Weeks after purchasing a farm in Far West, Missouri, he was expelled along with the rest of the Mormons by Missouri Executive Order 44.
Horace Walpole | Horace Greeley | Horace | Horace Silver | Horace Andy | Horace Mann | Horace Mann Towner | Horace Trumbauer | Horace James | Horace Horsecollar | Horace Heidt | Horace Bushnell | Niles Eldredge | Horace Plunkett | Horace Gray | Horace François Bastien Sébastiani de La Porta | Horace Brown | Horace-Bénédict de Saussure | William Horace Temple | Sir Horace Mann, 1st Baronet | Reginald Horace Blyth | Horace Walker | Horace Vernet | Horace Mann Jr. | Horace Lamb | Horace Howard Furness | Horace Everett Hooper | Horace Engdahl | Horace Dobbins | Horace Dimick |
Alfred Erskine Marling (1859 – May 29, 1935) was the President of Horace S. Ely & Co. and later President of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York.
Horace attended North Side High School, where he played football, with his high school highlight being the winning touchdown he scored on Armistice Day in a game against the Wichita Falls team in 1933.
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After graduation from North Side, Horace attended college at Texas A&M University for a year as a member of the class of 1938, and then began attending Texas Christian University (since four of his uncles were Methodist preachers) where he graduated in August 1939 with a bachelors degree in physical education.