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Topic: William Coxe


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In the News (Mon 28 Dec 09)

  
  William Coxe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Coxe (March 17, 1747 - June 8, 1828), English historian, son of Dr William Coxe, physician to the royal household, was born in London.
In 1791 he was made prebendary of Salisbury, and in 1804 archdeacon of Wiltshire.
He married in 1803 Eleanora, daughter of William Shairp, consul-general for Russia, and widow of Thomas Yeldham of St Petersburg.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/William_Coxe   (403 words)

  
 The Greenville Historical Society Coxe Collection   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Coxe, a professional photographer and a pilot, achieved national recognition for his aerial photography.
Coxe shot newsreels for MGM, was the official photographer for Southern Textile Expositions, and covered area textile communities activity, sports events for local schools, and photographic work for corporate and governmental agencies.
Coxe donated the collection to the Greenville County Historical Society which retains the rights to all pictures contained in the collection.
www.greenvillehistory.org /the_coxe_collection.html   (261 words)

  
 McIlvaineArguments
Daniel Coxe, who conveyed to the lessor of the plaintiff, was born in New Jersey, where he resided from his birth until some time in the year 1777, when he removed to the city of Philadelphia while or shortly before it was in the possession of the British troops.
Daniel Coxe, who ought to know the quo animo of all the acts charged against him, declares by his counsel, that he never meant to give up his capacity to take and hold lands by descent or purchase: and his counsel declare that if such was his intention, he could not do it.
Coxe are considered by the same law, as expatriated, as aliens, and being no longer citizens; he having been attainted of treason by the state of Pennsylvania in the year 1778.
home.hiwaay.net /~becraft/McIlvaineArguments.htm   (14616 words)

  
 ancestors - pafn16 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
William Cox died before 1656, for on Dec. 14, 1656, Peter Lee was granted 126 acres of land in Henrico County which adjoined "the land belonging to the orphans of William Cox." Orphans of William appear to have been Thomas Cox and John Cox [I].
William Coxe retained his 100 acres "Ancient Planter" seat on Strawberry Bank, although presumably his 10-year lease had expired in 1638 but was probably renewed, for in 1642 he was still recorded as the owner of these lands.
John Cox [I] (William), of Arrowhattocks, on 29 March 1665 patented 550 acres in Henrico County on the north side of "Harristocks" [Arrowhattocks], adjoining the land of Capt. Edloe.
www.sorrellsgenealogy.com /pafn16.htm   (8954 words)

  
 Coxe Family Mining Papers - The Family
Born in England in 1640, Daniel Coxe, the ancestor of the Coxe family in America, was a doctor and a land speculator.
Coxes owned thousands of acres of land, despite the fact that Tench’s father, William Coxe, did not share the passion for acquiring and developing new lands that his own father and grandfather had.
The Coxe family began liquidating its property in 1962, largely due to the depressed condition of the anthracite coal industry.
www2.hsp.org /collections/coxe/family.html   (572 words)

  
 Tench Coxe and the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, 1787-1823 David B. Kopel Stephen Halbrook William and Mary Bill of ...
Coxe clearly believed in the individual right to arms, and he just as clearly believed that it was wrong for the Pennsylvania farmers to take up arms against a lawful tax that had been duly created through proper constitutional methods.
Coxe was the first American economist to foresee the immense economic potential of cotton culture in *370 the United States.
Coxe is recognized today as a leading expositor of federalist doctrine, and his subsequent career as a public servant and as a political writer supply depth and nuance to the original understanding of the right to keep and bear arms in the early republic.
www.davekopel.org /2A/LawRev/hk-coxe.htm   (11236 words)

