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unusual facts about Frank A. Briggs


Frank Briggs

Frank A. Briggs (1858–1898), American Governor of the state of North Dakota


97th Operations Group

The lead aircraft of the group, Butcher Shop, was piloted by the Group Commander, Colonel Frank A. Armstrong, and squadron commander Major Paul W. Tibbets (who later flew the Enola Gay to Hiroshima Japan on the first atomic bomb mission).

And Then...

Songwriter Kevin "Shekspere" Briggs wrote the song "Bedroom" that appears late on the album.

Bassingbourn Barracks

The first of these, the 101st Provisional Combat Bomb Wing, commanded by Brigadier General Frank A. Armstrong, Jr., set up its headquarters at Bassingbourn on 16 April 1943.

Benjamin M. Golder

Golder was the younger brother of historian Frank A. Golder (1877-1929), an academic expert on the history of Imperial Russia.

Biostratinomy

More recently, D.E.G. Briggs and colleagues have made detailed studies of decay with the prime aim of understanding the profound halt to these processes that is required by exceptional preservation in lagerstätten.

Charles Eyton

In 1914, Frank Garbutt created the Oliver Morosco Photoplay Company, named after Oliver Morosco.

David H. Mason

Frank A. Mason (1862–1940), an attorney and the first full-time football coach at Harvard University.

Faith and Courage

O'Connor composed a majority of the tracks on Faith and Courage and production duties were shared by a variety of artists including Wyclef Jean, David A. Stewart, Brian Eno, Kevin "She'kspere" Briggs, Anne Preven and Scott Cutler among others.

Francis Barrett

Frank A. Barrett (1892–1962), American soldier, lawyer and politician

Frank A. Barrett

He married Alice Catherine Donoghue on May 21, 1919, and they moved to Lusk, Wyoming.

Frank A. Golder

His family, who were ethnic Jews, emigrated to the United States during Golder's early boyhood years, probably in the immediate aftermath of the Odessa Pogrom of 1881.

He never married but was survived by his younger brother Benjamin M. Golder, who sat as a Republican Congressman from Pennsylvania at the time of his death.

Frank A. Mason

Mason was the son of David H. Mason, an attorney and politician who served on the Massachusetts Board of Education, in the Massachusetts House of Representatives, and later as the United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts.

This was the first time in school history that the football team had a full-time head coach (Lucius Littauer coached on several occasions in 1881, but did not coach the team full-time).

Frank A. Oliver

Oliver was elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-eighth and to the five succeeding Congresses and served from March 4, 1923, until his resignation on June 18, 1934.

Frank A. Perret

Frank A. Perret became involved in the development of the theory of EMF (s:.Counter-electromotive force, CEMF).

Frank A. Sedita Academy

Frank A. Sedita Academy is an elementary school located in the West Side of Buffalo, New York.

Frank A. Welch

Welch also served as “Gold Badge” Command Master Chief for the Ninth Coast Guard District, Cleveland, Ohio, where he represented the enlisted men and women of the “Great Lakes,” and as Master Chief of the Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer Academy in Petaluma, California.

Frank A. Youmans

On May 29, 1911, Youmans was nominated by President William H. Taft to a seat on the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas vacated by John H. Rogers.

Frank Alexander

Frank A. Alexander (born 1937), American Thoroughbred horse racing trainer

Frank Armstrong

Frank A. Armstrong (1902–1969), United States Army Air Forces Brigadier General

Frank Mason

Frank A. Mason (1862–1940), American attorney who also served as the first full-time football coach at Harvard University

Frank Matthews

Frank A. Mathews, Jr. (1904–1964), American Republican Party politician from New Jersey

Frank McClintock

Frank A. McClintock (1921–2011), American mechanical engineer in material science

Frank P. Briggs

He resumed the newspaper publishing business and was chairman of the Missouri State Conservation Commission in 1955-1956; from 1961 to 1965 he was Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Fish and Wildlife.

Frank Welch

Frank A. Welch (born 1959), Master Chief Petty Officer of the U.S. Coast Guard

G. W. Briggs

On top of this he also wrote the college hymn for Loughborough College of Technology, which would later become Loughborough University.

His most famous hymn is "God Has Spoken by His Prophets" as set to the tune written for Ode to Joy by Beethoven.

George Briggs

George N. Briggs (1796–1861), seven-term Governor of Massachusetts

G. W. Briggs (George Wallace Briggs) (1875–1959), English hymn writer and Anglican clergyman

H. W. Briggs

W. Briggs served as a member of the 1861-1862 California State Assembly, representing the 4th District.

Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women

Those listed as contributors to the study included Frank A. Beach, Irving Bieber, Wainright Churchill, Albert Ellis, Paul Gebhard, Evelyn Hooker, Laud Humphreys, Judd Marmor, Wardell Pomeroy, Edward Sagarin, Robert Stoller, Clarence Tripp, and Colin J. Williams.

James A. Stillman

In 1918 his father who was chairman of National City Bank of New York died and the younger Stillman engaged in a fight with Frank A. Vanderlip to control the company.

James E. Briggs

Briggs was a member of Rotary International, the Order of Daedalians, the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce, vice chairman for the campaign committee of the Texas United Fund and a member of the board of directors for the Air Force Academy Foundation.

Jason W. Briggs

In 1841 at Potosi, Wisconsin he was baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints by William O. Clark.

Brigham Young, president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles assumed control of the church's headquarters in Nauvoo, Illinois.

Julie Enfield

Julie Enfield is the daughter of the Canadian M.P. and Q.C. barrister Frank A. Enfield.

Metapsychology

The modern metapsychology movement was founded by psychiatrist Frank A. Gerbode, and stresses therapy as a way of developing the spirit for personal growth, rather than as an answer to mental disorders.

Robert Briggs

Robert O. Briggs (1927–2008), director of the University of California Marching Band

Robert H. Briggs

A member of the Miller Eccles Study Group's board of directors, Briggs also wrote "The Tragedy at Mountain Meadows Massacre: Toward a Consensus Account and Time Line," as well as reviews of Sally Denton’s American Massacre, Will Bagley’s Blood of the Prophets, and Richard E. Turley, Jr. et al's Massacre at Mountain Meadows.

Scientology and the legal system

In Religious Technology Center v. Gerbode, 1994 WL 228607 (C.D. Cal. 1994) (against Frank A. Gerbode, inventor of Traumatic Incident Reduction), a Rule 11 sanction of $8,887.50 was imposed against Helena Kobrin, an attorney for the Church, for bringing baseless and frivolous claims.

Sy Bartlett

There he came into daily contact with the inner workings of Air Force commanders in England, including Brig. Gen. Frank A. Armstrong, and was a close observer of the development of the Eighth into a powerful combat force.

United States v. Dion

Before hearings on an amendment to extend protection to the golden eagle, Assistant Secretary of the Interior Frank P. Briggs wrote a letter to the subcommittee acknowledging the religious significance of the golden eagle to many Indian tribes of the southwest.

William Adams Richardson

He served in the militia, first as a Judge Advocate with the rank of Major and later as an aide to Governor George N. Briggs with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.


see also