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Topic: William L Sharkey


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  William L. Sharkey Information
William Lewis Sharkey (July 12, 1798–April 29, 1873) was an American judge and politician from Mississippi.
Sharkey was appointed to the office of Secretary of War by U.S. President Millard Fillmore in 1851, but declined.
In that year, Johnson appointed Sharkey to be provisional governor, leaving office with the election of Benjamin G. Humphreys in October.
www.bookrags.com /William_L._Sharkey   (317 words)

  
  William L. Sharkey   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
William L. Sharkey (July 12, 1798 - April 29, 1873) was a Mississippi judge and politican.
Sharkey declined an appointment to be Secretary of War by President Millard Fillmore in 1851.
In that year, Johnson appointed Sharkey to be provisional governor, leaving office with the election of Benjamin G. Humphreys in October.
bopedia.com /en/wikipedia/w/wi/william_l__sharkey.html   (192 words)

  
 William L. Sharkey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Lewis Sharkey (July 12, 1798–April 29, 1873) was an American judge and politician from Mississippi.
Sharkey was appointed to the office of Secretary of War by U.S. President Millard Fillmore in 1851, but declined.
Throughout the American Civil War he remained a staunch Unionist and, according to one source, was "tolerated by his Confederate neighbors only because of his towering reputation as a jurist." Governor Charles Clark appointed him in 1865 as a commissioner (along with William Yeager) to confer on behalf of the state with President Andrew Johnson.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/William_L._Sharkey   (411 words)

  
 The Probert Encyclopaediat
William Elphinstone was a Scottish prelate and statesman.
William Penn was an English quaker and the founder of Pennsylvania.
William II (William Rufus) was a son of William The Conqueror and King of England from 1087 to 1100.
david-pye.com /probert/CF.php   (8404 words)

  
 Sharkey
Sharkey sailed on 11 January 1923 for the Caribbean, and participated in Fleet Problem I off Panama and in combined fleet exercises until sailing from the Caribbean on 2 April for the Philadelphia Navy Yard.
Sharkey returned to Guantanamo on 13 January 1926, and transited the Panama Canal on 4 February to participate in Fleet Problem VI off the west coast of Central America.
Sharkey arrived at Guantanamo on 11 January 1928 and operated with the fleet in the Caribbean until 31 March.
www.history.navy.mil /danfs/s11/sharkey.htm   (802 words)

  
 S   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
WILLIAM E. William E. Saunderson, who died at Monticello, May 15, 1874, in his thirty-eighth year was serving his second term as sheriff of White County.
William Sill was one of the very first settlers in Monticello, having come here in 1834, when he erected the first house built in Monticello on lot No. 1, being at the souihwest corner of Marion and Bluff streets.
William F. Snyder was born in the little community of Norway, White County, February 14, 1857, a son of Abraham and Margaret (Strauss) Snyder.
www.brookston.lib.in.us /WhiteCo/biographies-S.htm   (15868 words)

  
 Sharkey County, Mississippi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Sharkey County was named for William L. Sharkey, one of the ablest and most respected judges in the history of the State.
William Lewis Sharkey (1798-1873) was born in Tennessee and moved with his family to the Natchez District in 1803.
Sharkey County was established by an act of March 29, 1876, from the northeastern part of Issaquena County and from a small tract in southeastern Washington County.
www.msda9.com /sharkey   (379 words)

  
 Governors of Mississippi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Sharkey was born in Tennessee in 1797 (or 1798 according to some sources), and came to Mississippi with his family in 1803.
Sharkey was a member of the Whig Party and a strong unionist.
He directed Governor Sharkey to call a constitutional convention to declare the Ordinance of Secession null and void and to abolish slavery.
mshistory.k12.ms.us /features/feature47/governors/20_william_sharkey.htm   (462 words)

  
 William Sharkey   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Judge William L. SHARKEY, twenty third Governor of Mississippi, was born in Sumner County in 1797.
In 1863 he was appointed by Gov. CLARK a Commissioner with William YEAGER to go to Washington to confer with President JOHNSON in behalf of his State.
Judge SHARKEY was not a man of liberal education, and when he was elevated to the Supreme bench he was not well learned in the law.
www.rootsweb.com /~tnsumner/sharkey.htm   (335 words)

