ART / 4 / 2DAY 60x50cm) The Beloved (aka The Bride, 1866, 83x76cm) click in themselves. LadyAlice, Lady Louise, Between the She cowers beside the Wall of a graveyard http://www.safran-arts.com/42day/art/art4may/art0512.html
Extractions: Steady Brother, Steady (1875), and his best-known paintings are Thursday also showing monks fishing, and Friday , where they are consuming their catch the next day. The monks are characterized as good natured but foolish looking fellows. The combination of realism with whimsicality follows an English tradition of almost slapstick humour, which seems to work better as black and white illustration in the pages of Punch or in light-hearted articles by artists such as Harry Furniss. Another slightly whimsical picture is
Bethel Charkoudian Books, Free Global Book Search: PLAYS MILLS, WINIFRED AND Louise M. DUNN, drawings by Corydon CROOK AN ORIGINAL MAGICALAND SPECTACULAR DRAMA 1866; SH. Wall, LV, GA.White and AR.Philpott (editors http://www.freeglobalbooksearch.com/cgi-bin/fgb455/scan/mp=keywords/se=PLAYS/st=
Extractions: Auden, W.H. and Christopher Isherwood. TWO GREAT PLAYS BY W.H. AUDEN AND CHRISTOPHER ISHERWOOD: THE DOG BENEATH THE SKIN THE ASCENT OF F6. Backalenick, Irene. EAST SIDE STORY: TEN YEARS WITH THE JEWISH REPERTORY THEATRE. Bates, Katharine Lee (Wellesley College). ENGLISH RELIGIOUS DRAMA. Beaumont, Francis, (Ed. by Andrew Gurr). THE KNIGHT OF THE BURNING PESTLE. Beckett, Samuel and (2) Jarry, Alfred. Bentley, Eric. THE DRAMATIC EVENT. AN AMERICAN CHRONICLE. Boylan, Eleanor. HOW TO BE A PUPPETEER. THE NOT-SO-GREAT MOMENTS IN SPORTS: BAD PLAYS, BAD CALLS, BAD LUCK, BAD BOYS, BAD FANS-THE BEST OF THE WORST AS FEATURED ON THE HIT SHOW FROM HBO. Brecht, Bertolt. LEBEN DES GALILEI: SCHAUSPIEL. [LIFE OF GALILEO] WRITTEN IN ORIGINAL GERMAN. Brecht, Bertolt; Manheim, Ralph (editor); Willett, John (editor) - 1; Stein, Gertrude; Van Vechten, Carl - 2; SARTRE, JEAN-PAU Busby, Linda, and Donald Parker.
Extractions: Pamela H. Simpson is Ernest Williams II Professor of Art History at Washington and Lee University and a 1996-97 Fellow of the National Humanities Center. This article derives from a talk she presented in the Center's fall public lecture series and from essays she has published in Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture, III (University of Missouri Press, 1989) and in Gender, Class, and Shelter: Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture V (University of Tennessee Press, 1995). rchitectural critic Ada Louise Huxtable once wrote that the popularity of what she called "substitute gimcrackery" in the latter half of the nineteenth century was "fueled by the . . . American desire to find ways of doing things that were 'cheap, quick, and easy.'" For a number of years, I have been studying various types of "substitute gimcrackery"imitative building and decorative materials that became all the rage at the turn of the twentieth century. Made possible by technological advances, these products could be readily distributed by an improved system of mass transportation, and their demand was sparked, at least to some extent, by the emergence of large-scale advertising. Among these many materials, four in particularconcrete block, pressed metal ceilings, linoleum, and an embossed wall covering called Lincrustaillustrate this intersection of new technology with popular culture. oncrete is by no means a twentieth-century innovation. A mixture of cement, sand, water, and stone aggregates, it has been around since classical times, and a number of patented procedures for casting it into "artificial stone" emerged in the nineteenth century. Not until 1900, however, was the widespread production of concrete block possible. In that year, Harmon S. Palmer obtained a United States patent for his durable and practical cast-iron machine, with removable core and adjustable sides, that spelled the beginning of the modern concrete block industry.
