samuel Dinsmoor (1766-1835), American politician, U.S. Congressman and Governor of New Hampshire
This human name article is a disambiguation page – a list of pages that might otherwise share the same title, which is a person's or persons' name.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Samuel_Dinsmoor_(disambiguation)   (122 words)

  
 [No title]
SAMUEL DINSMORE was a native of Windham, born July 1, 1766.
SAMUEL W. HALE, son of Samuel and Saloma (Whitney) Hale, was born in Fitchburg, Mass, April 2, 1823.
Samuel W., has been engaged in mechanical pursuits during all his active life, beginning in the old cotton-mill at Chesterfield, from which he went to the armory at Springfield, Mass, where he remained until called to take charge of a department in a gun manufactory in New York city.
www.nh.searchroots.com /documents/History_Keene_NH.txt   (22023 words)

  
 Conway Public Library -
Nathaniel Greenlaw, son of John and father of Samuel N., was born in the Pine Tree State, and was a farmer by occupation, engaging in agricultural pursuits in Maine and New Hampshire successively.
Samuel N. Greenlaw acquired the rudiments of his education in the schools of Eaton, and was graduated from Dartmouth College in 1862.
Janette Osgood was a daughter of Samuel Osgood, a lineal descendant of John Osgood, one of the original householders of Andover, Mass., and the town’s first Representative to the General Court.
www.conway.lib.nh.us /history/biography.htm   (13778 words)

  
 Dinsmoor, Samuel, Jr.
Samuel Dinsmoor, Jr., was admitted to the bar in 1819, but was not enrolled as an attorney at Keene until 1823.
He was the son of Gov. Samuel Dinsmoor, and was born May 8, 1799.
He graduated from Dartmouth college in 1815, and was associated with Gen. James Miller in the practice of law in Arkansas.
www.accessgenealogy.com /scripts/data/database.cgi?file=Data&report=SingleArticle&ArticleID=0017438   (104 words)

  
 Bryansite - John Crosse I 1668-1730
By 20 Nov 1719, Samuel Stansbury of Baltimore Co, MD had a certificate for 100 acres on the south side of the Great Falls of Gunpowder River in Baltimore County.
Samuel died in Apr 1783, according to the statement from his widow in Chancery Case No. 4308 who was not named in his will dated 19 April 1783.
Samuel's "Will" is confusing for researchers, in that, it names some grandchildren and stepchildren as "sons and daughters" and for some others their relationships were not given.
www.bryansite.com /cross/johni.htm   (1112 words)

  
 Vital Records Of Haverhill, Massachusetts [Deaths] D & E
Samuell and Dorothie (Swan), slain by Indians, Apr. 29, 1708.
Samuel and Sophia, dysentery, Sept. 20, 1848, a.
Samuel and Nancy [W. GR8], quinsy, Dec. 14, 1849, a.
www.rays-place.com /town/ma/haverhill/death-d.htm   (805 words)

  
 Warren Chapter 42   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
I do not remember how long Curtis operated the mine, but I have been informed that the coal was used for fuel in the house into which my father moved about 1839 previous to the time of his removal.
Elijah Pound, jr., was the youngest son of Elijah, Sr., and settled and considerably improved the farm that Joseph Clendenning had first cleared in part.
Dinsmoor reared a large family, and died full of years.
www.accessible.com /amcnty/PA/Warren/Warren42.htm   (5981 words)

  
 Deaths in Lancaster, MA 1843-1849
Joel Wilder son of Samuel Wilder, died aged 70 yrs of Consumption.
Damon, Hariet Hart, dau of Samuel Damon, Jr.
James Goodwin Jr., died at the house of his grandfather, James Goodwin, on Tuesday the 22nd day of April, 1817 aged 18 yrs, 7 mos and 10 days.
www.usgennet.org /usa/ma/state/worc/deaths_lanc.html   (6197 words)

