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Topic: Thomas Worthington


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  Thomas Worthington (architect) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas Worthington (1826 – 1909) was an eminent 19th century English architect, particularly associated with public buildings in his native Manchester.
Worthington was the fourth of six sons of a Salford Unitarian cotton merchant.
Worthington was strongly influenced by his Unitarian upbringing, becoming committed to social reform and improvement, and joining numerous learned societies, including the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society, the Portico Library and the Royal Manchester Institution.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Thomas_Worthington_(architect)   (343 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Thomas Worthington
Worthington himself had in 1596 addressed a memorial to the cardinal protector on the state of the Roman College, in which he calls attention to the decline of Douai, which he ascribes to the innovations of Dr. Barrett.
Worthington was granted an annual pension of 200 crowns, and appointed an Apostolic notary with a place on the Congregation of the Index.
Thomas was retaken with his uncle at Islington, and remained a prisoner in the Gatehouse for upwards of two and a half years.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/15713b.htm   (1128 words)

  
 Thomas Worthington (1691 - 1753)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Thomas Worthington, son of John and Sarah (Howard) Worthington, was born January 8, 1691, in Westminster Parish, Anne Arundel County.
Thomas Worthington served the on the vestry of St. Ann's Parish in 1726 as well as in 1734 and 1742.
Thomas Worthington who for many years past and to the time of his death was one of the representatives of his county and with a steady and disinterested fidelity; was strictly honest in principle and practice, and therefore had the esteem of all that knew him.
home.att.net /~rworthington/AA_Gentry/AA_Gentry_2-Thomas.htm   (490 words)

  
 Ohio Historical Society | Ohio Governors
Thomas Worthington, sixth governor of Ohio, was born at his father's estate near present Charles Town, West Virginia, in 1773.
Worthington was elected to the first and second territorial legislatures, where he served on important committees.
Upon the organization of state government Worthington was elected to the house of representatives from Ross County, but was at once elected by the general assembly as one of the first two United States senators from Ohio.
www.ohiohistory.org /onlinedoc/ohgovernment/governors/worthing.html   (746 words)

  
 WORTHINGTON, (Hon.) THOMAS
Dr. Thomas Worthington was descended from the Worthington and Calvert families, both eminent in the early annals of the State of Maryland.
Worthington's mother was the youngest daughter of Col. Kennedy Long, of Baltimore, Md., who was in command of the Twenty-seventh Maryland Regiment, which played a prominent part in the defense of Baltimore during the War of 1812.
Worthington was brought to recover an interest in his grandfather's estate in Baltimore, nearly fifty years after it had passed into the possession of others.
www.rootsweb.com /~ilmorgan/1906/worthington.htm   (997 words)

  
 SEVENTH GENERATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Thomas Tolley WORTHINGTON was born on 17 Dec 1771 in Baltimore County, Maryland.
Thomas Tolley WORTHINGTON was born on 25 Nov 1815.
Henry WORTHINGTON was born on 1 Sep 1826 in Mason County, Kentucky.
home.gci.net /~airloom/jcb/d64.htm   (215 words)

  
 TWHS Softball: Cards News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Thomas Worthington scored two runs in the second inning, two in the third and four in the fourth.
Thomas had taken a 5-0 lead with two runs in the first and three in the second, but Chillicothe cut the lead to 5-3 by the time Crowell relieved Stephanie Leader in the fourth inning with one on and none out.
Thomas Worthington took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first inning when Janna Alsnauer singled to score Carrie Casden who had led off with a walk and a stolen base.
eteamz.active.com /twhssoftball/news   (5059 words)

  
 Thomas Worthington (1739 - 1821)
Thomas Worthington, son of John and Comfort Worthington, was born 1739 in St. Anne's Parish, Anne Arundel County.
Thomas Worthington became a widower, and on April 9, 1781, he married Marcella Owings, born 1748.
Thomas Worthington was chosen one of the representatives of Soldier's Delight Hundred of Baltimore County to enforce the non-intercourse resolutions of the Continental Congress.
home.att.net /~rWorthington/AA_Gentry/AA_Gentry_3-Thomas.htm   (266 words)

  
 Adena - The Worthingtons - Thomas Worthington   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Thomas Worthington, sixth governor of Ohio, was born at his father's estate near present Charles Town, Virginia (now West Virginia), in 1773.
Elected to the territorial legislature, Worthington emerged as a leader of the opposition to Territorial Governor Arthur St. Clair.
Worthington served as a representative in the Ohio house from 1807 to 1808.
www.ohiokids.org /adenahouse/tw.shtml   (507 words)