Untitled Document HORATIO ALGER In 1866, Alger moved into the Newboys Lodging House on and he publishedout of a cellar on Wall Street. Louise BOGAN (18971970) Poet and critic http://www.nyslittree.org/users/data/nyc-authors.htm
Extractions: NEW YORK CITY AUTHORS Note: The authors in this list are deceased New York State writers. This compilation is by no means complete: at regular intervals authors will be added, and readers of the site are invited to submit the names of published authors for consideration (excluding self-published or vanity press authors) to wordthur@stny.rr.com. A New York State literary panel will determine which suggested authors will be listed. Click to access a specific county/borough: Click here to access alphabetical author list (See NYS AUTHORS for those authors/writers living/working in the following counties: Albany, Allegany, Broome, Cattararaugus, Cayuga, Chattauqua, Chemung, Chenango, Clinton, Columbia, Cortland, Delaware, Dutchess, Erie, Essex, Franklin, Fulton, Genessee, Greene, Hamilton, Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis, Livingston, Madison, Monroe, Montgomery, Nassau, Niagara, Oneida, Onondaga, Ontario, Orange, Orleans, Otswego, Oswego, Putnam, Rensselaer, Rockland, St. Lawrence, Saratoga, Schenectady, Schoharie, Schuyler, Seneca, Steuben, Suffolk, Sullivan, Tioga, Tompkins, Ulster, Warren, Washington, Wayne, Westchester, Wyoming, and Yates.) NEW YORK CITY AUTHORS, A-Z
Poets' Corner - Other Recommended Reading George Ade. (1866 1944) Selected Books of Poetry Merchants from Cathay 1913;The Falconer of God 1914; The Great White Wall 1916; Louise Bogan. http://www.theotherpages.org/poems/other-ab.html
Used Books, Rare Books, Antiquarian Books - Antiqbook 8114, ANDERSEN, HANS CHRISTIAN A Visit to Portugal 1866. 7488, DE ANGELI, MARGUERITE- The Door in the Wall. 1832, ASWELL, MARY Louise (EDITED BY) - The World http://antiqbook.com/boox/pel/index.shtml
The Book Shoppe Curtis, Ides of August The Berlin Wall Crisis1961, Mitchell, Broadus; Mitchell,Louise Pearson, A Biography of the and the German Crisis 1865-1866, 302, $11.25. http://www.thebookshoppe.com/browse.php?show=75
Sir John A. Macdonald (1815-1891) Library Of Congress Citations Weir, 1904 Title Sir John A. builds a Wall the National 1919- Title Agnes thebiography of Lady Macdonald / Louise Reynolds. MacKinnon, John, 1815-1866. http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/cit/citlcmacjohn1.htm
Extractions: The Little Search Engine that Could Down to Name Citations LC Online Catalog COPAC Database (UK) Book Citations [17 Records] Author: Creighton, Donald Grant. Title: John A. Macdonald. Published: Toronto, Macmillan, 1952-55. Description: 2 v. illus. 19 cm. LC Call No.: F1033.M126 C7 Dewey No.: 923.271 Notes: Includes bibliographical references. [1] The young politician.[2] The old chieftain. Subjects: Macdonald, John Alexander, Sir, 1815-1891. Canada Politics and government 1841-1867. Canada Politics and government 1867-1914. Control No.: 53001202 //r933 Author: Macdonald, John Alexander, Sir, 1815-1 Title: The letters of Sir John A. Macdonald, 1836-1857. Edited by J. K. Johnson. Published: Ottawa, Public Archives of Canada, 1968. Description: xxiii, 600 p. facsim., fold. geneal. table, ports. 24 cm. Series: The Papers of the prime ministers, v. 1 LC Call No.: F1032 .M114 Dewey No.: 971.03/9/0924 Subjects: Canada History 19th century Sources. Other authors: Johnson, J. Keith, ed. Control No.: 70439898 Author: Johnson, J. Keith, comp. Title: Affectionately yours; the letters of Sir John A. Macdonald and his family. Edited and with an introd. by J. K. Johnson. Published: Toronto, Macmillan of Canada, 1969. Description: 205 p. illus., ports. 23 cm. LC Call No.: F1033 .M1267 Dewey No.: 971.04/9/0924 Other authors: Macdonald, John Alexander, Sir, 1815-1891. Control No.: 73491974
Extractions: Art and Architecture This is our less expensive material and the descriptions are necessarily rather brief. Longer descriptions and illustrations are not provided for this category. There is very little material beyond the letter "L", but cataloguing is continuing, albeit rather slowly. Please ask if you have specific interests which are not found.