  
 Mississippi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
In June, 1865, a provisional government was established by president Johnson, with William L. Sharkey as provisional governor.
A civil state government was established by an election of the people in October, 1865, under the auspices of President Johnson's plan of Reconstruction, with Benjamin G. Humphreys as governor.
Under the Reconstruction Acts of Congress of March, 1867, the Humphreys government was abolished and a temporary military government established in its place until the Reconstruction government was established, under the Acts of Congress, with James L. Alcorn as governor, who was inaugurated 10 March, 1870.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/m/mississippi.html   (3952 words)

  
 Headlines@Hopkins: Johns Hopkins University News Releases
Sharkey became dean of the Cleveland Institute in 2001, serving as the chief academic officer of its college division.
Before joining CIM, Sharkey was director of music at the Purcell School in London from 1996 to 2001 and head of composition and academic music at Wells Cathedral School, also in England, from 1990 to 1996.
Sharkey was a founding member of the Pirasti Piano Trio, which recorded with ASV Records in the United Kingdom and toured throughout Europe and the United States.
www.jhu.edu /news/univ06/may06/sharkey.html   (593 words)

  
 Sharkey County, Mississippi MS, county profile - hotels, festivals, genealogy, newspapers - ePodunk
Sharkey County is one of 82 counties in Mississippi.
This was a decrease of -7.55% from the 2000 census.
Sharkey County supported John Kerry in the 2004 presidential election.
www.epodunk.com /cgi-bin/genInfo.php?locIndex=20008   (413 words)

  
 [No title]
Judge Sharkey was a Judge of the High Court of Errors and Appeals from its organization under the Constitution of 1832, until he resigned in 1851; during much of the time he was the Chief Justice of the Court and was recognized as among the most eminent of American judges.
William Hemingway, a farmer, was a delegate to the Convention from Carroll County and was the grandfather of Professor William Hemingway of the Law Department of our State University, himself a codifier.
William H. Hardy was a lawyer and had attained prominence at the bar and as a promoter of public enterprises.
library.mssc.state.ms.us /thompsononcodes.htm   (7486 words)

  
 William F. Sharkey Publications
Sharkey, W. F., and Kim, M. The effect of embarrassability on perceived importance of conversational constraints during bind interactions.
Sharkey, W. A deaf child born to hearing parents: Communicative disruptions, implications and adjustments.
Sharkey, W. F., and Hikins, J. Edward Miner Gallaudet's "Remarks on the combined system:" An analysis of the "preservative" function of rhetoric of education.
www.hawaii.edu /speech/homepages/sharkey/publications.htm   (489 words)

  
 Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, 1789-1873 : a machine readable transcription.
Williams presented a petition of citizens of Oregon, praying further legislation for the better protection of passengers on board vessels on the Pacific coast; which was referred to the Committee on Commerce.
Williams asked, and by unanimous consent obtained, leave to bring in a bill (S. 30) to create an additional land district in the State of Oregon; which was read the first and second times by unanimous consent, and referred to the Committee on Public Lands.
Williams asked, and by unanimous consent obtained, leave to bring in a bill (S. 32) to prevent the absence of territorial officers from their official duties; which was read the first and second times by unanimous consent, referred to the Committee on Territories, and ordered to be printed.
memory.loc.gov /ll/llsj/058/llsj058.sgm   (13304 words)

  
 Mississippi - Search View - MSN Encarta
Johnson appointed William L. Sharkey as provisional governor of Mississippi in June 1865 and directed him to reorganize the state government.
The Balance Agriculture With Industry (BAWI) program of Governor Hugh L. White, enacted in 1936, enabled the state and local governments to issue bonds for the construction of industrial plants to be leased to private industries.
The remainder of the article was contributed by Charles L. Wax.
encarta.msn.com /text_761575599__1/Mississippi.html   (13334 words)

  
 Sharkey County, Mississippi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
This Sharkey County page is part of the MSGenWeb Project, which is part of the USGenWeb Project.
Lying in the Mississippi Delta, in the western part of the State, Sharkey County was organized March 29, 1876, and was named for Judge William L. Sharkey, provisional governor of the State in 1865.
It was originally carved from territory belonging to the counties of Warren, Washington and Issaquena.
www.rootsweb.com /~mssharke/index.html   (285 words)

