Literatura académica sobre el tema "Ohio (1883)"

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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Ohio (1883)"

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Yochelson, Ellis L. "The trilobite from Ohio with preserved legs: 1Mickelborough 1883 and Walcott 1884". Archives of Natural History 30, n.º 2 (octubre de 2003): 331–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2003.30.2.331.

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ABSTRACT: Part and counterpart of a trilobite collected from Upper Ordovician strata near Cincinnati, Ohio, USA, provided additional information on the legs of trilobites. These appendages had only been certainly known for less than a decade. The specimen was described by a local paleontologist in the local natural history journal, but part of the text was repeated in a leading American biological journal, and repeated in full in the Geological magazine. This trilobite was subsequently redescribed by C. D. Walcott in Science, following a speech in which he discussed it before the Biological Society of Washington. The specimen is now in the collection of the National Museum of Natural History in Washington.
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Brower, James C. "Camerate and Cladid crinoids from the Upper Ordovician (Katian, Shermanian) Walcott-Rust Quarry of New York". Journal of Paleontology 84, n.º 4 (julio de 2010): 626–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000058364.

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The camerates, Pycnocrinus argutus (Walcott, 1883) and Rhaphanocrinus subnodosus (Walcott, 1883), are characterized by narrow food grooves. An open distal stem coil was present in P. argutus, and R. subnodosus may have possessed the same type of holdfast. Such holdfasts either lay loose on the seafloor or were wrapped around unknown soft objects. The rhaphanocrinids were located at elevations of at least 300 mm above the substrate. Conversely, the much smaller pycnocrinids lived close to the seafloor at levels of about 10 to 24 mm. The three cladids are Merocrinus curtus (Ulrich, 1879), M. retractilis (Walcott, 1883), and Dendrocrinus gregarius Billings, 1857a. Merocrinus typus Walcott, 1883 and M. corroboratus Walcott, 1883 are conspecific with M. curtus. The spiral anal sac of M. retractilis is unique. Embryocrinus problematicus Hudson, 1918 probably represents a juvenile of Dendrocrinus gregarius, which also occurs in Ottawa, Ontario. Complete columns and attachment structures have not been found for D. gregarius and Merocrinus retractilis. Merocrinus curtus ranges from New York into the Cincinnati, Ohio area of the midcontinent. Although attachment devices and long stem segments are not preserved in the New York specimens, individuals of Merocrinus curtus from Cincinnati either have a conical holdfast cemented to a bryozoan or a tight distal stem coil that was wrapped around the stem of another crinoid; adult merocrinids from the Cincinnati region were positioned high above the seafloor, and incomplete stem segments up to about 800 mm long are known. The Walcott-Rust Quarry cladids all possessed wider food grooves than the camerates, so they were able to catch larger food particles.
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Kratochvíl, Matěj. "Music as an Adaptation Strategy: The Hruby Family’s Voyage from Cehnice to Cleveland". Journal of Austrian-American History 6, n.º 1 (18 de mayo de 2022): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/jaustamerhist.6.1.0001.

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Abstract This article looks at the history of the Hruby family as an example of how immigrants to the US adapted and acquired social status through music. The family originated in the village of Cehnice in South Bohemia. Frank Hruby, the family patriarch, started his career there as a musician playing in various circuses across Europe. During his travels, he visited Cleveland, Ohio, and in 1883 settled there with his wife and oldest son. Hruby joined several musical ensembles and gradually became an important personality in the local music scene. His children studied music as well and followed their father’s musical path. They moved from playing in marching bands to founding their own orchestra, which toured across the United States as well as Europe. Using archival sources, I show how musical versatility and professionalism helped the Hruby family to integrate into American society and to reach a certain social status. Their history also illustrates how the family’s music activities balanced their Czech heritage with the requirements of the new-world audience.
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Gray, LaVerne. "Naomi Willie Pollard Dobson: A Pioneering Black Librarian". Libraries: Culture, History, and Society 6, n.º 1 (1 de marzo de 2022): 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/libraries.6.1.0001.