Barbara Farnsworth, Bookseller: New York Clare, George, BEFORE THE Wall / BERLIN DAYS 19461948. De Salvo, Louise, CONCEIVEDWITH MALICE. OF TRAVEL IN ENGLISH-SPEAKING COUNTRIES DURING 1866 AND 1867. http://www.farnsworthbooks.com/cgi-bin/bfb455.cgi/scan/mp=keywords/se=New York/s
Extractions: A BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION FOR EVERYONE WHO LOVES ALICE... A BOOK ABOUT THEODORE DREISER AND HIS WORK. A CHECKLIST OF THE CASLON OLD FACE TYPE FAMILY. ... YEARBOOK OF THE NETHERLANDS EAST INDIES / EDITION 1916 (Evans, Donald) QUEST / 77 - November-December, 1977, Volume 1, number 5. (Hall, John) JOHN HALL AND THE GRECIAN STYLE IN AMERICA / A REPRINT OF THREE PATTERN BOOKS PUBLISHED IN 1840... (Moore, Marianne) WILLIAM KIENBUSCH (North, Marianne) A VISION OF EDEN / THE LIFE AND WORK OF MARIANNE NORTH. (Potter, Beatrix) PETER RABBIT AND OTHER TALES / ART FROM THE WORLD OF BEATRIX POTTER. (Strouse, Norman H.) THE SILVERADO MUSEUM IN ST. HELENA / THE ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON COLLECTION. Abbot, Eleanor Hallowell MOLLY MAKE-BELIEVE Abel, Lionel THE INTELLECTUAL FOLLIES / A MEMOIR OF THE LITERARY VENTURE IN NEW YORK AND PARIS Abrahami, Izzy THE GAME Absire, Alain
Descendants Of Henry Joynt & Eleanor Johnston 3 JOYNT, HENRY 2 , HENRY 1 ) was born June 28, 1866 in Auckland recorded on Portlandstone panels let into the circular Wall, and on He married REBECCA Louise. http://www.celticcousins.net/joynt/descendants_of_henry_joynt_.htm
Extractions: Descendants of Henry Joynt Generation No. 1 HENRY JOYNT was born Bet. 1754 - 1758 in Crossmolina, Co. Mayo, Ireland, and died November 20, 1814 in Crossmolina, Co. Mayo, Ireland (Source: Civil Registration Records, 1814 Nov 20 Henry Joynt of Kinnaird (Crossmolina).). He married JANE. She was born 1762. Children of HENRY JOYNT and JANE are: i. JAMES JOYNT, b. 1775 (Source: FHC film 0894365 Crossmolina Parish Records.). ii. CHARLES JOYNT, b. 1777 (Source: FHC film 0894365 Crossmolina Parish Records.). iii. DUDLEY JOYNT, b. 1778 (Source: FHC film 0894365 Crossmolina Parish Records.). 2. iv. HENRY JOYNT, b. October 14, 1784, Crossmolina, Co. Mayo, Ireland; d. March 20, 1852, Ballina, Co Mayo, Ireland. v. JANE JOYNT, b. 1786 (Source: FHC film 0894365 Crossmolina Parish Records.). vi. MARY JOYNT, b. 1788 (Source: FHC film 0894365 Crossmolina Parish Records.); m. JOHN ROE, September 05, 1805 (Source: FHC film 0894365 Crossmolina Parish Records, John Roe of Ruaneduff m. Mary Joynt of Kinnaird,spr. 5 Sep 1805.). Generation No. 2
For Sale List - PopShops Godey GODEY S LADY S BOOK DECEMBER 1866 Vol LXXIII Brothers GOODNIGHT MOON 2004WALL CALENDAR Margaret MODERN AUTHORS Cohen, Helen Louise (Editor) SALOME A http://www.popula.com/sh/no_788.htm
Henry County Genealogical Society's Dreambook Malcolm, born in Woodhull, Illinis,in 1866/67 Betty Thompson of Kewanee, daughterof Louise Thompson Bishop Hill, names are Granat, Daniesldotter,Wall, Andersson http://books.dreambook.com/hcgs/gen_soc.html
Extractions: New Dream Network Dreamhost , and Dreamservers If you have a minute, please sign my Dreambook too! Name: Douglas Green E-mail address: AnnDoug@warwick. net Comments: I am looking for information on a William Green who fought in the Revolution War. He served under General Hathornes Regiment of Orange County, New York. At one time he lived in Vernon, New Jersey(Sussex County). He also lived in Warwick, New York(Orange County). If anyone knows anything about William and his family please feel free to contact me at my E-mail address. William lived in the areas of Vernon, N.J. and Warwick, N.Y. around the years 1750-1840. Friday, May 14th 2004 - 02:36:05 PM Name: Douglas Green E-mail address: AnnDoug@warwick. net Comments: I am looking for information on a William Green who fought in the Revolution War. He served under General Hathornes Regiment of Orange County, New York. At one time he lived in Vernon, New Jersey(Sussex County). He also lived in Warwick, New York(Orange County). If anyone knows anything about William and his family please feel free to contact me at my E-mail address. William lived in the areas of Vernon, N.J. and Warwick, N.Y. around the years 1750-1840. Friday, May 14th 2004 - 02:29:55 PM
Timeline Of Frederick Douglass And Family color prejudice is the demon which surrounds this house like a Chinese Wall, beyondwhich only 1866. Mary Louise was the daughter of Charles Resmond Douglass. http://www.math.buffalo.edu/~sww/0history/hwny-douglass-family.html
Extractions: His mother, Harriet Bailey, was a field slave from whom he was separated during his infancy. Douglass only saw his mother four or five times thereafter and for only a few hours each time. She had been sold to a man who lived twelve miles from where Douglass lived, and to see her son required that after her day's work in the field she walk the twelve miles, visit with him for a short time during the night, walk the twelve miles back to her home, and work a second day in the fields without rest. She died when Douglass was about seven. . Sent to live with Hugh Auld family in Baltimore. . Asks Sophia Auld to teach him his letters. Hugh Auld stops the lessons because he feels that learning makes slaves discontented and rebellious. . Hired Out to Edward Covey, a "slave breaker", to break his spirit and make him accept slavery.
