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Topic: Timothy Fuller


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In the News (Sun 29 Nov 09)

  
  Margaret Fuller -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Her father, Timothy Fuller, a lawyer, gave her a vigorous classical education which was testing enough to have a lasting effect on her health.
Lost with them was Fuller's book on the history of the (The ancient Roman state from 509 BC until Augustus assumed power in 27 BC; was governed by an elected Senate but dissatisfaction with the Senate led to civil wars that culminated in a brief dictatorship by Julius Caesar) Roman Republic.
Fuller is said to have been the model for Zenobia, the (A woman possessing heroic qualities or a woman who has performed heroic deeds) heroine of (United States writer of novels and short stories mostly on moral themes (1804-1864)) Nathaniel Hawthorne's (additional info and facts about The Blithedale Romance) The Blithedale Romance (1852).
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/m/ma/margaret_fuller.htm   (540 words)

  
 Margaret Fuller
Fuller became friends with Ralph Waldo Emerson and was subsequently associated with transcendentalism.
Fuller, her husband, and her son all died when a boat transporting them back to America from Italy sank off Fire Island, New York.
Fuller is said to have been the model for Zenobia, the heroine of Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Blithedale Romance (1852).
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /encyclopedia/m/ma/margaret_fuller.html   (389 words)

  
 Margaret Fuller
Margaret was the first-born child of Unitarian parents, Margarett Crane and Timothy Fuller, Jr.
A lawyer and a Republican in Federalist New England, Timothy Fuller was elected to the Massachusetts Senate in 1813 and in 1818 began the first of four terms in the United States Congress, later returning to the state legislature and finally retiring to write.
Fuller provided a setting where they could discuss what they knew, free to explore ideas and speak their own thoughts on such topics as classical mythology, education, ethics, the fine arts, and woman.
www.uua.org /uuhs/duub/articles/margaretfuller.html   (2524 words)

  
 The University of Tulsa >> News/Events/Publications
Timothy Fuller, the William and Rita Bell Distinguished Visiting Professor of Anglican and Ecumenical Studies at The University of Tulsa, will discuss “Anglican Ideas of the Church,” for the 2005 William and Rita Bell Lecture at 7:30 p.m.
Fuller is the Lloyd E. Worner Distinguished Service Professor in political science at Colorado College where he has served as a member of the faculty since 1965 and editor of the Colorado College Studies Journal since 1974.
Fuller was appointed by President Bush to the President’s Advisory Council for the Arts from 2002-2003 and he is a member of the board of the American Academy for Liberal Education.
www.utulsa.edu /news/article.asp?Key=1117   (218 words)

  
 Fuller, Timothy
TIMOTHY FULLER, the fourth child and eldest son of Timothy Fuller Sr., attained distinction.
Mr Fuller's published writings are, "An Oration delivered at Watertown, July 4, 1809; " "Address before the Massachusetts Peace Society, 1826; " "The Election for the Presidency considered, by a Citizen; " Speeches on the Seminole War, Missouri Compromise, &c.
Timothy Fuller married Margaret Crane, daughter of Maj. Peter Crane, of Canton, Mass., May 28, 1809.
www.accessgenealogy.com /scripts/data/database.cgi?file=Data&report=SingleArticle&ArticleID=0023408   (1005 words)

  
 "Mother" of human rights reporting
Margaret Fuller was the eldest of nine children born to Unitarian parents in 1810 at Cambridgeport, Mass.
Margaret Fuller experienced what one source called a delayed mourning for the death of her father, a mourning which finally in the winter of 1840-1841 led to her shifting of attention to issues of female creativity.
Fuller thus became a co-editor of The Dial, a quarterly literary journal of the Transcendentalists, in 1840.
www.worldlymind.org /fuller.htm   (1923 words)

  
 Margaret Fuller
Her father was Timothy Fuller, a Republican Party member of Congress.
She wrote that "when inward and outward freedom for woman as much as for man shall be acknowledged as a right, not yielded as a concession." Fuller's writings on political equality influenced a generation of feminists involved in the struggle for women's suffrage.
Fuller now began advocating socialist views and during the Revolution of 1848 assumed charge of a hospital in Rome while her husband took part in the fighting.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /USAWfuller.htm   (741 words)

