Frederick H. Prince (1859–1953), his son, American stockbroker, investment banker and financier
Norman was son of Frederick H. Prince and had graduated from Harvard Law School and was practicing law in Chicago when he joined a group to build and race a plane in the Gordon Bennett Cup Race.
Prince of Wales | Charles, Prince of Wales | Prince | Prince Charles | Prince (musician) | Frederick the Great | Prince William, Duke of Cambridge | Prince Albert | Prince Edward Island | Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex | Frederick | Port-au-Prince | Prince Caspian | Frederick II | Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor | Albert, Prince Consort | Frederick Russell Burnham | Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts | Frederick Law Olmsted | Prince Edward | Prince Philip | Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor | Frederick Forsyth | Frederick Douglass | Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn | crown prince | Prince of Orange | Prince Andrew, Duke of York | Frederick, Maryland | The Little Prince |
As prime minister, he created the Spanish Institute of Provission and he attempted to carry out a reform plan, but this was opposed by the liberals.
Later in the 1890s he worked as a musical director for Columbia Records and also conducted the Columbia Orchestra and Columbia Band starting in 1904 as successor to cornetist Tom Clark.
He presented his credentials as a Member-elect to the Forty-first Congress but was not permitted to qualify.
The roster of Fabris’ notable students included Prince-Archbishop John Frederick of Bremen and Christian IV, King of Denmark, under whose patronage he published his exceptional rapier-fencing manual Lo Schermo, overo Scienza d’Arme (“on fencing, or martial knowledge”).
There is a photo "Portrait of F. Holland Day in Arab Costume, 1901" by Frederick H. Evans.
Frederick H. Crawford, Ulster Unionist Council agent who organised the Larne gun-running operation in 1914
Frederick H. Evans (1853–1943), British photographer, primarily of architectural subjects
In 1920 Babbitt was an unsuccessful candidate for Governor, losing the Republican nomination to James Hartness.
Reprinted in 1987, with forward and notes by James H. Pickering, by the University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.
Colonel Frederick Hugh Crawford CBE, JP (21 August 1861 – 5 November 1952) was an officer in the British Army.
In Congress, he was one of the managers appointed by the United States House of Representatives in 1926 to conduct the impeachment proceedings against George W. English, who was a judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Illinois.
It also received endorsements from former UN Ambassadors Jeane Kirkpatrick and Charles Lichenstein.
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Rowan Scarborough, in his 2007 book "Sabotage: America's Enemies Within the CIA" (Regnery) came to a similar conclusion and wrote that Fleitz paid a professional price for defending Bolton and standing up to political pressure from rogue CIA and State Department intelligence analysts.
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Fleitz's name hit the press in the spring of 2005 during the battle in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to confirm Bolton as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations.
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From 2001-2005, CIA loaned Fleitz to the State Department where he served as chief of staff to Undersecretaries of State for Arms Control John Bolton (2001–2005) and Robert Joseph (2005–2006).
Frederick Howard Shaw (a.k.a. Federico H. Shaw by the Spaniards) He was born in the Naval Station of Ferrol in North-western Spain on 20 October 1864 and died in the Spanish Capital on 11 August 1924) after a long and prolific political career.
After serving as mayor, Prince became a trustee of the Boston Public Library and served as president of its board of trustees for 11 years.
Frederick O. Prince (1818–1899), American lawyer, politician, and mayor of Boston, Massachusetts
He joined the Arthur D. Little Consulting Company when he heard about the creativity experiments going on there.
George M. Prince (died 2009), co-creator of synectics with William J. J. Gordon
The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, a center for international picture book art, drew 90,000 visitors to the Hampshire campus and Amherst during its first year.
and Osterholz with all their estates had turned into such foundations (German: das Stift, more particular: Damenstift, literally Ladies' foundation), while the monastery of Zeven was in the process of becoming one, with – among a majority of Catholic nuns – a number of nuns of Lutheran denomination, usually called conventuals.
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The Bremian monasteries still maintaining Roman Catholic rite – Altkloster, Harsefeld, Neukloster, and Zeven – became the local strongholds for a reCatholicisation within the scope of Counter-Reformation.
Born in Montville, Connecticut in 1787, he completed preparatory studies, and moved to Georgia in 1796 with his parents, who settled in Washington, Wilkes County.
They were finally assigned to a training camp near Saint Florent.
Laura Billings was an older sister of Frederick H. Billings, and he accompanied Capt. Simmons and his wife, to San Francisco in 1849.
The towers are named for Frederick H. Rindge, the philanthropist who helped found Cambridge Rindge and Latin School, Cambridge City Hall, and the Cambridge Public Library.
In his new position of Duke of Saxony he held the Land of Hadeln around Otterndorf, south of the river Elbe right opposite of Ditmarsh on the north bank.
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Siegfried continued and promoted the interior colonisation by settling wasteland and draining and diking marshes, as in Oberneuland (1181; a part of today's Bremen), Stuhr (1183), Osten and the marshes along the river Oste.
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He participated in the foundations of the monastery in Osterholz (1182) and Heiligenrode (1180/1183; a part of today's Stuhr).
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Frederick refused to receive the rank as Emperor like a papal fief, which is why he conflicted with Pope Alexander III.
Corker was elected as a Democrat to the Forty-first Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the House declaring Charles H. Prince not entitled to the seat and served from December 22, 1870, to March 3, 1871.
Walter Schultz (1900-1957) was a German theologist who was Landeskirchenführer in Mecklenburg 1933-1945, and bishop in Mecklenburg 1934-45.
William J. Prince (born 1930), General Superintendent of the Church of the Nazarene