  
 History of the Town of Goffstown, NH
This year Samuel Blodget begs leave to present to the town of Goffstown his bill for services rendered as selectman of fifty days time, and four hundred and eight-two miles travel, and expense, which he asks the town to accept as a gift; quite a liberal present to the town for that day.
Samuel Richards Vandue master to Enoch Eaton for the term of three months for £60, and the town pay the "Doctrin." As John McClintock was in the Continental Army, this was probably an incentive for others to enlist.
At this time Samuel Blodget presents a petition to the people of Goffstown asking their signatures thereto, which in due time he lays before the General Court of New Hampshire praying for a representation exclusive of any other town.
www.usgennet.org /usa/nh/county/hillsborough/goffstown/book/chap14_3.html   (3341 words)

  
 [No title]
Levi Chamberlain, the two Dinsmoors (Samuel and Samuel Jr.), Lieutenant Charles B. Daniels, who gave his life for his country, Miss Catherine Fiske, the founder of Keene Female Seminary, and many other names that we have known and respected will be found in this number.
No. 146.--Samuel Dinsmoor Jr., died Feb 24 1869, aged 69.
Samuel Wood, born at Lancaster, Mass., July 27, 1795, died April 10, 1857.
www.nh.searchroots.com /documents/Keene_NH_cemeteries.txt   (22790 words)

  
 Attorneys serving Massachusetts, Rhode Island and the District of Columbia - Burns & Levinson
Dinsmoor was a partner and founder of Finnegan, Hickey & Dinsmoor P.C. He concentrates his practice in all areas of complex corporate, intellectual property and commercial litigation, with expertise in antitrust, constitutional, corporate/commercial, and securities law.
Dinsmoor formerly served as Chairman of the Litigation Department at Gaston & Snow and before then he was a trial attorney with the U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division in Washington D.C. Memberships:
Theodore Dinsmoor was selected as a 2004 Massachusetts SuperLawyer, which is based on a survey of Massachusetts attorneys and reviewed by an independent blue ribbon panel.
www.burnslevinson.com /our-attorneys/attorney-detail.asp?id=163   (309 words)

  
 Manuscripts Guide -- M
Samuel Hazard on a voyage from Smyrna to Philadelphia, 1815, with an account of a falling star, 26 October 1815.
Samuel Williams in New England, 1771-1773, with an account of a hurricane at Salisbury, Amesbury, and Haverhill, 12 August 1773.
Through his craniometic studies of human races, the Philadelphia physician Samuel George Morton exerted a profound influence on the development of physical anthropology in antebellum America, and made substantial contributions to mineralogy, paleontology, and natural history.
www.amphilsoc.org /library/mole/m.htm   (6185 words)

  
 Obstetrics & Gynecology
Martin JN Jr, Magann EF, Isler CM: "Preeclampsia: the Scope of Disease and Treatment," in Belfort M; Thornton S; and Saade G (eds).
Dinsmoor, M.J., Newton, E.R. and Gibbs, R.S.:  A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of oral antibiotic therapy following intravenous antibiotic therapy for postpartum endomyometritis.  Obstet.
Newton, E.R., Dinsmoor, M.J. and Gibbs, R.S.:  A randomized, blinded trial of antibiotics in idiopathic preterm labor.  Obstet.
www.ecu.edu /obgyn/facpub.htm   (5114 words)

  
 Chickasaw History According to Malcom McGee
His name stands as Head Chief annexed to their treaty held in the nation: but to the Treaty of 1816, of wh.
Samuel Colbert was only a common man in the nation, was killed by the Northern Indians in their national wars, soon after the Revolution.
He was a Virginian - his son Samuel, a half breed, became a chief, and his name appears to the Treaties of 1816 and 1818; and died soon after the Treaty of 1832, on Yocking Patata creek.
www.chickasawhistory.com /mcgee.htm   (6779 words)

  
 Douglas County, Part 3
Horton was Samuel A. Riggs, Osbun Shannon and N. Hoysradt; for Treasurer Watson, Solon O. Thacher and George J., Barker.
Sheriffs - Samuel J. Jones, appointed by the Territorial Legislature of 1855, who is said to have retained the office of Postmaster at Westport, Mo until February 1, 1856, resigned the office of Sheriff December 5, 1856.
Stephen Ogden was Sheriff from January, 1864, to January, 1868; Samuel Walker from January, 1868, to January, 1872; Samuel H. Carmean, from January, 1872 to January, 1876; H. Clarke, from January, 1876, to January, 1880, since which time H. Asher has been the occupant of the office, his term expiring in January, 1884.
www.kancoll.org /books/cutler/douglas/douglas-co-p3.html   (4113 words)