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ABSTRACT Naomi Willie Pollard Dobson (1883–1971) was an educator, librarian, clubwoman, civic leader, and the first Black woman to graduate from Northwestern University in 1905. Despite her achievements, Dobson is not represented in the literature in Black librarianship history, African American history, or women’s history. This article takes a closer look at an early twentieth-century life well lived. A chance reading of the 1915 Wilberforce University catalog revealed her as the head librarian at Wilberforce, an Ohio historically Black college founded in 1856 by the African Methodist Episcopal Church. This article documents the process of uncovering an unknown and unsung figure in African American woman’s biography and library history. The text makes the case for inclusion of an under-researched woman who contributed to the intellectual and liberatory conscious of African Americans. To situate the subject in time and space the article recounts her familial influences through genealogy, explores her movements through the society and women’s columns, and outlines her professional work through institutional reports. Recounting Dobson’s life involved embracing the relational through the significance of a remarkable family, communities centered on self-determination, and progressive racial uplift.
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Njoku, Onuuka N. "Igbo Resistance - The Ekumeku Movement: Western Igbo Resistance to the British Conquest of Nigeria, 1883–1914. By Don C. Ohadike. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1991. Pp. xii + 204. $29.95 (paperback $16.95)." Journal of African History 33, n.º 3 (noviembre de 1992): 492–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021853700032667.

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Maffly-Kipp, Laurie F. "Mapping the World, Mapping the Race: The Negro Race History, 1874–1915". Church History 64, n.º 4 (diciembre de 1995): 610–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3168841.

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In 1883, the African American Baptist preacher George Washington Williams published hisHistory of the Negro Race in America, 1619–1880. The book, a fundamentally optimistic account of the black presence in the New World, represented an attempt by the well-educated, northern divine to balance his commitments to an American evangelical tradition with an awareness of the ongoing oppression of his fellow African Americans at the hands of whites. “I commit this work to the public, white and black,” he noted in the preface, “to the friends and foes of the Negro in the hope that the obsolete antagonisms which grew out of the relation of master and slave may speedily sink as storms beneath the horizon; and that the day will hasten when there shall be no North, no South, no Black, no White,—but all be American citizens, with equal duties and equal rights.” The work revealed much about Williams: his upbringing in antebellum Pennsylvania as the child of an interracial union, his training at Howard University and Newton Theological Seminary, and his work experiences at Baptist churches in New England and Ohio. But this particular passage highlights the motivating force behind the book: it reveals, in anticipation of a historical narrative of over two hundred years of African enslavement, Williams's desire to recast much of the American past. Williams's historical account was, at heart, an attempt to impart moral meaning to the present by reconstructing the historical consciousness of both blacks and whites. In this desire, Williams fit precisely Friedrich Nietzsche's characterization of “historical men,” those who “believe that ever more light is shed on the meaning of existence in the course of itsprocess, and they look back to consider that process only to understand the present better and learn to desire the future more vehemently.”
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Brunson, James E. ""Our Man About Town" James A. Smith and the Image of the Colored Sporting Fraternity of Cleveland, Ohio, 1883-1889". Black Ball: A Negro Leagues Journal 1, n.º 2 (1 de septiembre de 2008): 12–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.3172/blb.1.2.12.

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Perko, F. M. "MARGARET C. DEPALMA. Dialogue on the Frontier: Catholic and Protestant Relations, 1793-1883. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. 2004. Pp. xvi, 220. $55.00." American Historical Review 111, n.º 2 (1 de abril de 2006): 497. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr.111.2.497.

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Jenkins, Philip. ":Controlling Vice: Regulating Brothel Prostitution in St. Paul 1865-1883 . By Joel Best ( Columbus , Ohio State University Press , 1998 ) 175 pp. $24.95 cloth $16.95 paper". Journal of Interdisciplinary History 30, n.º 3 (enero de 1999): 543–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh.1999.30.3.543.

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Jenkins, Philip. "Controlling Vice: Regulating Brothel Prostitution in St. Paul 1865–1883. By Joel Best (Columbus, Ohio State University Press, 1998) 175 pp. $24.95 cloth $16.95 paper". Journal of Interdisciplinary History 30, n.º 3 (enero de 2000): 543–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh.2000.30.3.543.

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Tesis sobre el tema "Ohio (1883)"

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Britton, Jessica Dyan. "The Failure of Prison Reform: A History of the Ohio Penitentiary, 1834-1885". Oxford, Ohio : Miami University, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=miami1218121677.

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DiBari, Sherry A. "Rendville, Ohio: An Historical Geography of a Distinctive Community in Appalachian Ohio, 1880-1900". Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1307303263.

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Ward, Adah Louise. "The African-American struggle for education in Columbus, Ohio: 1803-1913". Connect to resource, 1993. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view.cgi?acc%5Fnum=osu1244143944.