  
 Slave Narratives
She was born to Mary Crane and Timothy Fuller, who lived Cambridgeport (now a part of Cambridge) Massachusetts.
Over a period of five winters, Fuller had covered subjects such as fine arts, ethics, education and the influences of women in areas such as the family, school, church, society and literature as well.
Fuller takes the opportunity to attack the two-faced ideals of men, ideals that have hindered the woman’s improvement in society while allowing for fls to finally achieve their rights.
www.geocities.com /insaaf21/Insaaf21.html   (982 words)

  
 Excerpt From: 2002 LICENCE APPEAL TRIBUNAL Decisions
Fuller testified that before the cabinets were installed, he had pointed out to Ashcroft that they were the wrong ones.
Fuller rejected it because of the attached release which was required and, according to Mr.
Fuller acknowledged that he did not permit an Ashcroft worker, Pierre, to use a wedge to fix the sagging floor in the living room.
www.central-park.ottawa.on.ca /docs/fuller/2002-02-28.phtml   (8382 words)

  
 The Parsons Child and Family Center   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Albert D. Fuller was devoted to the Albany Orphan Asylum and its children, as can be seen in the correspondence between him and children who had left the Asylum to return to their parents or were bound out to families.It was during Mr.
Fuller's tenure as superintendent that the majority of the children's records were kept, including the individual case files.   In 1891, Albert Fuller was also placed in charge of the Lathrop Memorial, another home in Albany for orphaned children.After he died in 1893, his wife, Helen Fuller, who served until 1902, succeeded him.
Fuller, who became Superintendent after the death of her husband.Some records include case numbers so that records can be cross-referenced to other volumes in series.
www.nysl.nysed.gov /msscfa/sc17377.htm   (2042 words)

  
 A Tribute to David Otis Fuller: Some Jewels from His Correspondence
Though Dr. Fuller was a bold and uncompromising warrior for the preserved Bible, his life was not full of bitterness and carnal wrangling.
Fuller was Princeton educated, but he did not worship at the fountain of scholarship, nor did he glory in man's intellect as most educated Christian leaders seem to do.
For years I did my best [Dr. Fuller was with the GARBC for over 50 years] to have them come out flatfooted in favor of the KJV and make it their final absolute Authority, but they keep dancing around the issue and playing tag with most everybody.
www.wayoflife.org /fbns/fuller.htm   (4138 words)

  
 Men, Women and Margaret Fuller
The Fullers were amongst the oldest of New England’s families—measured in generations and not centuries, because of course, this was the New World.
Timothy eventually met and married Margaret Crane, a beautiful young woman who came as close as was possible to being Timothy’s ideal woman.
Emily Dickinson did likewise in New England, but Margaret Fuller’s own stern code of truth would never allow her to do this, so apart from a few very close admiring friends, and the women who attended her classes and adored her, she was still resented, and many criticized her for stepping outside the traditional role.
www.uucb.org /sermons/2003062901   (2437 words)

  
 reagenealogy - pafg277 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Thomas Fuller [Parents] was born in Apr 1618 in Isle of Wight, England.
Timothy Fuller was born on 18 May 1739.
Timothy Fuller [Parents] was born on 18 May 1739.
members.cox.net /garyrea/pafg277.htm   (151 words)

  
 Timothy Fuller   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
FULLER, Timothy, congressman, born in Chilmark, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, 11 July 1778; died in Oroton, Massachusetts, 1 October 1835.
Fuller was a hardworking lawyer, and an active and publicspirited man. He died suddenly of cholera, in testate and insolvent.
Another brother, Arthur Buckminster Fuller, clergyman, born in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, 10 August 1822; died in Fredericksburg, Virginia, 11 December 1862, was fitted for College by his sister Margaret, and graduated at Harvard in 1843.
www.famousamericans.net /timothyfuller   (1714 words)

  
 margaret fuller
Sarah Margaret Fuller, Marchesa d'Ossoli was born May 23, 1810, to Timothy and Margaret Crane Fuller in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts.
Disappointed that his first-born was a girl, Fuller decided to give his daughter the same education that he would have given a son.
Fuller and her husband, along with her manuscript of the revolution, were never found.
www.uncp.edu /home/canada/work/allam/edit/fuller.htm   (979 words)