  
 Neither Lady nor Slave: Working Women of the Old South, Edited by Susanna Delfino and Michele Gillespie. Chapter 1.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Sally Lowry received such a reserve, but she was unable to occupy it because squatters had already made it their home.
Samuel Cole Williams (Johnson City, Tenn.: Watauga Press, 1930), 241, 436-38, 453-55; William Bartram, William Bartram on the Southeastern Indians, ed.
Samuel Mitchell to David Haley, 23 January 1800, Henley Papers, Special Collections, William R. Perkins Library, Duke University, Durham, N.C.; Benjamin Hawkins to Henry Dearborn, 28 October 1801, in Hawkins, Letters, 1:387; Chinabu King et al.
uncpress.unc.edu /chapters/delfino_neither.html   (5855 words)

  
 Warren Chapter 56   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
William, the younger, was born in Newburg, N.Y., in 1764; could distinctly remember having seen Washington; served in the War of 1812, being stationed at Erie to protect the country from an apprehended invasion of the enemy, and died at his home in Beaver county on the 5th of June, 1859.
Charles C. Merritt, the subject of this sketch, is the eldest son of Thomas and Elizabeth Merritt, and was born in the township of Hanover, near the village of Forestville, N.Y., on the 3d of April, 1837.
GRANDIN, SAMUEL, the subject of this sketch, is a grandson of one Samuel Grandin, who was born in 1700 on one of the islands along the coast of France.
www.accessible.com /amcnty/PA/Warren/Warren56.htm   (20639 words)

  
 Treaties
It is therefore by the undersigned commissioners here assented to, with the understanding that they are to have no interest in the reservations which are directed and provided for under the general Treaty to which this is a supplement.
Everge, Giles Thompson, Thomas Garland, John Bond, William Laflore, and Turner Brashears, the two first named persons, may locate one section each, and one section jointly on any unimproved and unoccupied land, these not residing in the Nation; The others are to include their present residence and improvement.
DeRosier, Jr., "Andrew Jackson and Negotiations for the Removal of the Choctaw Indians," Historian, 29 (May 1976), pp.
www.choctaw.org /history/treaties.htm   (7245 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Dilweg to Dionysius
Washington Monument in Washington, D.C.); granduncle of Dracos A. Dimitry, Jr.
Wayne County, Mich. Married to John David Dingell, Jr.
Son of Joseph Adam Dingell and Mary (Knapp) Dingell; married 1925 to Grace Blossom Bigler; father of John David Dingell, Jr.
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/dilweg-dionysius.html   (1595 words)

  
 Dr. Moses Long's Sketch of Warner
Joseph Gould, with such as the honorable board shall join, be a committee to all intents and purposes to effect the business projected by time report of the committee of both houses to consider the petitions for townships, which passed this day, viz.
IN­COUNCIL, Read and concurred, and William Dudley, Samuel Wells, Thomas Berry, Joseph Wilder, and John Chandler, jr., Esqrs., are joined with the committee of the house for the line between Merrimack and Connecticut rivers, andc.
At a great and general court, held in Boston the twenty fourth day of November, one thousand seven hundred and thirty six, the following vote passed the two houses, and was consented to by the governor, viz.
www.warner.nh.us /historical_sketches.htm   (5759 words)

  
 Southeastern Native American Documents, 1730-1842
Account of S[amuel] A. Worcester's second arrest, 1831 July 18 / S[amuel] A. Worcester
An account of the first settling of the colony of Georgia with a journal of the first embarkation, under the direction of Mr.
[Affidavit of] Need[ha]m Norris, 1799 Jan. 16; [Affidavit of] Need[ha]m Norris [and] Samuel Knox
dlg.galileo.usg.edu /CollectionsA-Z/zlna_allitems.html   (7314 words)