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Maglinger, III Woodrow Wilson. "Dark Days in the Ohio Valley: Three Western Kentucky Lynchings, 1884-1911". TopSCHOLAR®, 2004. http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/242.

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This thesis investigates three lynchings of African Americans in Progressive-Era western Kentucky. The first occurred in Owensboro. In July 1884, a masked mob at-tacked the Daviess County jail. Richard May, an African-American field hand, had been incarcerated for the alleged sexual assault of a local farmer’s daughter. During the lynch mob’s actions that claimed May’s life, the white county jailer was killed protecting his prisoner. Ironically, just two decades earlier Jailer William Lucas had fought for the Confederate States of America during the Civil War. In nearby Hawesville in September 1897, Raymond Bushrod was also arrested on suspicion of raping a white girl. Rumors swirled throughout the town about a potential mob, with the local newspaper even commenting that “the result of [the community’s outrage] will likely be the first lynching in the history of Hancock County before morn-ing.” Indeed Bushrod was hanged; however, the heinous act took place in daylight in the full view of cheering women and children. The final case, the April 1911 Livermore (McLean County) lynching, received the widest national–and even international–attention. Residents of Livermore seized William Potter, a local black man arrested for allegedly assaulting a white man, from town law enforcement officials. The lynch mob then shot Potter to death on the stage of the town opera house. Some accounts state that admission was charged for the morbid spectacle. The horrific event was harshly condemned by the national and international press, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People petitioned both Frankfort and Washington, D.C. for action. Surprisingly, heavy public pressure resulted in the eventual indictment of eighteen prominent McLean Countians believed to have partici-pated in the heinous spectacle. Not surprisingly, they were all hastily acquitted, however. Nonetheless, media attention of the disturbing tragedy helped to ensure that the days of unchecked lynch law in the American South were numbered. These stories are brought to life through eyewitness accounts in contemporary newspaper reports and court records. In addition to presenting a case study of each lynching, I examine the public sentiment, media treatment, and legal proceedings (if any) surrounding these acts of racial violence. As an overarching theme, I analyze how soci-ety itself changed during the period under review, from 1884 to 1911. While there are unique aspects to each lynching, all of these stories share common threads. Each took place in the adjacent western Kentucky Coal Field counties of Davi-ess, Hancock, and McLean. Each lynching victim stood accused of a crime that typically brought with it an automatic “death sentence” in the New South–sexual assault of a white woman in two cases, and attempted murder of a white man in the other instance. Each occurred about a decade and a half apart. While lynchings of African Americans in the Bluegrass State during the period covered by this thesis were not uncommon–historian George Wright counts some 135–many of the details make these three cases distinctive. The death of Jailer Lucas in the line of duty was a very rare occurrence. So too was the brazen communal nature of the Hawesville lynching and the legal action taken against the men of the Livermore mob. These tales also demonstrate that public attitude about extralegal “justice” was far from unanimous. While many whites undoubtedly agreed with the Owensboro Messenger’s assertion that lynching was “too good for” certain “black brutes,” there were unwavering voices of reason and civility present also. These latter voices grew progressively louder as the national anti-lynching campaign reached its crescendo in the 1920s and 1930s. Many special people have been influential in helping me to complete this project. I would like to thank the Western Kentucky University History Department, in particular Patricia Minter, Carol Crowe-Carraco, and Marion Lucas, for reading my thesis and of-fering their valuable suggestions. Any mistakes that remain are solely my responsibility. Also, the librarians at the Daviess County Public Library, Western Kentucky University, and the University of Kentucky were immensely helpful in my search for primary sources. Above all I want to dedicate this project to my father and mother, Woody and Susan Maglinger. They have taught me to live by the Golden Rule, and I would not be the man that I am today had they not shared God’s love through their beautiful examples.
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Coffin, Sarah L. "The Brownfields reality check : a study of land value and the effects of Brownfields on the locations of Section 8 Housing". Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/23917.

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Gross, Jeanne Bilger. "Benjamin Russel Hanby, Ohio composer-educator, 1833-1867: His contributions to early music education /". The Ohio State University, 1987. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu148758461216499.

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Mairose, Mary Alice. "Nativism on the Ohio: the Know Nothings in Cincinnati and Louisville 1853-1855". The Ohio State University, 1993. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1382626901.

