He took over eight thousand pictures of the family spanning the 34-month period beginning with Kennedy's inauguration and ending with his assassination.
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He died in Merritt Island, Florida, just nine months after his appearance on Antiques Roadshow describing his iconic photograph, which was done as part of the LBJ Centennial.
Cecil B. DeMille | William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley | Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury | Cecil Rhodes | Cecil Taylor | William Cecil | Cecil Sharp | Cecil Beaton | Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury | David Cecil, 6th Marquess of Exeter | Cecil | Stoughton | Robert Cecil | Cecil Raleigh | Cecil Parkinson | Stoughton, Massachusetts | Cecil Street | Cecil McBee | Cecil Kellaway | Cecil Balmond | Cecil Adams | William Cecil Slingsby | Thomas Cecil Howitt | Stoughton Grange | Southpointe (Cecil, Pennsylvania) | Robert Cecil Martin | Malcolm Cecil | John Stoughton Newberry | Hubert Cecil Booth | Cecil Howard Green |
On July 10, 1863, during the Union army's pursuit of the retreating Army of Northern Virginia, Stoughton was severely wounded in an engagement near Funkstown, Maryland, resulting in the loss of his right eye.
Stoughton was an attorney in New York City after the war, practicing with his father and with his uncle, Edwin W. Stoughton.
Edwin H. Stoughton (1838-1868), American Civil War general and lawyer
Crippled as a boy, he worked as a cobbler while studying law, attained admission to the bar in 1841, and practiced first in Chester, and later in Bellows Falls.
# Much of this material is mentioned in THE KING'S ENGLAND - NORFOLK - Green Pastures and Still Waters, edited by Arthur Mee, Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1940.
Kingdoms in Conflict: An Insider's Challenging View of Politics, Power and the Pulpit is a work of Christian literature by former US President Richard Nixon's chief counsel, Charles Colson, published in 1987 in the United States by Zondervan and in 1988 in the United Kingdom by Hodder & Stoughton.
Several of the writers agreed to write pamphlets and books that would promote the government's point of view; these were printed and published by such well-known publishers as Hodder & Stoughton, Methuen, Oxford University Press, John Murray, Macmillan and Thomas Nelson.
William L. Stoughton (1827-1888), politician from the U.S. state of Michigan