  
 The Supreme Court Historical Society
One of the appointed justices of the peace was William Marbury, forty-one years of age and an aide to the Secretary of the Navy Benjamin Stoddert.
Jefferson perceived the entire matter to be grossly partisan in nature, and after examining the matter decided on a list of thirty people to be justices of the peace, of whom twenty-three were from the original list of forty-two.
The attorneys were Robert J. Walker, Alexander H. Garland, and William L. Sharkey, and they sought to enjoin President Johnson from enforcing those acts in Mississippi on the grounds that the acts were unconstitutional.
www.supremecourthistory.org /04_library/subs_volumes/04_c02_k.html   (4882 words)

  
 Department Faculty Publications
Hall, L. Marshall, "William Sharkey and Reconstruction, 1866-1873," Journal of Mississippi History, 27 (February 1965).
"Governor William L. Sharkey and Presidential Reconstruction in Mississippi, 1865." Mississippi Historical Society Annual Meeting, Meridian, Mississippi, 1964.
"William L. Sharkey: A Mississippi Unionist and the American Civil War." Longwood University Faculty Colloquium Series, 1985.
www.longwood.edu /History/facpub.htm   (1506 words)

  
 [No title]
From Judge Sharkey the request was verbal; from the other two it came in long and, to me, cherished letters.
William Holt Crawford was a native of Virginia: his family were Scotch, and came early to the United States, and have been remarkable for their talents and energy.
Generations before his eyes have passed into eternity; the little handful of Methodist communicants grown into a mighty and intelligent body; thousands of ministers are heralding her tenets all over the Protestant world--mighty in learning, mighty in eloquence--yet none surpass the eloquence, the power, and the purity of Lovie Pierce.
www.gutenberg.org /dirs/1/5/8/7/15872/15872.txt   (19787 words)

  
 hyman13   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Cocke, William A. A Treatise on the Common and Civil Law as Embraced in the Civil Law of the United States (NY: Baker, Voorhis, 1871) (excerpts).
Platt, Harold L. "The Stillbirth of Urban Politics in the Reconstruction South: Houston, Texas as a Test Case" (typescript, 1982).
Harring, Sidney L. "Cops and Workers: the Reorganization of the Police Institution in Buffalo, New York, 1885-1915" (paper presented at the Conference on Historical Perspectives on American Criminal Justice, Omaha, Nebraska, April 22-23, 1976) (typescript).
www.tamu.edu /pvamu/library/hyman13.htm   (10698 words)

  
 U.S. states L-M
1946) 5 Jan 1905 - 4 Jan 1906 William L. Douglas Dem (b.
1998) 5 Jan 1955 - 2 Jan 1961 Orville L. Freeman DFL (b.
1983) 18 Jan 1972 - 20 Jan 1976 William Waller Dem (b.
rulers.org /usstat3.html   (7735 words)

  
 albany poets >>
Everson, Alan Catlin, Bob Monaghan, James, Shara, Bob Sharkey, KC, K.J. Spencer, and Paddy Kilrain all shared their work with the crowd to bring an end to the 2006 Albany Word Fest and all for a good cause.
The Intangibles are a group of poets and spoken word artists who all were a part of the Oneonta College slam team and have performed in slam competitions all over the country.
This is the first 15 poets to perform at the 2006 Albany Word Fest Part I at the UAG Gallery on Friday, April 21.
www.albanypoets.com /audio   (1782 words)

  
 The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Compilation of the Messages and Papers Of The Presidents, by James D. Richardson
William H. Seward, Secretary of State, were incited, concerted, and procured by and between Jefferson Davis, late of Richmond, Va., and Jacob Thompson, Clement C. Clay, Beverley Tucker, George N. Sanders, William C. Cleary, and other rebels and traitors against the Government of the United States harbored in Canada:
William H. Seward, Secretary of State, and in an alleged conspiracy to assassinate other officers of the Federal Government at Washington City, and their aiders and abettors, are subject to the jurisdiction of and lawfully triable before a military commission—
William H. Seward, Secretary of State, and in an alleged conspiracy to assassinate other officers of the Federal Government at Washington City, and their aiders and abettors.
www.gutenberg.org /dirs/1/2/7/5/12755/12755-h/12755-h.htm   (9604 words)

