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Topic: William Winter Payne


  
  (Mary PAYNE - Mary Jane PEACOCK )
William PAYNE (10 Feb 1732 - 2 Mar 1822)
William PAYNE (Capt.) (4 Feb 1753 - 1837)
William PAYNE III (31 Jul 1724 - 12 Jul 1782)
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~mysouthernfamily/myff/index/ind0759.html   (357 words)

  
  The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Payne to Payrow
Son of I. Payne and Cora B. (Thompson) Payne; married 1909 to Alice Montgomery.
Payne, Melvin Walter — of McDowell County, W.Va. Republican.
Payne, William Winter (1807-1874) — also known as William W. Payne — of Gainesville, Sumter County, Ala.
www.politicalgraveyard.com /bio/payne-payrow.html   (1002 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: )
William Strachey, a Virginian official of whom little is known biographically, described (1610) the ship-wreck of Sir Thomas Gates on the Bermudas, which is believed to have yielded Shakespeare suggestions for The Tempest.
William Dunlap (1766-1834) is, however, credited with being the father of the American theatre on the New York stage, where his plays were produced.
A third writer, William Cullen Bryant (1994-1878), is associated with them, and though he announced his poetic talent precociously by Thanatopsis (1807), his Poems (1832), immediately republished in London, were the basis of his true fame.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?content_id=2753&locale=en   (11257 words)

  
 Edwin Booth - LoveToKnow 1911
The splendour of this period in his career was dashed for many months when in 1865 his brother, John Wilkes Booth, assassinated President Lincoln (see Lincoln, Abraham).
Edwin Booth did not reappear on the stage until the 3rd of January 1866, when he played Hamlet at the Winter Garden theatre, the audience showing by unstinted applause their conviction that the glory of the one brother would never be imperilled by the infamy of the other.
See also William Winter, Life and Art of Edwin Booth (1893); Lawrence Hutton, Edwin Booth (1893); Henry A. Clapp, Reminiscences of a Dramatic Critic (Boston, 1 9 02); A. Clarke.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Edwin_Booth   (976 words)

  
  Tenth Street UMC - History Payne Memorial Methodist Church
The winter came on and since the room could not be heated it was very uncomfortable for the children, many of whom in those days went barefooted and barelegged throughout the winter.
Payne kept declaring that no church could ever be built, for there was neither money in the treasury nor members who could afford to do anything.
Payne, being at that time paralyzed, was going to will the church lot to one of the children.
www.mindspring.com /~tenthstumc/history/payne.html   (922 words)

  
 The Winter branch
Frederick Winter seems to have spent most of his working life on the buses and is shown as an Omnibus Conductor in the mid-1890's.
Fanny was baptised on 23 November 1879 and a unnamed (Winter) baby on 27 July 1880, both in private ceremonies, according to the register entries.
William and Sarah were married in April 1864: the address for William John's birth is shown as 4 College Place, Chelsea, which is where Sarah was living before they married.
www.alanwinter.co.uk /winterline.htm   (2145 words)

  
 Robert Payne Collection   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Pierre Stephen Robert Payne was born December 4, 1911, in Saltash, County of Cornwall, England, the son of Stephen Payne, a naval architect, and Mireille Louise Antonia (Dorey) Payne, a native of France.
In China Payne met General George C. Marshall, Chiang Kai-shek, and Mao Tse-tung, who was elusive and living in the caves of Yenan, all of whom later became subjects for his biographies.
Payne was chairman of the Translation Committee of P.E.N. until 1976, when he left to found the Translation Center at Columbia with Frank MacShane and William Jay Smith.
www.sunysb.edu /libspecial/collections/manuscripts/payne/biography.html   (1592 words)

  
 David L. Payne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David L. Payne was born December 30, 1836, in Grant County, Indiana, on a farm near Fairmount.
Payne enlisted and was mustered in as the captain of Company D. This battalion replaced the Seventh Cavalry which had been transferred to the Platte for the summer.
During this campaign, Payne served as a scout for General Sheridan in the western and central portions of the Indian Nations.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/David_L._Payne   (1159 words)