  
 DinsmoreFamily.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Laird was probably not his first name but a title and would indicate that he was a man of some note and consequence in his locality.
He was a farmer, had tenants under him, and dwelt on the banks of the flowing Tweed, at a place which tradition has variously called Achenmead, Auchinmede, Aikenmead, and other variations of the name.
In 1667 he forsook his father's house and his native land and went forth, first appearing in the Province of Ulster in the Parish of Ballymoney, County of Antrim, Ireland.
home.sc.rr.com /gdinsmore/gen/genealogy.html   (378 words)

  
 [No title]
The heads of these families were Jonathan Farnsworth, Eleazer Robbins, Simon Stone, Jr., Jonathan Farnsworth, Jr., Jeremiah Farnsworth, Eleazer Davis, Ephram Farnsworth, Reuben Farnsworth, and [_torn_] Fransworth, who had petitioned the General Court to be set off from Groton.
The town of Harvard took its name from the founder of Harvard College, probably at the suggestion of Jonathan Belcher, who was governor of the province at the time and a graduate of the college.
He was the wealthiest citizen of Lancaster, kept six horses in his stables, and dispensed liberal hospitality in the mansion inherited from his father Colonel Samuel Willard.
www.gutenberg.org /dirs/1/3/7/6/13761/13761.txt   (14980 words)

  
 Robert Dinsmoor/Margaret Orr   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Name: John Dinsmoor Born: 22 FEB 1720/21 at: Ballywattick, Ballymoney, Antrim Co. Ireland Married: BET.
Name: Mary Dinsmoor Born: 20 AUG 1723 at: Ballywattick, Ballymoney, Antrim Co., Ireland Married: 25 DEC 1743 at: Londonderry, Rockingham County, New Hampshire Died: 27 FEB 1805 at: Londonderry, Rockingham County, New Hampshire Spouses: James Nesmith, Jr.
Name: William Dinsmoor Born: 9 MAY 1731 at: Londonderry, Rockingham Co, New Hampshire Married: at: Died: NOV 1801 at: Windham, New Hampshire Spouses: Elizabeth Cochran
www.naesmyth.com /ft/fam00068.htm   (197 words)

  
 HEPATITIS
Performance characteristics and results of a large-scale screening program for viral hepatitis and risk factors associated with exposure to viral hepatitis B and C: results of the National Hepatitis Screening Survey.
Assessment of hepatitis C virus quasispecies heterogeneity by gel shift analysis: correlation with response to interferon therapy.
Resolution of hepatitis B viremia in a renal transplant recipient treated with alpha-2b interferon.
www.ccjm.org /hepatitis/references.htm   (8565 words)

  
 1828 Farmer's New-Hamshire Annual Register
MORRIL - 6 1819 John F. 1823 Samuel BELL - 1825 Levi WOODBURY - Representatives; (* are dead)
1789 * Samuel LIVERMORE - 4 * Abiel FOSTER - 2 * Nicholas GILMAN - 8 1791 Jeremiah SMITH - 6 (He resigned his seat after attending the May session of 1797, Mr SPRAGUE was elected to supply the vacancy).
SPRAGUE, resigned, and took his seat in Jan. 1800) * Samuel TENNEY - 7 1801 George B. * Joseph PIERCE - 1 1802 * Samuel HUNT - 1 1803 * Silas BETTON - 4 David HOUGH - 4 Clifton CLAGETT - 2 1805 * Tho.
www.usroots.com /~usgwnhus/archive/1828/nh1828-b.htm   (494 words)

  
 Greene County, TN, Genealogy January 1998
Samuel MOORE mar. Ann White in Greene Co on 11-26-1791 & on 7-1-1793, my GGGG-grandfather, EPHRIAM MOORE was born.
His father, Samuel died suddenly after Ephriam's 4th sibling was born & Ephriam cared for his mother & siblings until she remarried.
Particularly, Samuel Linebaugh who was married to a Maggie Webb or a Catherine M. Malone(or Maline).
www.genealogyforyou.com /usa/tennessee/greene/queries/query005.htm   (5002 words)

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