  
 January, 1998
William Coxe was born May 3, 1762, in Philadelphia, Pa. He had no formal education but taught himself.
A long fruit painting spree set in at the Coxe home, the father assigning certain varieties to each of the three girls who were painting away to capture the specimens at their optimum condition.
Coxe's appeal to the filial love of his daughters bore beautiful fruit; at least 160 of their watercolours have been preserved.
www.nafex.org /jansonfiles/JansonApril802.htm   (1195 words)

  
 ancestors - pafn17 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File
William Coxe is listed among the early records of Virginia as an "ancient planter" and in a muster of the inhabitants of Elizabeth Cittie, taken in January-February 1624/25 by Thomas Bouldinge, he appears as "William Coxe, age 26, came in the Godspeede 1610." From this record we can estimate that William Cox was born ca.
William Coxe and Elizabeth his wife at some time went to England and on their return sold their rights for land to their neighbor Mathew Edloe, son and heir of Mathew Edloe, deceased, for a patent granted him 12 July 1637 [in which] he listed their two names among his headrights.
William Coxe and his wife, Elizabeth, made at least one return trip to England, and in 1637 were claimed by Mathew Edloe as headrights.
www.sorrellsgenealogy.com /pafn17.htm   (9470 words)

  
 History of Horticulture - Coxe, William 1762-1831
The illustrations were excellent for their time but show only the size and outline of a fruit and whether it was dotted, splashed or streaked.
In 1804 he offered for sale "eighty kinds of apples, ninety of pears and fifty one of cherries, nearly all imported and one hundred varieties of peaches." The early development of fruit growing in southeastern Pennsylvania is attributed very larely to the enthusiasm engendered by William Coxe.
Additional information about William Coxe may be found on the Internet.
www.hcs.ohio-state.edu /history/history/147.html   (254 words)

  
 WILLIAM COXE - LoveToKnow Article on WILLIAM COXE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
WILLIAM COXE - LoveToKnow Article on WILLIAM COXE
(1747-1828), English historian, son of Dr William Coxe, physician to the royal household, was born in London on the 7th of March 1747.
He married in 1803 Eleanora, daughter of William Shairp, consulgeneral for Russia, and widow of Thomas Yeldham of St Petersburg.
81.1911encyclopedia.org /C/CO/COXE_WILLIAM.htm   (328 words)

  
 Caerleon Castle described by William Coxe 1801
Workmen were in the process of separating the stones, which were then sold to a Mr Williams who built a house with them.
THE MOUND - Coxe observed the situation, in the side of the mound, where a Roman sarcophagus had been recently discovered.
According to Coxe, the oldest inhabitants remembered dilapidated buildings at the foot of the Mynde (see Lee's findings later) and a flight of stone steps leading up the mound.
www.caerleon.net /mynde/castle/page3.html   (399 words)

  
 COXE, Tench (1755-1824) Guide to Research Papers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Tench Coxe also discusses property holdings in his family, and requests that the contents of this letter not be revealed to the Board.
In the letter, Tench Coxe mentions that he has written several pieces on the “methods of encouraging manufactures without forcing duties and prohibitions” and expresses the hope that they will be republished.
Tench Coxe also requests that he be notified in the event that the essays are published in a newspapers.
bioguide.congress.gov /scripts/guidedisplay.pl?index=C000842   (410 words)

  
 Coxe   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
In two volumes, aspiring travel author William Coxe provides personal accounts and observations that he compiled during his travels throughout Europe, spanning between Poland, Russia, Sweden, and Denmark.
Coxe supports his principle facts with his own experiences, and cites many sources referencing political alliances, historical pasts, and cultural tradition.
Coxe addresses the royal history of Lithuania and Poland; from the rivalry between the two contiguous states to the perpetual wars up until 1386.
depts.washington.edu /baltic/papers/travelaccounts/coxe_1784.htm   (213 words)

  
 RICHARD SAVAGE, 4TH EARL RIVERS - LoveToKnow Article on RICHARD SAVAGE, 4TH EARL RIVERS   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
After becoming Lord Colchester on his brothers death he entered parliament as member for Wigan in 1681 and procured a commission in the Horsegu.ards under Sarsfield in 1686.
He was the first nobleman and one of the first persons who joined the prince of Orange on his landing in England, and he accompanied William to London.
As Rivers left no legitimate son the earldom passed on his death to his cousin, John Savage, grandson of the 2nd earl, and a priest in the Roman Catholic Church, on whose death, about 1735, all the family titles became extinct.
65.1911encyclopedia.org /R/RI/RIVERS_RICHARD_SAVAGE_4TH_EARL.htm   (564 words)