  
 Guide to The Towers
Designed by Thomas Worthington in a florid Gothic style The Towers was referred to by locals as the Calendar House since they believed it to have 12 towers, 52 rooms and 365 windows.
However, in his recent book on Worthington, Anthony Pass considers it highly unlikely that 'Worthington or his sober client would have contrived 52 rooms and 365 windows merely to satisfy a numerical whim.
Thomas Worthington was a leading Victorian architect whose many commissions included several country houses and a series of Unitarian churches.
fungus.org.uk /cv/towers.htm   (1255 words)

  
 EIGHTH GENERATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
James Tolley WORTHINGTON was born on 17 Dec 1771 in Baltimore County, Maryland.
Elizabeth WORTHINGTON was born on 14 Jul 1768.
Edward WORTHINGTON was born on 18 Jun 1773.
home.gci.net /~airloom/jcb/d63.htm   (203 words)

  
 Item Description
After a brief time at sea, Worthington turned his attention to farming and surveying, which led him to locate and purchase land in the Virginia Military District, which is now in the state of Ohio.
Worthington lobbied President Jefferson and Congress to pass an act that enabled Ohio to draw up a constitution and become a state.
Worthington served as governor from 1814-1818, but was able to accomplish little due to the weak office he helped to create.
worlddmc.ohiolink.edu /OMP/NewDetails?oid=1160810   (353 words)

  
 Thomas Worthington   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
The pioneer village of Chillicothe, Northwest Territory, first known as Massiesville, to which General Thomas Worthington and his family removed from Virginia in 1798, was a small log-cabin settlement, typical of the best immigrant centers of the period.
Worthington and I may be able to entertain our friends as we did in our old Virginia manor-house." Its subsequent guestlist included many of the country's distinguished men and women, and also the names of some of the more noted Indian chiefs of the Northwest Territory.
General Worthington's rise to power and position was rapid and continuous until his demise at the early age of fifty-four.
www.adena.com /adena/ad/ad03.htm   (657 words)

  
 Thomas Worthington
Thomas Worthington, a pottery owner, benefactor of Bethesda Chapel who owned houses in Mollart Street, Bethesda Street and evidently Jasper Street.
Thomas Worthington born c.1816 the son of John Worthington.
Note: "People of the Potteries" states that Thomas Worthington was married three times and that it was his second wife Mary who laid the foundation stone of the mission hall.
www.thepotteries.org /people/worthington_thos.htm   (266 words)

  
 Ancestors of William Thomas Worthington
William Thomas Worthington, born January 11, 1844 in Greene County, North Carolina; died March 11, 1918 in Lenoir County, North Carolina; married (1) Penelope Kirkpatrick; married (2) Hannah Jane Lyons August 18, 1869 in Greene County, NC.
W.T. WORTHINGTON Living on his farm a mile and a half North of Kinston is Mr.
WORTHINGTON, came to Lenoir and lived on ADKINS Hill, near Kinston, then on the R.F. HILL place near Lousan Swamp, and than he came to his present place on Snow Hill road where he built a neat cottage home.
www.geocities.com /jgarner55/worthington/17.htm   (1381 words)

  
 H-Net Review: Mary Alice Mairose on Thomas Worthington: Father of Ohio Statehood
Sears seems to have agreed wholeheartedly with Worthington's assessment that St. Clair was a "pathetic old man" and depicts the territorial governor as a political dinosaur "who did not grasp the fact that aristocracy was on the wane and frontier democracy was on the rise" (p.
Extensive research in Worthington's papers has convinced me that Worthington was much more complex than he appears in the pages of this study, and that Worthington and his family still have a great deal to teach us about many aspects of life in early Ohio.
Yet Worthington's relations with his children were often stormy, and alcoholism, debt, and disgrace played a major role in the lives of his offspring.
www.h-net.msu.edu /reviews/showrev.cgi?path=6988928775412   (896 words)

  
 Ohio Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Worthington worked as a sailor, farmer, and surveyor.
At the beginning of his second term as governor, the state capital was moved from Chillicothe to Columbus.
Worthington served three terms in the Ohio House of Representatives, 1821 - 1825.
ohiobio.org /governors/worthington.htm   (69 words)

  
 Brice Thomas Beale Worthington (1724 - 1794)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Brice Thomas Beale Worthington, son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Ridgely) Worthington, was born November 2, 1727, in St. Anne's Parish, Anne Arundel County.
Brice Thomas Beale Worthington was a member in 1761 of the House of Delegates (2).
The notorious Bennet Allen, rector of the parish, wrote to the Governor, November 25, 1767, that Brice Worthington was "as hard as iron".
home.att.net /~rworthington/AA_Gentry/AA_Gentry_3-BriceThomas.htm   (349 words)