  
 THE UNBELIEF AT FULLER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
Fuller quickly became a hotbed of New Evangelical compromise, adopting a philosophy of doctrinal neutrality, positivism, pride of intellect.
Fuller Seminary’s endorsement of the Revised Standard Version was irrefutable evidence that the school was already on the wrong side of the age-old battle for truth.
After she attended Fuller “she was surprised to find that she was the only one at the seminary who still held a prejudice against women pastors.” Thus she became the co-pastor of Goldenwest Vineyard Christian Fellowship and when her husband died, she continued as the senior pastor.
www.wayoflife.org /fbns/unbeliefat.htm   (4215 words)

  
 Memorial Day came early for Army reserve staff sergeant
Fuller, who serves with the Army Reserves, 353rd Transportation Unit out of Buffalo, was in Iraq Feb. 10—Dec. 15, 2003.
It was the duty of Fuller and the 353rd to haul fuel where it was needed; they picked up, transported, uploaded and downloaded approximately 2.4 million gallons of fuel and traveled about one million miles.
Fuller received the flag in September and flew it on a truck that traveled from Kuwait to Baghdad.
www.erstarnews.com /2004/may/25king.html   (532 words)

  
 HistoryLink Essay: Fuller, Dr. Richard Eugene (1897-1976)
Fuller was Seattle Art Museum’s founding director and he served as president for 40 years.  For this he took no salary.  He continued to build the Seattle Art Museum’s collection at his expense and erase budget deficits out of his own pocket.
In January 1961, Richard Fuller and Mark Tobey (then living in Switzerland) were among the 155 artists, scientists, writers, and directors of cultural institutions across the nation invited to attend John F. Kennedy’s presidential inauguration.
Eugene Fuller and Dr. Richard E. Fuller,” The Town Crier, June 24, 1933; “Museum to be Exhibited,” Ibid., May 6, 1933; Martha Kingsbury, “Seattle and the Puget Sound,” in Art of the Pacific Northwest From the 1930s to the Present, (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1974).
www.historylink.org /essays/output.cfm?file_id=7190   (975 words)

  
 Hijacking of American Education: Part 3 - Sarah Margaret Fuller   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Her father Timothy, an attorney who was elected to the Massachusetts legislature and later to the U.S. Congress, was bitterly disappointed, having set his heart on a son.
Schoolmates soon found the Fuller girl always insisted on her own way and was unwilling to follow the leadership of others.
Fuller crusaded against what she called the "cult of true womanhood," i.e., piety, purity, submissiveness, passivity, and domestic virtues.
www.forerunner.com /forerunner/X0284_Hijacking_American_L.html   (1600 words)

  
 HomeSchool - Camp Internet - HomePlanet.Net HomeSchool Center
The paper had nationwide circulation and Fuller was able to encourage readers' interest in American writers.
Fuller traveled to Europe and sent back articles about life in the European cities.
During the of Revolution of 1848 and during the siege of Rome by the French forces, Fuller assumed charge of one of the hospitals of the city, while her husband took part in the fighting.
www.rain.org /campinternet/transcendentalism-margaret-fuller.html   (583 words)

  
 Margaret Fuller biography New England Transcendentalism
Margaret Fuller was then twenty-five and had to give up the keenly anticipated prospect of a European tour with some literary friends.
Margaret Fuller, the life-changingly spellbinding conversationalist, held women only "conversation classes," in Elizabeth Palmer Peabody's West Street bookstore in Boston in 1839 designed to emancipate women from their traditional intellectual subservience to men.
The editorship was indeed officially hers during the period 1839-2 and she continued to perform considerable editorial duties after relinquishing the editorship in 1842 until the Dial ceased publication in 1844.
www.age-of-the-sage.org /transcendentalism/margaret_fuller.html   (1486 words)