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Reaser, Dona M. "Profit and penitence : an administrative history of the Ohio Penitentiary from 1815 to 1885 /". The Ohio State University, 1998. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487949508368686.

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Howard, Jonathan. "Changing the Law; Fighting for Freedom: Racial Politics and Legal Reform in Early Ohio, 1803-1860". The Ohio State University, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1293551467.

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Mulligan, Thomas C. "Lest the Rebels Come to Power: The Life of William Dennison, 1815-1882, Early Ohio Republican". The Ohio State University, 1994. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1384511018.

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Libros sobre el tema "Ohio (1883)"

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Fairchild, James Harris. Oberlin: The colony and the college, 1833-1883. Oberlin, O[hio]: E.J. Goodrich, 1989.

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Phillips, W. Louis. Index to Ohio pensioners of 1883. Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1987.

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Nishimoto, Bonnie Cox. Brown County, Ohio, German church records: Evangelical Reform Church, Higginsport, Ohio (1869-1895), Lutheran Protestant Church, Ripley, Ohio (1863-1883). Woodbridge, VA (12217 Oakwood Drive, Woodbridge 22192: B.C. Nishimoto, 1992.

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Powers, William Tatnall. Mahoning County, Ohio, coroner's inquests book #1, 1883-1908. [Ohio]: Mahoning County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society, 1995.

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1922-, Adams Barbara y Shelby Co. Genealogical Society (Ohio), eds. Index of inmates, Shelby County Infirmary, Sidney, Ohio, 1866-1883. Sidney, Ohio: Shelby County Genealogical Society, 1995.

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Redd, Robert E. Selected index of names to history of Hocking Valley, Ohio, 1883. [Logan, Ohio: R.E. Redd, 2001.

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1947-, Payne Warren, Payne Julie y Anonymous Artist Gallery, eds. The collectors' showcase: Artists of the Ohio Valley school and the Wonderland Way, 1883-1940. Louisville, KY: Anonymous Artist Gallery, 2002.

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From the Ohio to the San Joaquin: A biography of Captain William S. Moss, 1798-1883. Stockton, Calif: Heritage West Books, 1991.

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P, Stephens Norma, Knott Marie A y Southern Ohio Genealogical Society, eds. News-Herald obituaries, 1885-1886, Hillsboro, Ohio. Hillsboro, Ohio: Southern Ohio Genealogical Society, 1986.

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Ohio Genealogical Society. Hamilton County Chapter, ed. Hamilton County, Ohio, church burial records, 1880-1889. Milford, Ohio: Little Miami Pub. Co., 2006.

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Capítulos de libros sobre el tema "Ohio (1883)"

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Butler, Diana Hochstedt. "Episcopal Distinctiveness: Fighting the Protestant Radicals,1832-1838". En Standing Against The Whirlwind, 61–92. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195085426.003.0003.

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Abstract On September 10, 1831, Charles Mcilvaine was elected unanimously to become the second bishop of the diocese of Ohio. Busy with parish duties and teaching a course on “Christian Evidences” at the University of the City of New York, the election genuinely surprised him. When the news arrived, Mcilvaine wrote in his diary: I can very freely commit the matter to the Lord. I would not remain here, if it be His will that I go to Ohio; I would not go to Ohio, ifit be His will that I remain here. My heart does not thirst for a bishopric. Its honour I could willingly forgo, its responsibility I am not sufficient to bear. Its duties are unspeakably holier than any spirit I could bring to them.
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Runyon, Randolph Paul. "Afterword". En The Assault on Elisha Green, 195–98. University Press of Kentucky, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813152387.003.0019.

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Only three children survived him, all daughters. Caroline Green married in 1871 and moved with her family to Yellow Springs, Ohio. Her son, Madison W. Baber (1873-1947), married into a prominent and storied black family that had been among the thirty slaves freed by abolitionist Moncure Conway, who took them by train through Confederate territory from Washington in July 1862 to Yellow Springs. Baber's daughter Bertha Morris lived long enough to vote against Barry Goldwater. Elisha Green is fondly remembered by his churches in both Maysville and Paris. In the latter city, the descendants of the congregation that rejected him in 1884 now claim him as their founder with as much pride as those of the original church, located one block away. Plymouth Baptist closed its doors in 1910. Clayville, the community of black homeowners he established in Paris, was replaced by new housing in the 1960s, but its name survives.
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Niven, John. "“It Is a Big Fish”". En Salmon P. Chase, 355–66. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195046533.003.0027.

