Deborah C. Peel, American physician and national speaker on health privacy
John Peel | Robert Peel | Sir Robert Peel | Deborah Cox | Deborah Kerr | Deborah | Peel, Isle of Man | Peel | Deborah Voigt | Deborah Brown | Deborah Watling | Deborah Raffin | Peel Memorial Hospital | John Peel (writer) | Deborah Willis | Deborah Butterfield | Peel Street | Peel Region | Deborah Todd | Deborah Read | Deborah Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire | Deborah Allen | Regional Municipality of Peel | Peel tower | Peel Street, Montreal | Deborah Sampson | Deborah Lipstadt | Deborah Doniach | Deborah Davis | Deborah Dash Moore |
His chief works are The Convict's Appeal published in 1818, a protest against the death penalty and general severity of the criminal code, and Household Verses published 1845, which came to the notice of Sir R. Peel, through whom he obtained a pension of £100 a year.
The son, J. H. B. Peel, became a Daily Telegraph writer on country matters.
Peel post office was established in 1888 and named for congressman Samuel W. Peel of Arkansas.
He served as chairman of the Committee on Indian Affairs (Fiftieth and Fifty-second Congresses).
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Peel was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-eighth and to the four succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1883-March 3, 1893).
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