Block A Lower, Orchard Mesa Cemetery, Grand Junction, Mesa County 1920 Son Charles W. Wilder 1930 1949 LE Jenks Sept. E. Ratliff 1884 - 1959 BlackBlanche L. Ernest A. 1892 E. Anderson 1912 - 1974 1866 1944 Albert S. Hamlin http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/co/mesa/cemeteries/orchmsla.txt
Jackman, Albert W. 1864-1943 Jenkins Family. Jenks, Loren T. Jenner, Howard H. 18681965. Johnson, Albert. Johnson,Alfred 1864-1938. Johnson, Frank S. 1903-. Johnson, Frederick Ernest 1884-. http://users.aol.com/morganpm/j.htm
Extractions: Jackman, Albert W. 1864-1943 Jackman, Charles M. 1862-1933 Jackman, Nettie S. Todd 1870-1951 Jackman, T. R. Jacks, Ezra D. Jacks, Liner D. 1863-1923 Jacks, Milton H. 1863-1932 Jacks, Nathaniel Green -1934 Jacks, William H. 1831- Jackson, A. C. Jackson, Alice G. Jackson, Alvin O'Neal Jackson, Anna Belle see: Jones, Anna Belle Jackson Jackson, Anna Woods 1868- Jackson, Annie Jenkins Jackson, Bernice Powell Jackson, C. L. Jackson, Charles Elwood, Sr. 1879-1972 Jackson, Charles Elwood 1913- Jackson, Clayton Willis 1922- Jackson, Donna Jackson, Ena Jackson, Edward 1930- Jackson, Edward Lane 1873-1954 Jackson, Ernestine L. 1905-1994 Jackson, George Walker -1924 Jackson, Harley 1874- Jackson, Harry Earl 1903-1971 Jackson, Helen Livermore Jackson, Isabelle Anderson -1940 Jackson, J. O. Jackson, James T. Jackson, Jesse L. Jackson, Jesse W. 1877- Jackson, John A. Jackson, John M. 1925- Jackson, John Orval 1902- Jackson, L. F. 1853- Jackson, L. M. Jackson, Lee Jackson, Lida Beaty 1882-1956 Jackson, M. C. 1880- Jackson, Maldonia 1946- Jackson, Marion C. 1894-
WebGED: Turner Database Data Page Jenks, Brittney (private) child Jenks, Brian (private) 1909) spouse Marks,Albert Lewis (1869 1970) spouse Strey, Ernest (private) child http://www.alveus.com/rdoll/KTURNER.wbg/wga3.html
Archives Of The Gray Herbarium 18661945. Jenkins, Anna Eliza, 1923-1931, 4, 1886-1972. Jenks, AlbertErnest, 1898-1901, 5, 1869-1953. Jenks, Charles William, 1898-1922, 15,1848-1929. http://www.huh.harvard.edu/libraries/si.htm
Jackman, William James, 1850 Life Of George Borrow, The. http//gutenberg.net/, txt,htmeng. Jenks, AlbertErnest, 1869-1953, 1004005. Bontoc Igorot, The. http//gutenberg.net/, txt,htm-eng. http://hzeid.free.fr/aj.htm
Extractions: Jackman, William James, 1850- Flying Machines: construction and operation; a practical book which shows, in illustrations, working plans and text, how to build and navigate the modern a http://gutenberg.net/ txt,htm-eng Jackson, Helen Hunt Ramona (1921) http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/ebooks/ msr,plm,htm-eng Jackson, Helen Hunt, 1830-1885 Ramona http://gutenberg.net/ txt,htm-eng Jacobs, William Wyman. The Monkey's Paw. (1902) http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/ebooks/ msr,plm,htm-eng Jaloux, Edmond, 1878-1949 L'Escalier d'Or http://gutenberg.net/ txt,htm-fre James, G. P. R. (George Payne Rainsford), 1801?-1860 King's Highway, The http://gutenberg.net/ txt,htm-eng James, George Wharton, 1858-1923 Grand Canyon Of Arizona, The; how to see it http://gutenberg.net/ txt,htm-eng James, Henry Washington Square http://www.mozambook.net/ msr,pdf-fre James, Henry Confidence (1879) http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/ebooks/ msr,plm,htm-eng James, Henry Daisy Miller: A Study (1879) http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/ebooks/ msr,plm,htm-eng James, Henry The Altar of the Dead (1909) http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/ebooks/
Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors >%20J Edward, 18381910; Jenkins, Herbert George, 1876-1923; Jenks, AlbertErnest, 1869-1953; Jennie Hall; Jens Peter Jacobsen; Jepson, Edgar http://www1.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=A
Conclusion Dean Conant Worcester (18661924), David Prescott Barrows (1873-1954), and AlbertErnest Jenks (1869-1953) were their counterparts in American colonial http://ww2.lafayette.edu/~barclayp/conclude.html
Extractions: Chapter 6: Conclusions from "Japanese and American Colonial Projects: Anthropological Typification in Taiwan and the Philippines," by Paul D. Barclay, University of Minnesota Doctoral Dissertation, copywrite 1999 Please do not cite without permission of author: barclayp@lafayette.edu I. Modernization as Professionalization The "heroic" phase of empire was closed....District officers in the field and colonial administrations...amassed statistics and undertook surveys that appeared in voluminous reports, all of which were designed to make colonization a scientific and rational undertaking, one no longer performed idiosyncratically by strong or unusual personalities who roamed worlds they did not understand. I thought the work of being a translator and interpreter was mostly mechanical, and consisted of acting like a parrot. It was not the work a full-blooded human being would follow....My youthful soul well remembered the stories I had heard as a child about the South Seas and the devil-like savages who lived in Taiwan. This far-off place was now a part of Japanese territory, and I thought... I would like go there just once myself..."Mori Ushinosuke "...intensive work...is not possible among a people not already subject in some measure to the mollifying influence of the official and the missionary who will not fear, or be offended by, inquiry into their customs. Probably the most favorable moment for ethnographical work is from ten to thirty years after a people has been brought under the influence of official and missionary. Such a time is sufficient to make intensive work possible, but not long enough to have allowed any serious impairment of the native culture..."W.H.R. Rivers