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Topic: William Wilson Allen


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In the News (Mon 30 Nov 09)

  
  WilsonA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Allen Wilson was born 7/23/1784 in Litchfield, Connecticut, and died 2/4/1854 in Mercer County.
William and Keziah are found in Aledo in 1860: #1280 William A. Wilson, 29, farmer, born In; Keziah, 19, Pa; Allen J., 1, Il; William Woodward, 15, laborer, born Pa [brother of Keziah].
William and Keziah are in New Boston Township in 1870: #128 William A. Wilson, 39, farmer, born In; Kate, 30, Pa; Jay, 12, Il; Edd, 10, Il; Dick, 7, Il; Rusa (f), 6; Genl Phil Sheridan, 4, Il; John, 1, Il.
www.geocities.com /Heartland/Shores/2731/WilsonA.html   (3124 words)

  
 William M. Allen Biographies   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
William Allen is considered to be the father of modern commercial jet aviation.
William McPherson Allen was born on September 1, 1900, in Lolo, a tiny town in the foothills of Montana's Bitteroot Mountains.
Allen was a central figure in the wartime negotiations between Government and industry to develop the standard cost-plus contract, which called for the war industry to manufacture armaments at their cost plus a certain fixed fee.
users.moscow.com /woodisgood/bios/wmallen3.htm   (5096 words)

  
 The Monitor - McAllen, Texas   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
William Allen Wilson, 46, is facing one count of aggravated sexual assault against a disabled individual stemming from an incident Feb. 9 at Doctors Hospital at Renaissance in Edinburg.
According to court documents, Wilson’s defense attorney, Richard Garza, said the victim is "not competent to testify due to mental infirmity, which renders her recollection of the alleged offense suspect."
Wilson worked a few shifts at the hospital before the incident occurred and there had never been a complaint against him, Valle said.
www.themonitor.com /SiteProcessor.cfm?Template=/GlobalTemplates/Details.cfm&StoryID=8889&Section=Valley   (659 words)

  
 Descendants of Nathaniel Wilson   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
William Newton was born on 17 February 1845 at Brown County, Ohio.
William W was born in September 1864 at Mississippi.
Wilson was born on 10 September 1880 at Clark County, Ohio.
www.iwaynet.net /~lbeougher/wilso001.htm   (6184 words)

  
 University of Arkansas, Fayetteville: William Wilson Papers
William Wilson (1807-1886) was a prominent landowner and stock raiser in the Prairie Grove area of Washington County, Arkansas.
Wilson and his wife, Eliza, acquired over 2,000 acres near the present-day town of Prairie Grove, and began building a home for their large family.
William Wilson had at least four brothers and sisters, one of whom figures prominently in the collection's correspondence: John Wilson, who lived in Homer, Louisiana.
libinfo.uark.edu /specialcollections/findingaids/wilson.html   (2029 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Chicago: Ogle, 1901, pp 629-630 Ezra WILSON, deceased, was for many years a highly esteemed and honored citizen of Richfield Township, Adams County, Wisconsin, his home being on Section 2, where his widow still resides.
He was well and favorably known and was justly entitled to the high regard in which he was held by his fellow citizens and by all who knew him, for he led an upright, honorable life, and was true to every trust reposed in him.
WILSON was a member of the Relief Corps at Hancock.
www.rockvillemama.com /adams/wilsonezra.txt   (456 words)

  
 Carroll Co, IA, 1850, 1860 Biographies
On January 3, 1854, William Gilley was united in marriage to Miss Leah Mohler, a native of Wayne county, OH, and a daughter of John and Susan (Mohler) Mohler.
William Gilley: Willard B., who was drowned at the age of twelve; Ira M., a farmer of Grant county, Washington, living near Coulee City; Ida, now living in Carroll, who married William Trowbridge; and Emma I., also of Carroll, who married E. Pelsue (see original article for more details on the family).
Wilson was a worthy representative of the eary pioneer element of Carroll County.
www.geocities.com /Heartland/Prairie/4566/carbio5x6x.html   (5917 words)

  
 University of Delaware: WILSON FAMILY PAPERS
The distribution of Edward Wilson's estate in 1844 ignited a family debate over the integrity of Elizabeth Wilson's share, and how it would be affected by having her husband, Henry Crosfield, serve as a trustee.
Wilson family members were major benefactors of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, donating the core collection of their natural specimens in the 1850s, and funding a new wing for the building.
Allen Family of Delaware Anna Mary (Allen) Wilson, wife of Edward Rathmell Wilson, was related to the Allen Family whose papers are housed in Series X, Folder 42.
www.lib.udel.edu /ud/spec/findaids/wilson_f.htm   (5237 words)

  
 Reddin Wilson
Allen then states that on or before 13 Jan. 1837, the heirs must show cause why the land, in four separate tracts should not be divided and sold.
Rebecca Wilson was to be allotted 1/3 of the proceedings, the rest to be divided equally among the children.
Wilson may also have been a son of Elizabeth Wilson, and not the William Wilson who was Reddin's son.
www.sciway3.net /clark/beaufort/rwilson.html   (2973 words)

