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unusual facts about Joseph G. Kendall


Joseph Kendall

Joseph G. Kendall (1788–1847), U.S. Representative from Massachusetts


Cephas Yao Agbemenu

Cephas Yao Agbemenu was a member of and contributor to the African Proverbs, Stories and Sayings Committee, chaired by Father Joseph Healey founded in Nairobi, Kenya.

David E. Kendall

Following a clerkship with Supreme Court Justice Byron White, Kendall spent five years as an associate counsel at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, focusing on criminal defense practice, handling high-profile death penalty cases including Coker v. Georgia and the death penalty appeals of John Arthur Spenkelink and Gary Gilmore.

David Kendall

David E. Kendall, Washington, D.C. lawyer who served as the personal attorney of President Clinton during the Impeachment

Elva R. Kendall

He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1930 to the Seventy-second Congress.

Gas Huffer

At the conclusion of Girl Trouble's set, K.P. Kendall called Gas Huffer's Tom Price (who has been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease) to the stage and presented to him a "Certificate of Achievement".

George H. Kendall

George H. Kendall (c1854-1924) was the president of the New York Bank Note Company, that printed stock certificates.

He had a long running dispute with the New York Stock Exchange because they would not list companies with securities that were engraved by him.

George M. Lowry

Five men volunteered: Joseph G. Harner, Coxswain J. F. Schumaker, Boatswain's Mate Second Class George Cregan, and Seamen Harry C. Beasley and Lawrence C. Sinnett.

God's Favorite

Scenic design was by William Ritman, costumes were by Joseph G. Aulisi and lighting was by Tharon Musser.

John W. Kendall

Kendall was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-second Congress and served from March 4, 1891, until his death in Washington, D.C., on March 7, 1892.

Joseph G. Butler, Jr.

In a passage that praised the late industrialist's vision as well as its realization, the magazine's editors wrote: "To set the strictly American tone of the place, he planted a befeathered bronze Indian in front of the $500,000 collonaded building designed by the Manhattan firm of McKim, Mead & White. With Youngstown University nearby, the two blocks surrounding the museum soon developed into the cultural strip of the U.S.'s third biggest steel center".

As a philanthropist and community leader, Butler was also instrumental in the conception and realization of other civic projects, including Niles' National McKinley Birthplace Memorial, a monument to the memory of his personal friend, President William J. McKinley.

Joseph G. Davis

He has previously served in the Information Systems departments at Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana, USA, the University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand, and University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia.

Joseph G. Gavin Jr

(September 18, 1920 – October 30, 2010) was an American engineer responsible for the development of the lunar module used in the Apollo program, as well as president, chief operating officer and chairman of the executive committee of the Grumman Corporation.

Joseph G. Haubrich

In 1990, Joseph joined the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland as an economist and consultant in the research department.

Joseph G. LaPointe, Jr.

A portion of Ohio State Route 49 in Montgomery County has been designated the "Joseph G. LaPointe Jr. Memorial Highway".

Joseph G. Prior

Prior is the current pastor at St. John the Evangelist in Morrisville, Pennsylvania, which is a part of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Joseph G. Williams

In 1950 after 12 years in the Army Joe came back home to Warsaw and married his high school sweetheart Dolly Johnson on March 3, 1950.

In 1999 his father George Williams died at the age of 99 in Kansas City, Missouri and on December 31, 2006 his mother Jenny Williams died at the age of 105 in Warsaw, Missouri.

In November 2007 Joe and his wife Dolly attended the funeral services for Porter Wagoner in Nashville, TN.

After 40 years in the country music business Joe retired to his family farm in Warsaw with his wife Dolly in 1990 where he is a hometown hero.

Once Joe moved to Nashville he started to work in the night clubs for tips and was writing songs for superstars such as Ernest Tubb, Kitty Wells and many others.

Well into his 80s Joe still did a few shows every year in his homestate of Missouri mostly at the Missouri State Fair in Sedalia.

In 1993 Joe bought a gas station in Warsaw and renamed Ol' Joe's, then in 2003 Joe's oldest son James bought the gas station from his father and kept the name.

Joseph "Joe" George Williams (born July 1, 1920 in Warsaw, Missouri) is best known for his songwriting work in country music from the mid-1950s until the early-1980s.

Joseph M. Kendall

Kendall was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-second Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of his father, John W. Kendall, and served from April 21, 1892, to March 3, 1893.

-- A grammar fix may be needed here. -->Presented credentials as a Member-elect to the Fifty-fourth Congress and served from March 4, 1895, to February 18, 1897, when he was succeeded by Nathan T. Hopkins, who contested his election.

-- A grammar fix may be needed here. -->Clerk of the House of Representatives in the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses.

Justice Wilson

Joseph G. Wilson, an Associate Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court

Medlicott

Joseph G. Medlicott (died 1866), Irish geologist; older brother of Henry

Minot's Ledge Light

Plans for a new stone edifice were meanwhile drawn up for the Lighthouse Board by Brigadier General Joseph G. Totten; model makers built the proposed new structure in miniature; the same location was decided upon; and Barton S. Alexander, of the United States Engineers, started work on its construction in April 1855.

Nathan E. Kendall

Defeating Hamilton in a close race, Kendall served in the Sixty-first Congress, then was re-elected in 1910, serving in the Sixty-second Congress.

New York Bank Note Company

In 1892 George H. Kendall replaced Russell Sage as president of the company.

R. T. Kendall

While at Oxford, Kendall was pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in Lower Heyford from 1974 to 1977 (now Brackley Baptist Church) which mainly served USAF families based at RAF Upper Heyford and RAF Croughton.

Stephen J. Stilwell

In 1913, Stilwell was accused by George H. Kendall, President of the New York Bank Note Company, of demanding a bribe of $3,500 to pass legislation which would make it a misdemeanor for the New York Stock Exchange to refuse certificates engraved by the New York Bank Note Company.


see also