  
 Winter(s) Genealogy
Winter born 1824 in Alabama was still single in 1850 in Monroe County, Mississippi and living with her mother.
Winter born November 15, 1830, died November 20, 1907 in Oklahoma and married Sarah H.B. Farr who was born January 8, 1840 in South Carolina and died January 29, 1898.
Winter born between 1859 and 1862 in Mississippi, died between 1926 and 1929 in Calhoun County, Mississippi and married in 1875 to Charles Hicks Bailey who was born September 1854 in (Anson County ?) North Carolina and died 1921 in Calhoun County, Mississippi.
www.michaelcaviness.com /winter.htm   (1176 words)

  
 Reuben Payne and Elizabeth Sweetman
Payne Witnessed a deed between Catesby Cocke of parish Truto in County Fairfax and Robert Mannan of parish Brunswick and county King George Planter.
Payne and Richard Payne witness a deed between William Brokenbrough and Elizabeth of Parish Lunenburg in county Richmond and Thomas Turner son of Harry Turner of King George Co. on 3rd/4th Feb. 1756
William Payne was ordered along with 11 others to set aside one acre of land by the Sheriff, Arthur Morson for Adam Stewart to a sett of mills at a value of Two pounds current money.
www.joepayne.org /reuben.htm   (2594 words)

  
 The Basie Centennial Ball
Even though the title of one of the most famous tunes associated with his band, "The Kid from Red Bank," should have been a tip-off, many jazz enthusiasts assume that Count Basie was a native of Kansas City, because that is where he and his band first rose to national prominence.
In fact, William Basie was born to Harvey Lee Basie and Lilly Ann Childs Basie in their house on Mechanic Street in Red Bank, New Jersey on August 21, 1904.
William Basie did not start out to be a piano player.
www.yehoodi.com /basie100/william_basie.php   (2543 words)

  
 TAMUS Amarillo / Bushland /Etter Home
Payne, W.A. Managing yield and soil water use of pearl millet in the Sahel.
Payne, W.A. A traditional shallow-cultivating hoe of West Africa that conserves water in sandy soils.
Payne, W.A. Growth and transpirational water use efficiency of pearl millet in response to water and phosphorus supply.
amarillo.tamu.edu /~bpayne   (1846 words)

  
 Sewell or Sewall of Coventry - Person Page 213
She was the daughter of Jonathan/1 Sewell and Mary Payne.
She was the daughter of William Dunning Sewell and Mary Loke Sumner.
William Henry Temple, son of Gustave Handcock and Mary Moore, on 9 January 1833 in the Chapel of the Holy Trinity, Quebec, the service being conducted by Rev. E.W. Levock.
www.sewellgenealogy.com /p213.htm   (3285 words)

  
 [No title]
In 1862 he became manager of the Winter Garden theatre, New York, where he gave a series of Shakespearian productions of then unexampled magnificence (1864–1867), including Hamlet, Othello and The Merchant of Venice.
See also William Winter, Life and Art of Edwin Booth (1893); Lawrence Hutton, Edwin Booth (1893); Henry A. Clapp, Reminiscences of a Dramatic Critic (Boston, 1902) ; A. Clarke.
(J. BOOTH, WILLIAM (1829–), founder and " general " of the Salvation Army (q.v.), was born at Nottingham on the loth of April 1829.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?content_id=10209&locale=en   (1459 words)

  
 Dr. Payne's Corner - Mission Statement
Payne, David E. 1994 "Documenting the Importance of Advising." Presentations made at the NACADA 18th National Conference on Academic Advising (October 1994), at the NACADA South Central Regional Conference (May 1995), and at the NACADA 19th National Conference on Academic Advising (October 1995).
Payne, David E. 1992 "Overcoming Impediments to Cooperation with Institutions in the Pacific Basin." Presentation at the Association of Southeast Asian Institutions of Higher Learning Conference on University Cooperation in the Pacific Basin Region (May).
Payne, David E. TV in Iceland: A Synthesis of Studies." Paper read at the International Communications Association Meetings (A shorter version of this paper was also read at the Midwest Sociological Association Meetings, 1978).
www.shsu.edu /~payne/vita.html   (2373 words)