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Abstract If Chase was responsible for the actions of his agents in the Mississippi Valley and thus vulnerable to political attack, he was also guilty of that cardinal political sin of not looking after his home base. With the exception of his brief barnstorming tour of Ohio and Indiana in October 1863 Chase had counted on his handful of trusted associates-the Cookes, his son-in-law Sprague, a half-dozen or so newspapers, some tottering like the Ohio State Journal (whose management was part of the corrupt army quartermaster ring), and the gifted Whitelaw Reid, nominally Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette-to support his candidacy.
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"The North: Ohio, Vermont, and New York". En The Creation of American Common Law, 1850–1880, 118–46. Cambridge University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511509919.006.

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Haw, Richard. "The Kentucky, Ohio, and Allegheny (1851–60)". En Engineering America, 396–435. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190663902.003.0017.

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After his success at Niagara, John tried to secure further railroad suspension bridge contracts, yet his only success proved to be an absolute albatross. In 1853, he received a contract to build a railroad suspension bridge over the Kentucky River, but he got no further than building the bridge’s towers. The project lingered on for many years, with hope but no money. A similar situation prevailed in Cincinnati. The necessary funding and legislation were secured by 1856, and John was summoned. The project was shut down two years later after the panic of 1857 left the bridge company’s coffers empty. John finally abandoned his two unfinished towers in 1861, there to stand as lonely witnesses to the presence of a coming war. Better news and better financing came to John out of Pittsburgh, where the St. Clair Street Bridge needed replacing. John was offered the contract, and he completed the bridge on time and under budget in 1860.
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Haw, Richard. "Unfinished Business (1863–69)". En Engineering America, 476–528. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190663902.003.0019.

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returned to Cincinnati in 1863 to find his two solitary bridge towers ready to receive the complex system of suspension cables, supporting beams, cable stays, and trusses he had designed. The work of completing the bridge took a further year and half, during which his wife Johanna passed away, a fact that led John to dabble for almost a year in séances. Fortunately, John’s triumph over the Ohio came just as New York was clamoring for someone to bridge the East River. It didn’t take long for the board of trustees to offer John a contract. Over the next two years, John worked feverishly at his drawing board. Unfortunately, the task would prove harder than even the most ardent sceptic had imagined, and John himself would not live to see it done. On June 28, 1869, John’s right foot was crushed by a ferry as he surveyed the Brooklyn waterfront, and he contracted lockjaw. He died in agony several weeks later.
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Meléndez-Badillo, Jorell A. "The Anarchist Imaginary". En Writing Revolution, 177–93. University of Illinois Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252042744.003.0011.

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Max Nettlau’s publications became key documents for the study of Latin American anarchism and radical history. Nettlau considered Hispanic anarchists in the United States as an integral part of the Latin American anarchist imaginary. This chapter explores Nettlau’s correspondence with two anarchist activists, José Lóuzara de Andrés (1891-1973) from Steubenville, Ohio, and Enrique Nido (1884-1928) from Rosario, Argentina. Albeit incomplete, Nettlau’s intellectual project not only helped shape anarchist historiography in the Americas it became one of the largest collections of anarchist documents now housed at the International Institute for Social History (IISH).
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Nielsen, Kim E. "Mrs. Anna Miesse, Local Doctor’s Wife". En Money, Marriage, and Madness, 11–21. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043147.003.0002.

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This chapter relays the limited information available about Ott’s early life, and focuses on her live as the wife of Dr. Jonathan Miesse in Chillicothe, Ohio. The household of this small-town physician and his wife, the household in which their children grew, was complicated, unhappy, and sometimes ugly. Jonathan filed for divorce in 1849, after twelve years of marriage, but withdrew his application within two months, and attempted a separation agreement in 1853. He again filed for divorce in late 1855. This chapter focuses on marriage laws and the contrast between marriage ideals and realities.
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"The People of Oregon Feel Proud to Call You Their Son". En Lamson Of The Gettysburg, editado por James M. McPherson y Patricia R. McPherson, 110–44. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195116984.003.0006.