  
 Margaret Fuller
Margaret Fuller was born Sarah Margaret Fuller on May 23, 1810 in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts.
She was a very intelligent, even precocious, child who received an intense education from her father, Timothy Fuller, learning Greek and Latin at a very early age.
Fuller traveled to Europe and sent back articles about letters and art in Europe, meeting many well-known European writers and intellectuals.
www.vcu.edu /engweb/transcendentalism/authors/fuller   (737 words)

  
 History's Women An Online Magazine
Margaret Fuller Ossoli was born in the year 1810.
Her father, Timothy Fuller, gave much personal attention to her education.
She proved to be a remarkable scholar and when she was six years old she could read Latin and at eight she read Shakespeare, Cervantes, and Moliere extensively.
www.historyswomen.com /thearts/MargaretFullerOssoli.html   (343 words)

  
 [No title]
Fuller began collecting his personal papers, and newspaper and magazine clippings about his work, in the 1920s; his "Chronofile," as he called it, grew to include material about his inventive activities, the business and legal structures that supported his work, correspondence with countless admirers, and family letters.
Fuller first sorted his thoughts into different manila envelopes with the name of the friend whom he thought would be interested in that particular nuance of his thinking.
Fuller filed correspondence by the date that a response was received from a correspondent, rather than necessarily when he initiated a dialogue.
www-sul.stanford.edu /depts/spc/xml/m1090.xml   (5502 words)

  
 Timothy Fuller
A member of the Republican Party, Fuller was elected to Congress four times (4th March, 1817 to 3rd March, 1825) and served as chairman of the Naval Affairs Committee.
Fuller, the father of Margaret Fuller, returned to the State senate between 1825-28.
Timothy Fuller died from cholera in Gorton, Middlesex County,
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /USAWfullerT.htm   (150 words)

  
 reagenealogy - pafg278 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
Timothy Fuller [Parents] was born in 1778 in Chilmark, Marthas Vineyard, Massachusetts.
Arthur Buckminster Fuller [Parents] was born in 1822.
Arthur Ossoli Fuller [Parents] was born in 1856.
members.cox.net /garyrea/pafg278.htm   (311 words)

  
 Margaret Fuller: Summer on the Lakes: Chronology   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Timothy Fuller begins serving the first of four terms in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Fuller dies with husband and son only a few hundred yards from Fire Island.
Margaret and Her Friends; or Ten Conversations with Margaret Fuller Upon the Mythology of the Greeks and Its Expression in Art Held at the House of the Rev. George Ripley… Beginning March 1, 1841.
courses.washington.edu /hum523/fuller/Chronology.shtml   (652 words)

  
 Dolores Fuller at Brian's Drive-In Theater
Born Dolores Eble in Indiana in 1923, Dolores Fuller is best known for her association with director Ed Wood and as one of the stars of the 1953 film Glen or Glenda; however, she has enjoyed a lengthy and varied career in show business.
By the time Fuller met Ed Wood in 1952, she was already firmly established as a television personality.
Today, Dolores Fuller is still active in show biz; her musical show is nearing completion and tells the real story of her life with Ed Wood and their dear friend, Bela Lugosi.
www.briansdriveintheater.com /doloresfuller.html   (1187 words)

  
 Business Wire: Michael Rivera and Timothy Fuller Join Railworks. @ HighBeam Research
Fuller was responsible for all information technology including application development, telecommunications, technology procurement, web development, help desk and computer operations.
Fuller was the Director of Information Services with Crown Central Petroleum Corporation, a $1.6 billion company, where he had similar responsibilities.
Fuller earned a bachelor of business administration with a concentration in management information systems from Texas Tech University.
www.highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?docid=1G1:57050966&refid=ink_tptd_np   (510 words)

  
 LitKicks: Margaret Fuller   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
She was one of the core members of the circle of spiritual-minded Concord intellectuals that became known as the Transcendentalists, along with the educator Bronson Alcott, who hired her as a teacher at his progressive Temple School.
Fuller's activities included conducting a series of public "conversations" on lofty philosophical subjects with other women, which generated much attention in these pre-liberated years.
Fuller worked closely with Emerson in founding "The Dial", the flagship publication of the Transcendentalist movement, in 1840.
www.litkicks.com /BeatPages/page.jsp?what=MargaretFuller   (700 words)

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