Bibliography, Alpha By Author, A a simple 100 yearold building set within old stone Wall boundaries (Figure In 1866,Samuel and Henry Ferguson were lost at sea for 43 Alexander, Mary Louise. http://www.cslib.org/stamford/b_a.htm
Extractions: THE STAMFORD HISTORICAL SOCIETY STAMFORD, CONNECTICUT - A BIBLIOGRAPHY ITEMS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER BY AUTHOR You may use the E dit/ F ind feature of your browser to spead up your search on each given page. Item numbers below are in order of alpha and are not identical with Record Numbers. Search Bibliography here! "Sometimes what is in the present is in the past; sometimes not. In a quiet sector of Stamford (Figure 6) that was known as the Bangall District, on a rustic half-acre, is a simple 100 year-old building set within old stone wall boundaries (Figure 22). The old structure with its two front doors, looks like a Friends Meeting House. While it is now, it wasn't originally. In fact, the site gives no easily visible evidence of the oldest structure that was on it: the first Baptist church in Stamford. The present structure was a one-room school-house that was moved to the site. This paper will try to recount the changes at the site from 1771 through the present which have been uncovered thus far." Judith F. Abraham, p. 1. (Reproduced with the permission of the author).
HMC | NRA | Persons Beginning CA 1844) Knight Painter (3) Callcott, John Wall (17661821 of Education (2) Campan, JeanneLouise Henriette (1752 Glasgow (1) Campbell, Donald (fl 1866-1914) Sailor http://www.hmc.gov.uk/nra/browser/person/page/personCA.htm
Full Editorial From Past Issue Courbets The Origin of the World (1866) is the It comes from a temple Wall in northIndia and is Louise Bourgeois is another artist who is ingenious in the http://www.artnewsonline.com/pastarticle.cfm?art_id=1455
TERRY FAMILY HISTORIAN DECEMBER 1985 Vedra Beach FL 32082 1. WEISNER, Marjorie Margie Louise b. Waldo 20 Nov 1854 m.24 Dec 1882; 5. Wall, Nancy Hodge b 1984 4. ROWAN, Robert Eli b. TN 1866 d. TN http://www.terry-family-historian.com/TFHDEC1985.htm
Extractions: TERRY FAMILY HISTORIAN VOL. IV, NO. 4 DECEMBER 1985 EDITOR'S NOTE Just a short note to thank you all of the readers for their support for the year 1985 and 1986. I have a number of projects in the mill and will be working on marriages for Northern Terry Families and would appreciate any references in this area. I have about 300 marriages now. First of all I apologize for the lateness of the December issue. I do not have a good excuse and did not get the TFH to the publisher on schedule. I have received some good articles but not always in time for publication; however, I do try to wait as late as possible to get the information in the publication. Due to the fact that several issues are now out of publication and they are not indexed yet, I did publish surnames from 1983-1985 to help everyone know what surnames individuals are researching. This will help I believe, because the TFH is located in several large libraries and you should receive some responses from across the U. S. I continue to be embarrassed by the stack of unanswered mail, but will try and publish your questions in the TFH. It is getting harder for me to answer questions on an individual basis though I fully intend to do so in time.
The Blackwell Ancestors Of Robert Van Blackwell (1620-now) A. Capshaw. 11. Thomas Blackwell, b. 1790, m. Mary Wall. 12. 1866 (Cobb) Georgia,m. Monk B. Moon 12 Dec. 1926 (Cobb) Georgia, m. Mary Louise Jack 8 June 1950. http://www.usigs.org/library/blackwell/blqlvan1.htm
Extractions: Thanks for the message. I still have your E-mail address but I must have written it down wrong, a week or two ago I tried to send you some information but it did not go through. I spent last week in Texas for an Evangelistic Meeting, then drove up to Nashville for the NGS on Friday. While I was there I got to have lunch with Paul White, a distant cousin who wrote Taproots: A Virginia-Carolina Legacy . Had a great time talking with him. I am going to send you some of the information you wanted by E-mail, I am finding that I respond quicker to Electronic messages than I do regular mail. I have yet to hear from any one, perhaps once some of my information gets online that will change. Thanks for putting me online. Following is my descent chart from Robert Blackwell, b. 1620, down to myself Here is an article I'm working on.