  
 Adena Mansion and Gardens   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Adena was built for Thomas Worthington, who served as one of Ohio’s first two U.S. senators during Jefferson’s second term and was later governor from 1814 to 1818.
He concluded that Worthington’s orchard of 300 trees was a mixture of the two types of fruit farms.
Worthington had 40 varieties of roses and 20 of those varieties have been planted as part of the garden restoration.
www.ourohio.net /mag/html/mag_s_oct_05_hg.php   (1262 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Thomas Worthington
Thomas Worthington (July 16, 1773 - June 20, 1827) was a Democratic-Republican politician from Ohio.
He served in the Territorial House of Representatives from 1799-1803 and served as a delegate to the State Constitutional Convention in 1803.
Worthington was elected one of Ohio's first Senators in 1803, serving until 1807.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Thomas-Worthington   (220 words)

  
 ROOTS AND ROUTES
Thomas Worthington began building Adena in 1802, after only five years in frontier Chillicothe, Ohio.
Because of Worthington's importance in early Ohio---he became both a Governor and a U.S. Senator---his house has been an Ohio Historical Society museum since 1953; before the 2003 Ohio Bicentennial, it had a $7 million refurbishing.
Harewood, Thomas Worthington's model for Adena, was also the setting for the wedding of James and Dolly Madison.
www.rootsandroutes.net /adena.htm   (382 words)

  
 Thomas Worthington Whittredge Online
Thomas Worthington Whittredge at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
Thomas Worthington Whittredge in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art Database
Thomas Worthington Whittredge at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington D.C. Thomas Worthington Whittredge at the Smithsonian Archives of American Art, Washington D.C. Ledger with thumbnail sketches for several paintings, ca.1860
www.artcyclopedia.com /artists/whittredge_thomas_worthington.html   (265 words)

  
 THOMAS R WORTHINGTON   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Thomas is one of a number of soldiers who remain uncommemorated officially by the Commonwealth War
The information collected in the course of this project puts beyond reasonable doubt the fact that he fell at Gallipoli in August 1915.
The 1901 Census shows him to be the fourth of seven children of Isaac and Jane Worthington.
members.aol.com /Cgwarmemorial/html/worthington.htm   (1043 words)

  
 ThisWeek Archival Article
This was an educated Worthington audience at opening night of the official Bicentennial drama, so most already knew that Lucy Fitch Kilbourne would die in the end.
Lucy and James Kilbourne, as well as their children and the supporting cast that helped settle Worthington 200 years ago, were portrayed as three-dimensional human beings on the stage.
Lucy Fitch Kilbourne is played by Bronwynn's daughter, Myvonwynn, who graduated from Thomas Worthington in 1996 and is currently finishing her degree at Columbia University.
libpub.dispatch.com /cgi-bin/document9?DBLIST=tw03&DOCNUM=13604   (647 words)

  
 HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY AT THE THOMAS WORTHINGTON ESTATE (ADENA STATE PARK)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
The archaeological investigation has to date involved the excavation of a total of 362 square meters in an attempt to identify and better understand early nineteenth century outbuildings associated with the main house of the estate.
The Thomas Worthington estate is the former home of Thomas Worthington who was one of Ohio's first state senators and highly influential in early nineteenth century Ohio politics.
The Worthington estate is a significant historic site representing the only plantation style residence in the state, and one of only two remaining residential structures built by Benjamin Latrobe, America's first architect.
www.ohioarchaeology.org /keener_1999.html   (484 words)

  
 Browsing Store - Thomas Worthington   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Territorial and state legislator, governor, and United States senator, Thomas Worthington was a dominant figure in early Ohio politics.
Thomas Worthington was born in 1773 in Charles Town, Virginia (now West Virginia); in 1798 he moved his family to the Northwest Territory and the town of Chillicothe.
He was soon appointed justice of the peace, a lieutenant colonel of the militia, and judge of the court of common pleas.
www.ohiohistorystore.com /browse.cfm/4,197.html   (240 words)

  
 JJHuddle.com: Thomas Worthington vs. WRA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-06)
Thomas is coming off of a close loss to rival Kilbourne.
I think that this game comes down to whether WRA is able to get fast breaks against Thomas.
With two huge blow out wins over Seaholm and Thomas, WRA might be the hottest team in the Midwest right now.
www.jjhuddle.com /cgi-bin/discus/discus.cgi?pg=next&topic=36109&page=172979   (159 words)

  
 RootsWeb's WorldConnect Project: Descendants of Thomas Tolley Worthington in Mason County, Kentucky
Descendants of Thomas Tolley Worthington in Mason County, Kentucky
Item: I give unto my daughter, Martha Worthington, the Bond which I have executed in her own name for the sum of seventeen hundred and eleven dollars and also all the interest that may be acsuable on the same to her and her heirs forever.
Item 3: whereas I have already advanced to my said son Garret Worthington the sum of twenty two hundred dollars, a horse saddle and bridle, I also now give and bequeath to him the sum of five hundred dollars to be paid out of my estate by my executors.
worldconnect.rootsweb.com /cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=rts1960w&id=I3   (677 words)

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