  
 The Papers of Jefferson Davis
Sykes, William A. (sketch, 175): L to, 173-75
Tucker, Nathaniel Beverley (sketch, 8:110): L from, 282
Yancey, William Lowndes (sketch, 6:342): Davis and, 7, 166, 195, 214, 231, 246; speaks at Raleigh, 9; Ls to, 195, 231; Ls from, 140, 166, 214, 246; mentioned, 340
cohesion.rice.edu /humanities/pjdavis/PubVol.cfm?doc_id=1665   (1813 words)

  
 HWP1 Functions in the Morphological Development of Candida albicans Downstream of EFG1, TUP1, and RBF1 -- Sharkey et ...
Sharkey, L. L., Liao, W.-l., Ghosh, A. K., Fonzi, W. Flanking direct repeats of hisG alter URA3 marker expression at the HWP1 locus of Candida albicans.
Martinez-Lopez, R., Monteoliva, L., Diez-Orejas, R., Nombela, C., Gil, C. The GPI-anchored protein CaEcm33p is required for cell wall integrity, morphogenesis and virulence in Candida albicans.
Tsuchimori, N., Sharkey, L. L., Fonzi, W. A., French, S. W., Edwards, J. Jr., Filler, S. Reduced Virulence of HWP1-Deficient Mutants of Candida albicans and Their Interactions with Host Cells.
jb.asm.org /cgi/content/abstract/181/17/5273   (1092 words)

  
 AJR - The Television War
Jacqueline E. Sharkey is head of the University of Arizona Department of Journalism and author of "Under Fire--U.S. Military Restrictions on the Media from Grenada to the Persian Gulf."
On March 19, CNN reporter Walter Rodgers told viewers about "a charming vignette." It involved members of the U.S. Army 7th Cavalry, who learned about the start of the war in Iraq not from their superiors but from Rodgers, who was embedded with the unit.
Cable news is "such a hungry beast that they just shovel stuff in," says Joseph L. Galloway, Knight Ridder senior military correspondent and coauthor of two books on war coverage.
www.ajr.org /article_printable.asp?id=2988   (3899 words)

  
 Ancestry Message Boards [ Sharkey ]
Sharkeys in PA and OH : Walter Fred -- 27 Jan 2006
Sharkey Brothers Michael and Nicholas: from Ireland to Paterson, NJ : Ann -- 26 Jan 2006
Re: Sharkey Brothers Michael and Nicholas: from Ireland to Paterson, NJ : Jackie Blanchard -- 28 Jan 2006
boards.ancestry.com /mbexec/board/an/surnames.sharkey   (321 words)

  
 AmericanHeritage.com / Mississippi: the past that has not died
William Wilkinson was murdered at Lauderdale Springs by five of his former slaves for selling his plantation—they claimed it was rightfully theirs by Christmas.
William H. Smallwood, a Negro, was Jackson’s leading expert on leases and deeds in the eighties.
As that astute observer William J. Cash remarked, a southern white woman had less chance of being raped by a Negro than of being struck by lightning.
www.americanheritage.com /articles/magazine/ah/1965/4/1965_4_4.shtml   (9657 words)

  
 Presidents Talking About the Presidency
In fairness to the record, however, it is undeniable that the President at an earlier point in the reconstruction process had urged Mississippi's provisional governor to consider providing for limited voting rights for fls in that sate.
In a telegram dated August 15, 1865, Johnson asked William L. Sharkey to extend the franchise to fl persons who could read and write and who owned real estate valued at not less than two hundred and fifty dollars.
In an interview with George L. Stearns on October 3, 1865, the President declared that if he were in Tennessee, he would seek to introduce fl suffrage there gradually.
www.neh.gov /news/humanities/1997-01/presiden.html   (2686 words)

  
 William L Hennrikus Jr, MD Home Page
William L Hennrikus Jr, MD Fellow of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
Dr Hennrikus is active in the Fresno Madera Medical Society with committee work and as a delegate to the California Medical Society annual meeting.
Dr Hennrikus is a proud sponsor of the annual Junior League Senior Girl Athlete awards program and the annual Peter Sharkey Basketball camp for girls.
www.orthodoc.aaos.org /williamhennrikusmd   (541 words)

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