  
 Alumni at Williams - News & Events - Awards & Honors
The Bicentennial Medals program was established in 1993, in celebration of the 200th anniversary of Williams College, to honor "distinguished achievement in any field of endeavor." Eligible candidates include alumni, current and former faculty and staff, students and parents.
The Ephraim Williams Medal, in honor of the College's founder, is given from time to time to a non-alumnus of Williams that has demonstrated exceptional service and loyalty to the College.
The coat was modeled after an eye-catching green coat worn by alumni secretary Charles B. Hall '15 at a winter homecoming and alumni fund drive meeting in 1951.
www.williams.edu /alumni/news/awards   (360 words)

  
 Robert Payne Collection   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Edited with an Introduction by Robert Payne; and an afterword by George Ivask; and translated by Robert Payne and Nikita Romanoff.
With a foreword by Robert Payne, An Introduction by Marija Gimbutas and Illustrated by Viktoras Petravicius.
The link between Robert Payne as Anthony Wolfe is inferred from Eyewitness, p.7, Contemporary Authors, a letter to his father, and an copy of the book, inscribed to a relative, in Mrs.
www.sunysb.edu /libspecial/collections/manuscripts/payne/bibliography.html   (1410 words)

  
 Sewall 1908 Book
William Barnes was born near Portsmouth, 0., Feb, 8, 1814.
William Sewall, born Sept. 16, 1872, at Chandlerville.
Sarah Batchelder Titcomb, Joseph Titcomb was the son of Penuel Titcomb and Lydia Poore Titcomb, and grandson of William Titcomb and Joanna Bartlett Titcomb, and of John Poore and Sarah——Poore.
www.robertsewell.ca /sewall1908.htm   (5678 words)

  
 Dayton's Bluff and the St. Paul Winter Carnival
William Hamm helped organize the first Carnival in 1886.
The Winter Carnival Treasure Hunt medallion was found in Mounds Park in 1987.
The first Saint Paul Winter Carnival was held in 1886.
www.tc.umn.edu /~cosim001/WinterCarnival.html   (782 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Gravesend Light: Books: David Payne   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Once again, Payne's trademark passion for the Southern landscape is palpably in evidence and he's got Joe's modern gothic family down pat.
Payne builds real and intelligent characters, examining their lives just as his protagonist, an introspective young anthropologist named Joe Madden, delves into the lives of the people he is studying.
Payne had already introduced Joe in a previous novel, Ruin Creek, where as young Joey he/we saw the break up of his parent's marriage (-- by the way, many of my students could not resist reading Ruin Creek as well during the semester).
www.amazon.com /Gravesend-Light-David-Payne/dp/0452282624   (1974 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Winter
Winter, Charles Edwin (1870-1948) — also known as Charles E. Winter — of Casper,
Winter, Edward Henry (1879-1941) — also known as Edward H. Winter — of
Winter, Thomas Daniel (1896-1951) — also known as Thomas D. Winter — of Girard,
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/winter.html   (481 words)

  
 Payne — Infoplease.com
Sereno Elisha Payne - Payne, Sereno Elisha Payne, Sereno Elisha, 1843–1914, American legislator, b.
William Winter PAYNE - PAYNE, William Winter (1807—1874) PAYNE, William Winter, a Representative from Alabama; born...
Donald Milford PAYNE - PAYNE, Donald Milford (1934—) PAYNE, Donald Milford, a Representative from New Jersey; born...
www.infoplease.com /ipea/A0777107.html   (282 words)

  
 Charlotte
Holt operated a school for girls until the early part of the twentieth century but was also running what came to be known as “one of the most popular boarding houses in Davidson” out of her home in the 1880s.
The family of Colonel William J. Martin was enticed to come to Davidson in 1869 as a result of the growth of the college after the Civil War.
Another distinctive dwelling on Concord Road that came about as a result of the expansion of Davidson College in the early decades of the twentieth century was the Hood House, located at 829 Concord Road.
www.cmhpf.org /surveydavidsonpayne.htm   (6865 words)

  
 The History of New York State
With William H. Laffan in charge of the publishing end, Edward Page Mitchell to relieve him of responsibility for the editorial page, and Chester Sanders Lord, as managing editor, he had time to think.
For many years the editor was George William Curtis, who brought "Harper's Weekly" to a plane of distinction as to both text and illustrations which it never surpassed.
William, D. Straight, who was Dorothy Payne Whitney, daughter of William C. Whitney.
www.usgennet.org /usa/ny/state/his/bk12/ch21/pt3.html   (4670 words)