  
 Early Guides to Fruit Tree Management - Online Exhibit   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Although the editor's attempts to translate English horticultural practices for use in a very different climate and environment were not entirely successful, there were plain directions for planting, pruning, and harvesting fruits, with some consideration of the diseases of fruit trees.
William Coxe's vocation was that of a merchant; his passionate avocation was growing fruit.
The Coxe orchard is considered the first experimental orchard in the country.
www.mannlib.cornell.edu /about/exhibit/OxHearts/guides.htm   (374 words)

  
 University of Delaware: BURD FAMILY PAPERS
Also included is a Deed of Appointment by E.S. Burd, Margaret Coxe, and Sarah Burd in presence of the will of Edward Burd (1832), as well as two-page sheriff's document pertaining to prisoners by Thomas Duncan to Edward Burd, issued in the Supreme Court of Philadelphia.
The Coxes are related to the Burd family through the marriage of Daniel W. Coxe (1769-1852) to Margaret (Burd) Coxe (1781-1845), the daughter of Edward Burd (1750/51-1833).
D.W. Coxe and E.S. Burd were made trustees of Margaret's estate after her death in 1845, then Eliza Burd after her own husband's death in 1848.
www.lib.udel.edu /ud/spec/findaids/burd2.htm   (2784 words)

  
 COXE, WILLIAM (1747-1828) - Online Information article about COXE, WILLIAM (1747-1828)
WILLIAM (A.S. Wilhelm, O. Norse Vilhidlmr; O. Ger.
English historian, son of Dr William Coxe, physician to the royal See also:
SALISBURY, WILLIAM LONGSWORD (or LONGESPEE), EARL OF (d.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /COR_CRE/COXE_WILLIAM_1747_1828_.html   (656 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Coxe to Crago
Coxe, Alfred Conkling (1847-1923) — of New York.
Judge of U.S. District Court for the Northern District of New York, 1882; Judge of U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, 1902-17.
Judge of U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, 1929.
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/coxe-crago.html   (1268 words)

  
 William Coxe's 'Historical Tour of Monmouthshire', 1801 :: Gathering the Jewels
William Coxe's 'Historical Tour of Monmouthshire', 1801 :: Gathering the Jewels
In the autumn of 1798 Sir Richard Colt Hoare, a famous Wiltshire antiquarian, came to visit his friend, William Coxe in Monmouthshire.
The result was the two monolithic volumes that form Coxe's Historical Tour of Monmouthshire.
www.gtj.org.uk /en/item1/7020   (198 words)

  
 Frank Coxe Photographs
S.P.C. and T.C.C., [Tench and Sallie Coxe] 1913
She was the wife of Col. Frank Coxe.
Grandmother of Frank Coxe, Tench C. Coxe Jr., W.F.P. Coxe, Eliza Coxe.
toto.lib.unca.edu /findingaids/mss/coxef/photolist.htm   (1244 words)

  
 GENUKI: Wills of Gloucestershire - Surnames beginning C
COXE, Richarde - of Westerleigh, Gloucs, yeoman, 7 Oct 1615.
Joint Executors: John COXE of Tewkesbury, Milner and son in law William CLARKE; in trust for the sole use, benefit and behooffe of my said two daughters Anne and Faith.
CHAPPELL, William - of Stratton, Beerhouse keeper, 2 Oct 1849.
www.genuki.org.uk:8080 /big/eng/GLS/ProbateRecords/WillsC.html   (3290 words)

  
 William Paterson Un. vs Kean University (Mar 30, 2004)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Coxe singled; Arias advanced to second; Sisca advanced to third, scored on a throwing error by rf.
McNeill reached on an error by 2b; Coxe advanced to second; Takemoto advanced to third.
Coxe singled to third base; Fields advanced to second; Sisca advanced to third.
www.keanathletics.com /pages/softball/Boxes04/S03301.htm   (1041 words)

  
 William Paterson vs Rowan (Apr 05, 2005)
William Paterson IP H R ER BB SO AB BF ----------------------------------------------- Jenn Scott..........
French singled, advanced to second on the error; Coxe scored on an error by lf.
William Paterson 7th - Blair to rf for Williscroft.
ww2.wpunj.edu /athletics/Softball/05boxes/soft4051.htm   (858 words)

