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unusual facts about Edmund H. Pendleton


Edmund H. Pendleton

Born in Savannah, Georgia, Pendleton received a liberal schooling as a youth.


Clarence M. Pendleton, Jr.

Pendleton denounced the feminist concept of comparable worth in the establishment of male and female pay scales as "probably the looniest idea since Looney Tunes came on the screen."

Edmund H. Wuerpel

About the turn of the twentieth century, Wuerpel became friends with the early Orthodontics pioneer Edward Angle.

Edward Angle

Angle was concerned with the aesthetics of orthodontics as well as functionality and so he collaborated with the artist and art educator Edmund H. Wuerpel in applying aesthetics to his field.

Edward Porter Alexander

Unlike such Confederate officers as Jubal Early and William Pendleton, Alexander eschewed the bitter Lost Cause theories of why the South was doomed to fail, given the overwhelming superiority of the North.

Former religious orders in the Anglican Communion

The house, built in the early nineteenth century, was extended for the convent, and the chapel was built in 1910 by Edmund H. Sedding.

George C. Pendleton

After the election of Woodrow Wilson to the presidency in 1912, Pendleton was to be appointed Postmaster of Temple, a post no doubt intended as a reward for his long service to the Democratic party.

George Pendleton

George C. Pendleton (1845–1913), U.S. Representative from Texas.

George H. Pendleton (1825–1889), U.S. Representative and Senator from Ohio

Human resource management in public administration

George H. Pendleton: Senator from Ohio sponsored the Civil Service Reform Act in 1883, which sought to implement a merit-based program in the federal government.

James M. Pendleton

He was an unsuccessful for reelection in 1874 to the Forty-fourth Congress.

James Pendleton

James M. Pendleton (1822–1889), U.S. Representative from Rhode Island

John O. Pendleton

He presented credentials as a Democratic Member-elect to the 51st United States Congress Congress and served from March 4, 1889, to February 26, 1890, when he was succeeded by George W. Atkinson, who successfully contested the election.

Peter McRobbie

McRobbie plays George H. Pendleton in Lincoln, (2012) as Lincoln's most virulent and snarling opponent in the House of Representatives in relation to the constitutional amendment outlawing slavery.

William N. Pendleton

He resigned his U.S. Army commission a year later on October 31, 1833, reportedly due to the issue of nullification in his home state.

Pendleton was portrayed in the 2003 Civil War film Gods and Generals by John Castle.

William Pendleton

William N. Pendleton (1809–1883), American teacher, Episcopal priest, and soldier

William W. Pendleton, former Democratic member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives


see also