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unusual facts about Joseph T. Curry


Jefferson B. Snyder

The list of honorary pallbearers reads like a "Who's Who" of state and delta politicians: Russell B. Long, Allen J. Ellender, John B. Fournet, Otto Passman, Ben C. Dawkins, Sr., Joseph E. Ransdell, W. W. Burnside, Joseph T. Curry, Andrew L. Sevier, Judge Frank Voelker, and successor District Attorney Thompson L. Clarke of Snyder's native St. Joseph.


A Report on Germany

While writing, Brown spent time in Germany, and also personally interviewed General George C. Marshall, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, General Joseph T. McNarney, General John H. Hilldring, John Foster Dulles, James F. Byrnes, former President Herbert Hoover, R. C. Lefingwell, Otto Jeidels, and former Senator Sinclair Weeks, among many others.

Charles Curry

Charles F. Curry, Jr. (1893–1972), U.S. Representative from California, member of the Seventy-second Congress of U.S.

Charles F. Curry (1858–1930), U.S. Representative from California and chairman of the Committee on Territories

Charles F. Curry

During his tenure as a Congressman, he served as chairman of the Committee on Territories (Sixty-sixth through Seventy-first Congresses).

Charles F. Curry, Jr.

As he was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1932 to the Seventy-third Congress, he engaged in the practice of law and in mining and other business enterprises.

Chongchon River

U.S. Army defector Joseph T. White was reported to have drowned in this North Korean river according to a letter dated 22 August 1985 which had been sent to his family.

Debbie Matz

Comptroller of the Currency Thomas J. Curry succeeded Matz as FFIEC chairman in April 2013.

Hole in the Wall Gang

Members included such infamous desperadoes as Butch Cassidy, the Sundance Kid, Kid Curry and his brother Lonny Curry, "Laughing" Sam Carey, Black Jack Ketchum, Elzy Lay, and George "Flat Nose" Curry, along with several lesser known outlaw gangs of the Old West.

Jack Thomas

Joseph T. Thomas, known as Jack, Australian citizen whose conviction for receiving funds from Al-Qaeda was overturned on appeal

Joseph Dawson

Joseph T. Dawson (1914–1998), officer in the U.S. 1st Infantry Division during World War II

Joseph T. Copeland

Joseph Tarr Copeland, already a distinguished former legislator and Michigan Supreme Court Justice, sold his 136-acre estate in section 32 of Pontiac Township, Michigan in 1858.

Upon his retirement from the bench, Copeland moved to West Bloomfield Township, Michigan, and in 1858 built the elaborate, Gothic Revival house that has always been referred to as "the castle" on the north shore of Orchard Lake.

Naturally, Copeland was elected Circuit Judge and concurrently became the 14th Michigan Supreme Court Justice.

Joseph Tarr Copeland (May 6, 1813 – May 6, 1893) was a Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court from 1852 until 1857, as well as a general in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

Joseph T. Dawson

Once at the top, he led his men to his objective at Colleville-sur-Mer, where he was wounded.

In June 1994, Dawson revisited Normandy to introduce President Bill Clinton during ceremonies marking the 50th anniversary of the invasion.

Joseph T. Ferraracci

Joseph T. Ferraracci was appointed to the position of State Senator for District 8, which covers portions of Baltimore County and Baltimore City, by former Maryland Governor Parris Glendening when John R. Schneider died.

Joseph T. Goodman

This documentation was primarily supplied by Alfred Maudslay, an English archaeologist who made significant contributions to Central American archeology.

Joseph T. Johnson

He attended the common schools and was graduated from Erskine College, Due West, South Carolina in 1879.

Joseph T. Kelliher

Joseph Timothy Kelliher (born January 17, 1961) is an American energy executive and former chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).

Joseph T. Kingsbury

Joseph T. Kingsbury was born on November 4, 1853 to Joseph C. Kingsbury and Dorcas Moore, in Weber County, Utah.

He implemented plans to move the university to a new site on lands purchased from Fort Douglas.

Joseph T. McCullen, Jr.

In 1971, McCullen joined the Executive Office of the President of the United States as a Special Assistant to the President.

Joseph T. O'Callahan

His service is also recounted in the story "Father Joe" by his nephew, storyteller Jay O'Callahan.

Joseph T. O'Neal

Governor William Fields appointed O'Neal to serve the remainder of the term until a November 7 special election.

Joseph T. Taylor

His battalion was committed to combat in the European Theater of Operations and he fought at the Battle of the Bulge.

The school motto is "We teach the 'whole child.' Our desire is that our children become 'masters of the universe.'" The Flanner House, now a United Way agency, houses the Center for Working Families, Children's Bureau, Marion County Public Library Branch, Indianapolis Metro Police Department, IPS Adult Basic Education and GED training program.

Osro Cobb

Coolidge also pocket-vetoed the national park bill, which had the support of Democratic U.S. Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas, his party's 1928 vice-presidential candidate on the Al Smith ticket.

Thomas Curry

Thomas J. Curry, Comptroller of the Currency of the United States

Torso Fragment

The other two works are a commissioned fictional bust of the patron saint of nurses, St. Camillus de Lellis installed in the School of Nursing and another bust, of Dr. Joseph T. Taylor, the first dean of the School of Liberal Arts at IUPUI.

Vanderbilt Stadium

The old field was re-christened Curry Field, in honor of Irby "Rabbit" Curry, a standout football player from 1914–16, who left Vanderbilt to serve in the American Expeditionary Force to Europe in World War I and was killed while flying a combat mission over France in 1918.

William Curry

William D. Curry (born 1926), retired United States Air Force officer

William H. Hardy

Although the Gulf and Ship Island Railroad changed hands to Joseph T. Jones, Hardy remained involved as a board member until 1899.


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