  
 William Wilson Morgan, January 3, 1906—June 21, 1994 | By Donald E. Osterbrock | Biographical Memoirs
WILLIAM W. MORGAN WAS born and raised in the South, but went to Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin as a student and spent the rest of his life there.
His father, William T. Morgan, and his mother, Mary Wilson Morgan, were both home missionaries in the Southern Methodist Church, who went from town to town to spread the Good News.
Morgan was active in the Williams Bay Congregational Church and, particularly in the years after his official retirement, occasionally gave talks on the universe in lieu of sermons.
www.nap.edu /readingroom/books/biomems/wmorgan.html   (6283 words)

  
 Archives of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Winfred Emory Allen was born June 6, 1873, in West Newton, Indiana, to Joseph Allen, Jr., and Esther Wilson Allen.
Allen was a member of the Ecological Society of America, the American Microscopical Society, the Limnological Society of America, the Western Society of Naturalists and the Botanical Society of America.
Allen apparently favored the marine biology focus and ecological perspective of Ritter and felt less at home in the broad oceanographic program initiated by Vaughan in 1925.
scilib.ucsd.edu /sio/archives/siohstry/allen-biog.html   (547 words)

  
 rorkesdriftvc.com - Cpl. William Wilson Allen
Note the grave has the name as 'Allan', he also signed his own name with 'Allan', but many records show him as 'Allen'.
Despite severe wounds, he and Hitch kept communication with the hospital open, enabling the patients to be withdrawn.
Read part of Corporal Allen's letter to his wife.
www.rorkesdriftvc.com /vc/allen.htm   (264 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Allen, U to Z
Rockingham County, N.H. Son of George Allen and Sarah A. (Collins) Allen; married 1895 to Grace A. Roberts.
Son of Nathaniel Allen and Sarah (Colburn) Allen; married 1842 to Effie Coons.
Allen, William Henry Harrison — of New Hampshire.
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/allen9.html   (855 words)

  
 Madison County, Ohio History
The former was born in Maryland in 1811, and the latter in this township in 1810.
William Pepper a native of Maryland, settled here on land now owned by Charles Mitchell about 1810-12, as we find by the township records.
Wilson removed to Madison County and settled on the head waters of Deer Creek, on land still owned by Mrs.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Madison/MadisonSomerfordH.htm   (5780 words)

  
 William Allen
Allen was (1750–74) chief justice of Pennsylvania, secured (1763) postponement of the sugar duties, and helped (1765) Benjamin Franklin in his efforts to have the Stamp Act repealed.
William ALLEN - ALLEN, William (1827—1881) ALLEN, William, a Representative from Ohio; born near Hamilton,...
John William ALLEN - ALLEN, John William (1802—1887) ALLEN, John William, (son of John Allen), a Representative...
www.infoplease.com /ce6/people/A0803392.html   (296 words)

  
 PALMATORY WILSON
William Palmatary except for the appointment of his guardian and the division of his father's land not record of him has been found.
On the Kent Co MD map of 1871, there is a clear position of a residence on the west side of the road leading to Wilson Point and the Warehouse at the end of the road.
William inherits $800 to be paid by his son John Fletcher without interest and to be paid within three years of my death.
www.rstonesifer.com /genealogy/paf_data/d0002/g0000021.htm   (945 words)

  
 William Wilson by Edgar Allen Poe : Summary Explanation Meaning Overview
Perhaps it was this latter trait in Wilson's conduct, conjoined with our identity of name, and the mere accident of our having entered the school upon the same day, which set afloat the notion that we were brothers, among the senior classes in the academy.
Wilson's retaliations in kind were many; and there was one form of his practical wit that disturbed me beyond measure.
Be Wilson what he might, this, at least, was but the veriest of affectation, or of folly.
www.eliteskills.com /c/5263   (6140 words)

  
 The Officer Down Memorial Page Remembers . . .
Assistant Chief Wilson was shot and killed after stopping a vehicle for having a headlight out at 2130 hours.
Unbeknownst to Assistant Chief Wilson, the suspect had just robbed a convenience store in Kalamazoo and had several of the stolen items in the front seat.
Assistant Chief Wilson had been with the agency for five years and was survived by his wife and two sons.
www.odmp.org /officer.php?oid=14340   (88 words)

  
 Additional Reading (from William James) --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
Laid out in 1748 by Nicholas Scull and William Parsons on land owned by Thomas and Richard Penn (sons of William Penn, Pennsylvania's founder), it was built around Penn Common, a large open square, and named for the hometown of the Penn...
Most notably he was a leader in the movement known as pragmatism, which stresses that the value of any idea or policy is based entirely on its usefulness and workability.
The British-born actor James William Wallack was well known both in Britain and in the United States as a performer and a theatrical manager.
www.britannica.com /ebi/article-3659?tocId=3659   (721 words)

