Hodges joined the Foreign Service in 1980 and was assigned to Caracas, Venezuela.
Heather M. Hodges ’68 - Former U.S. ambassador to Ecuador and Moldova
Ambassador Heather M. Hodges was declared persona non grata by the government of Ecuador and expelled from Ecuador on April 5, 2011.
Heather Graham | Heather Mills | Heather Fargo | Jim Hodges | Heather Locklear | Heather Headley | Heather Bishop | Peter Heather | Nicolas Hodges | Johnny Hodges | Heather Richardson | Heather Armstrong | Gil Hodges | Heather Nova | William Hodges | Lake Hodges | Joseph Hodges Choate | Heather Stevens | Heather Spohr | Heather Nedohin | Heather Mitts | Heather Masse | Heather Graham (actress) | Heather Fell | Heather Botting | Nathaniel Hodges | Henry C. Hodges | Heather Trost | Heather Tom | Heather Roy |
He was not a candidate for election to fill the vacancy in the Thirty-sixth Congress, caused also by the death of Mr. Harris.
In 1863 Lt. Colonel Hodges was made the Chief Quartermaster of the Army of the Cumberland, reporting to Major General Rosecrans, and participating in the Battle of Chickamauga from September 19 – 20, 1863.
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In 1853, the Secretary of War Jefferson Davis ordered an exploration of the Northwest for the purposes of a transcontinental railroad.
James L. Hodges, (1790–1846), delegate from Massachusetts in the United States House of Representatives
Hodges was elected as an Adams candidate to the Twentieth Congress and reelected as an Anti-Jacksonian to the Twenty-first and Twenty-second Congresses (March 4, 1827 – March 3, 1833).
He served on the Vestry, along with other civic and military leaders including Louis Sohns, Henry C. Hodges, and John McNeil Eddings, and was the Senior Warden when the church was consecrated in 1868 by Benjamin Wistar Morris (bishop).
He was reared in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, and came to Dallas, Texas in 1954 after receiving a bachelor's degree from Wheaton College.