Underhill was elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses (March 4, 1911 – March 3, 1915).
Edwin Lutyens | Edwin Booth | Edwin M. Stanton | Edwin Starr | Edwin of Northumbria | Edwin Hubble | Edwin Franko Goldman | John Edwin Sandys | Edwin Edwards | Edwin Bidwell Wilson | Edwin A. McAlpin | The Mystery of Edwin Drood | Edwin Torres | Edwin (musician) | Edwin Markham | Edwin Lankester | Edwin Forrest | Edwin Catmull | Edwin Abbott Abbott | Edwin | Underhill Stadium | Frederic Edwin Church | Edwin Santibáñez | Edwin Muir | Edwin Mellen Press | Edwin Long | Edwin Lacierda | Edwin H. Colbert | War (Edwin Starr song) | J. Edwin Orr |
He rose through the ranks of the studio as assistant to Edwin S. Porter, Charles Brabin, and John Hancock Collins.
The David O. McKay School of Education began in 1913 as an integral part of BYU named the Church Teachers College with Edwin S. Hinckley as the first dean.
The film, along with Frank Mottershaw's film A Daring Daylight Burglary, is considered to have helped launch the chase sub-genre and influenced Edwin S. Porter's The Great Train Robbery.
The resulting court case, Tolman v. Underhill, led to the California Supreme Court in 1955 overturning the oath and forcing the reinstatement of all those who had refused to sign it; Tolman could be considered a hero.
He collaborated with several other filmmakers, including George S. Fleming.
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In his Jack and the Beanstalk (1902) and Life of an American Fireman (1903) he followed earlier films by France's Georges Méliès and members of England's Brighton School, such as James Williamson.
In 1970, he became Professor of Thanatology at the University of California, where he taught for decades.
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As an intern, he studied schizophrenia, then thought to be environmentally caused, at the Veterans Administration hospital in Brentwood|.
Underhill was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-sixth Congress in 1898, in which year he was the only Democrat to be elected from Westchester County.
American Heritage sold to McGraw-Hill in 1970, to private investor Samuel Pryor Reed of New York City in 1976, to Forbes in 1986, and to an independent publisher, Edwin S. Grosvenor, in 2007.
According to Robert Bittlestone's Odysseus Unbound (2005), written with the assistance of Professor James Diggle of Cambridge University and Professor John Underhill of the University of Edinburgh, Paliki, a peninsula of Kefalonia, is the location of Homer's Ithaca, the home of Odysseus in Homer's Odyssey.