  
 Obits 11/25/99   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Born in Cleveland County, she was a daughter of the late John Landrum and Everlena Allen Allen.
While in UDC, she was president of the Southland Chapter, a member of the John H. Reagan Chapter, organized the William Wilson Allen Chapter, where she was first president, and organized the Allen Junior Chapter.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Lee Ray Bodenhamer; a brother, Landrum Jackson Allen; and five sisters, Mildred Allen Humphries, Jennie Dean Allen Bridges, Lucy Cora Williams, Eva Kate Ware and Libby Allen Patterson.
www.shelbystar.com /obits/_disc4/0000010e.htm   (687 words)

  
 James, William.Bibliography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Barzun, Jacques, A Stroll with William James (New York: Harper and Row, 1983).
Hollinger, David A., "William James and the Culture of Inquiry," In the American Province.
Clebsch, William A. "The Human Religiousness of William James," in American Religious Thought: A History (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1973).
www.swarthmore.edu /SocSci/rbannis1/AIH19th/Bibs/WJames.html   (480 words)

  
 [No title]
Wilson's rebellion was to me a source of the greatest embarrassment;--the more so as, in spite of the bravado with which in public I made a point of treating him and his pretensions, I secretly felt that I feared him, and could not help thinking the equality which he
Upon neither of these points could I be satisfied; merely ascertaining, in regard to him, that a sudden accident in his family had caused his removal from Dr Bransby's academy on the afternoon of the day in which I myself had eloped.
It was Wilson; but he spoke no longer in a whisper, and I could have fancied that I myself was speaking while he said: '
www.bralyn.net /etext/literature/edgar.allan.poe/wilson.txt   (6079 words)

  
 (William Robert WILLIAMS - Helen Lucille YAUFMAN )   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
William Robert WILLIAMS (12 Apr 1900 - 18 Feb 1964)
William Wesley WILLIAMS (15 Sep 1854 - 5 May 1926)
William Allen WILSON (4 Sep 1872 - 29 Jan 1928)
www.q1.net /~bkgene/ind0051.htm   (181 words)

  
 Burditt's of New England and New York: Index
Allen, Abel (marriage to Susan Burditt) (i25361), b.1831-
Allen, Philetus Ashbury (marriage to Almeda Burditt) (i1818), b.1825-d.1899
Allen, Polly Tanner (marriage to Joel Dean Burdett) (i59), b.1899-d.2004
www.burditt1653.org /nindex.htm   (1593 words)

  
 Etext Archive Listing by Document Title
The Conversation of Eiros and Charmion - Edgar Allen Poe
The Imp of the Perverse - Edgar Allen Poe
The Taming Of The Shrew - William Shakespeare
www.bralyn.net /etext/title.html   (2018 words)

  
 War
It was the bloodiest of the Indian wars in terms of relat...
King William's War The first of the England.
King William's War started when League of Augsburg against France.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /topics/war.html   (8572 words)

  
 [No title]
The operation was focused on Poland, the most populous of the Soviet satellites in Eastern Europe and the birthplace of John Paul II.
The key Administration players were all devout Roman Catholics--CIA chief William Casey, Allen, Clark, Haig, Walters and William Wilson, Reagan's first ambassador to the Vatican.
The document, citing the need to defend democratic reform efforts throughout the Soviet empire, also called for increasing propaganda and underground broadcasting operations in Eastern Europe, actions that Reagan's aides and dissidents in Eastern Europe believe were particularly helpful in chipping away at the notion of Soviet invincibility.
www.mosquitonet.com /~prewett/holyalliance1of2.html   (2565 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - William Allen White (American Literature, Biography) - Encyclopedia
AllRefer.com - William Allen White (American Literature, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Emporia, Kans., studied (1886–90) at Kansas State Univ. As owner and editor of the Emporia Gazette from 1895 until his death, he represented grass roots political opinion throughout the nation.
His writings include short stories, the novel A Certain Rich Man (1909), a biography of Woodrow Wilson (1924), two biographies of Calvin Coolidge (1925, 1938), and two collections of his newspaper writings, The Editor and His People (1924) and Forty Years on Main Street (1937).
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/W/White-WmA.html   (262 words)

  
 Maury County, Tennessee, Queries February 2000
James' parents, William Wilson and Rhoda Ball owned land in both Lewis and Maury Counties so maybe James was married there.
Wilson died Sept. 54, 1831 in Maury Co. James and Catherine were born abt.
Greatgrandfather Richard P. ALLEN is shown in the index to Maury Co. 1850 Fed. Census as "Richmond" P. ALLEN with wife Mary and children Sarah 10, S.J. 9, Joseph 8, Thomas 6, S.E. 4, and James 1.
www.tngennet.org /maury/queries/q200002.htm   (2413 words)

  
 William Allen White --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
Known throughout the United States as the “Sage of Emporia,” William Allen White was the publisher of a small-town newspaper.
His opinions on public issues, however, were republished throughout the nation and influenced public attitudes and government policy.
More results on "William Allen White" when you join.
www.britannica.com /ebi/article-9277725   (767 words)

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