  
 Descendants of Charles Columbus Payne
William Graham PAYNE born August 20, 1820 Tazwell, TN Amanda Melvina PAYNE born Sept. 8, 1829 Tazwell, TN died Nov.
Payne settled in Tazewell and kept his family together until his death, which occured a few years later on.
I believe that William Houston was related to the Houston's of Houston Valley in Greene Co., Tn but have not made that connection.
www.joepayne.org /payne2.htm   (2569 words)

  
 Jimmy Payne - Chicago Human Rhythm Project
His teacher and father is legendary dance master Jimmy Payne who taught tap and Afro Cuban dance to thousands of students for over seventy years.
Jimmy Payne's Rhythm Of Life is a live performance and video documentation that chronicles the life of Jimmy Payne, American Dance, and other legendary dance figures such as Dr. Prince Spencer of The Four Step Brothers, tap dance legend Lavaughn Robinson, and Eccentric Dancer, Rudy Horne, who first met Jimmy Payne, Sr.
Jimmy's style is from the earliest roots of tap dance passed from Broadway legend Buddy Bradley to Jimmy Payne in the mid nineteen twenties.
www.chicagotap.org /summerfestival/artists/payne.php   (301 words)

  
 Untitled Document
A voice for the voiceless, Payne sees his role as an objective outsider whose comments on the news of the day offer a fresh perspective.
Civilian sentiment had taken flight on the wings of such doves as Sen. William Fulbright, who chaired the Senate panel, Muhammad Ali and Rep. Robert Drinan from Kerry's hometown of Waltham, Mass.
The prime indictment of the Winter Soldiers was that Vietnam was indeed a war waged under false pretenses.
www.tms.tribune.com /htmlmail/consumer/profiles/payne.htm   (873 words)

  
 Performing Arts Collection Descriptions: Harry Ransom Center
Holdings for Wilson Barrett, Sarah Bernhardt, Edwin Booth, James Clouser, Edith Evans, Patrick Hines, B. Iden Payne, Sarah Rollitts, William Shakespeare, J. Scott Smart, Roland Young, and Florenz Ziegfeld have been removed from the Bio File and are treated as discrete collections.
Winter's son Jefferson published a testimonial to actor Frank Worthing in 1911, and manuscripts and correspondence document his efforts.
Present are letters to Jefferson Winter from several figures who included their reminiscences of Worthing: Viola Allen, Blanche Bates, Acton Davies, Louis V. DeFoe, Julia Marlowe, Hale McAllister, Henry Miller, S. Morris Pentland, Tyrone Power, Augustus Thomas, and Frank Worthing.
www.hrc.utexas.edu /collections/performingarts/holdings/all/descriptions   (5033 words)

  
 Wootton
Wootton House, pleesantly seated in a park of 70 acres near the church, and the property of Sir Philip Monoux Payne bart.
Wootton Hoo, built in 1884, is the residence of Major Charles William P. Warner.
There is a lending library, and clothing, blanket and coal clubs : in the winter months there are men's and mothers' meetings.
www.genuki.org.uk /big/eng/BDF/Wootton/index.html   (346 words)

  
 The History of New York State
William T. Dewart was publisher, and in general charge of the Munsey publications from the business side.
In 1895 New York journalism was enlivened the advent of William Randolph Hearst, who proved to be, measured by the dollar yardstick of success, the greatest constructive genius in its history.
That which was impossible for the daily press half a century ago, the pictorial representation of news, was only barely possible for the more leisurely weeklies, of which this was the first in importance from the middle of the last century.
usgennet.org /usa/ny/state/his/bk12/ch21/pt3.html   (4670 words)

  
 Dixon Hall Lewis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
He served as chairman of the House Committee on Indian Affairs from 1831 to 1835.
In 1844 Lewis was appointed by his brother-in-law Governor Benjamin Fitzpatrick to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of William R. King in 1844.
He was reelected as the Democratic candidate in 1847 and served from April 22, 1844, until his death in New York City on October 25, 1848.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Dixon_Hall_Lewis   (392 words)

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