  
 COXE, William, Jr. (1762-1831) Guide to Research Papers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Papers: In the William McIlvaine Daybook, 1789-1804, 1 volume.
A letter from William Coxe to Reuben Haines written in 1819.
In the letter, William Coxe gives an account of raising cabbages in Burlington County, New Jersey.
bioguide.congress.gov /scripts/guidedisplay.pl?index=C000843   (59 words)

  
 PA State Archives - MG-147 - Scope and Content Note - John Anderson Papers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Papers of George Woods, David Espy, Espy L. Anderson (son of John Anderson), and Major William Watson Anderson (son of Espy L.
Correspondents include James Armstrong, A. Dallas, Daniel Duncan, Benjamin Elliot, William Hartley, David Hoge, John Hubley, John Nicholson, John Ormsby, Thomas Smith, James Trimble, Samuel Waugh, John Woods and Paul Zantzinger.
Papers contain Civil War letters, 1861-65; correspondence with John Cessna, William Orbison, and A. Russell; accounts, 1860-66; military papers, 1861-65; and photographs, n.
www.phmc.state.pa.us /Bah/dam/mg/mg147.htm   (811 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Reference to family finances and to her husband William McMurtrie; health of sisters Elizabeth and Emily, and baptism of the baby Ellen McMurtrie.
3 102 Maria Coxe McMurtrie Biddle from Elizabeth C. McMurtrie Undated Description: Correspondence to Maria Coxe McMurtrie Biddle from her mother Elizabeth Coxe McMurtrie: 2 ALS undated, addressed to "Miss McMurtrie" in Washington, D.C., and in Charlestown.
4 8 Elizabeth Coxe McMurtrie to Ellen McMurtrie Undated Description: Correspondence from Elizabeth Coxe McMurtrie to her daughter Ellen McMurtrie, a sister of Maria Coxe McMurtrie Biddle's: ALS undated.
www.library.georgetown.edu /dept/speccoll/biddlefa/series3.htm   (7367 words)

  
 William Coxe Quotes
1 Quotes for 'William Coxe' in the Database.
He ascribed to the interested views of themselves or their relatives the declarations of pretended patriots, of whom he said, "All those men have their price."
All Quotes are provided for educational purposes only and contributed by users.
www.worldofquotes.com /author/William-Coxe/1   (65 words)

  
 Adam's Family as of Sept 2004 - aqwn83 - Generated by Ancestry Family Tree   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
17, states without supporting evidence that Alice was Alice Coxe, sister to William Coxe.
Named in the will of William Browne of Surry Co, VA, his grandfather.
Named in the will of William Browne of Surry Co, VA, her grandfather.
www.marcia-mcclure.com /aqwn83.htm   (747 words)

  
 Mary Claiborne, b: -
Cabiness, James Watkins Cabiness, Robert H. Cage, Nancy D. Calicut, Calvin Green Call, Adolphus Alwin Callard, William Campbell, Mercy Jane Canon, James Cargill, Annis (approx.
1655 - 3 Apr 1731) Chadwick, William Chair, William Chamberlain, Mary Chamberlain, Rebecca Chandler, Ruby Chaney, John Chaney, Nancy (approx.
25 Dec 1805 -) Charley, Walter Charley, William (Chr.
www.angelfire.com /journal2/n_woodhead/ipc.html   (276 words)

  
 Library of America: Various authors: The Debate on the Constitution: Volume One: September 1787 to February 1788
Thomas Jefferson to William Stephens Smith, November 13, 1787 "The Tree of Liberty Must Be Refreshed from Time to Time with the Blood of Patriots and Tyrants"
William Findley on the Constitution as a Plan for National Consolidation, December 1, 1787
The Reverend Daniel Shute and Colonel William Jones on Religious Tests and Christian Belief, January 31, 1788
www.loa.org /volume.jsp?RequestID=32§ion=toc   (2459 words)

  
 Rutherford County, NC Deed Index   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Coxe, Daniel W. & William / Coxe, Tench / Deed/35/237/1826
Coxe, Daniel W. & William / Coxe, Tench / Deed/45/89/1844
Coxe, Tench / McGlamery, Jesse / Deed/22-23/162 & 163 & 169/1804
www.rfci.net /wdfloyd/Deed-C1.html   (7358 words)

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