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unusual facts about Hugh L. Lamb


Hugh Lamb

Hugh L. Lamb (1890–1959), American bishop in the Roman Catholic Church


Bernard S. Meyer

In 1979, he was appointed by Governor Hugh L. Carey to the Court of Appeals, to the seat vacated by the appointment of Lawrence H. Cooke as Chief Judge.

Brad J. Lamb

A "fictional manifestation of Lamb" was the subject of a song "This Lamb Sells Condos" on the 2006 Polaris Music Prize winning album He Poos Clouds by Canadian songwriter Final Fantasy.

Brad Lamb

Brad J. Lamb, Toronto real estate broker and property developer

Carroll Gartin

He served his first term from 1952 to 1960 under fellow Democrats, Governors Hugh L. White and James P. Coleman.

Charles McKnight

According to Martha J. Lamb, Reverend McKnight received a severe saber cut to his head in the slashing melee that mortally wounded General Hugh Mercer at the Battle of Princeton.

Dan Christie Kingman

Among the pallbearers were Chief of Staff General Hugh L. Scott and two former Chiefs of Engineers, Generals Mackenzie and Bixby.

Glenn Springs Raid

When General Hugh L. Scott learned of the attack he organized another punitive expedition under the joint command of Colonel Frederick W. Sibley and Major George T. Langhorne.

He Poos Clouds

The track "This Lamb Sells Condos" refers to the Toronto real estate developer Brad J. Lamb, who had previously used the song's title phrase as an advertising slogan.

Hugh L. Nichols

In 1922, Nichols was appointed chairman of the U. S. Grant Memorial Centenary Association, which directed the restoration of the Grant Birthplace in Point Pleasant, Ohio, and directed the state to acquire it.

Hugh L. Scott

He was promoted to major in the Regular Army in February 1903 and served as Military Governor of the Sulu Archipelago, Philippines, in 1903-06 and also commanded troops there, taking part in various skirmishes, reorganized the civil government and institutions.

Hugh L. White

The vice president of the Regional Council of Negro Leadership and an NAACP worker, Lee had been urging African-Americans in the Mississippi Delta to register and vote.

Hugh Lawson

Hugh L. White (1881–1965), American politician of the Democratic party and industrialist

Len Elmore

Aside from his announcing duties, Elmore also previously served as Senior Counsel with LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae in New York City, where he currently resides, and is the president of the National Basketball Retired Players Association.

Marion J. Lamb

From the late 1980s, Lamb collaborated with Eva Jablonka, researching and writing on the inheritance of epigenetic variations, and in 2005 they co-authored the book Evolution in Four Dimensions, considered by some to be in the vanguard of an ongoing revolution within evolutionary biology.

Mark Strand Theatre

It was designed by Thomas W. Lamb and served as a model for many other similar theaters built at the time.

Nicholas Scoppetta

In 1979 New York State Governor Hugh L. Carey appointed Scoppetta to a post on the The Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor.

Thomas Lamb

Thomas W. Lamb (1871–1942), American theater and cinema architect

William Lamb

William F. Lamb (1883–1952), principal designer of the Empire State Building


see also