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Abstract After The Suffolk Campaign Lamson received a brief furlough and paid a short visit to Kate in Mount Vernon, Ohio. When he returned to the flagship Minnesota he performed the varied but routine duties of a flag lieutenant for two months, interrupted by a brief naval demonstration up the James River during which Lamson commanded the gunboat USS Commodore Barney. On July 30 he received welcome orders to take command of a ship just acquired by the navy, the James Freeborn, built in 1862, a sidewheel steamer carrying three guns and rated at a maximum speed of fifteen knots. By 1863 specially designed blockade runners built in Britain and capable of great speeds were outrunning Union blockade ships, forcing the Union navy to put equally fast ships into blockade service. The Freeborn was renamed the USS Nansemond in honor of Lamson’s achievements on that river. In August 1863 he took her to sea in search of blockade runners, and soon added new laurels to his record.
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Der Manuelian, Peter. "Midwestern Beginnings and Endings". En Walking Among Pharaohs, 11—C1.F2. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197628935.003.0002.

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Abstract This chapter traces the ancestry of George Reisner’s family, their origins in Worms, Germany, emigration, arrival in the New World, and ultimate settlement in Indianapolis. It highlights Reisner’s formative influences during his high school education, his father’s employment in a shoe store, and the birth of his younger siblings. The major event of his youth was his mother’s insanity and violent suicide, which caused the family to move house and engage an aunt to look after the children. Reisner’s future wife, Mary Putnam Bronson, moves with her family from Sandusky, Ohio, to Indianapolis. Accepted to Harvard University as a member of the class of 1889, Reisner prepares to move east.
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Actas de conferencias sobre el tema "Ohio (1883)"

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Cardona, Nathan, Abigale O'Connor, Jing Zhang, Jason Rech y Jonathan Levy. "DEVELOPING A REGIONAL RECORD OF HISTORIC TEMPERATURE CHANGES FROM 1893 TO 2021 IN THE TRI-STATE AREA OF OHIO, INDIANA, AND KENTUCKY". En Joint 56th Annual North-Central/ 71st Annual Southeastern Section Meeting - 2022. Geological Society of America, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2022nc-374725.

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Thurston, Leanne. "How Staged Head-On Collisions Changed Public Perception of Railroads". En 2019 Joint Rail Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/jrc2019-1329.

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With any new mode of transportation comes new fears for both the public and those involved in the industry. The advent of the transcontinental railroad was no different. When the transcontinental railroad was complete and trains became more commonplace for travel, the biggest fear became the worst case scenario: a head on collision between two trains. The idea of the head on collision remained the biggest fear of the public because it happened and was based on reality, but was rarely witnessed, which made the idea even more lofty. But with the standardization of time in the 1880’s, there were fewer crashes and collisions of railroads, but people were still afraid. Railroad companies began to brainstorm the best way to change public perception, and began to stage head on collisions open to public viewing for a small fee. Naturally, the idea took off, and head on collisions between trains became the next source of entertainment. For $2, spectators could watch two locomotives crash into each other at speeds of 58 miles an hour in Crush Texas, or even cheaper in Ohio. But this was more than just entertainment. William Crush, the most famous locomotive smasher had actually worked on the railroad known as the Katy. When asked by the executives of the railroad to boost sales, head on collision was his solution. Despite multiple injuries suffered in the crowd from shrapnel and an exploded boiler, this showcase worked, and ridership of the Katy increased dramatically. Crush’s display was not the first, or last time this took place around the country, but it was the most deadly, which makes it the most memorable and begs the question “what role do these staged collisions play in railroad history?” Ridership in the decades leading up to these staged collisions was steadily declining, and safety measures were not taken into consideration. But with these staged collisions that turned around. People, not just the public were able to see and study the different collisions and put minds at ease. But it also tells about the United States population at the time. These staged collisions could not have happened in any other era because of the industrial revolution which allowed railroad companies to begin to replace old locomotives and iron tracks with steel.
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Informes sobre el tema "Ohio (1883)"

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Health hazard evaluation report: HETA-84-066-1883, Artesian Industries, Mansfield, Ohio. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, marzo de 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.26616/nioshheta840661883.

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Health hazard evaluation report: HETA-86-125-1853, Empire-Detroit Steel Division, Mansfield, Ohio. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, noviembre de 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.26616/nioshheta861251853.

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Health hazard evaluation report: HETA-87-147-1873, Rothan and Rothan, DDS, Cincinnati, Ohio. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, febrero de 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.26616/nioshheta871471873.

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Health hazard evaluation report: HETA-87-339-1863, St. Francis-St. George Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, enero de 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.26616/nioshheta873391863.

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