With the encouragement of editor John W. Campbell, Throop subsequently figured in additional stories by other authors.
Kelvin | Kelvin MacKenzie | William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin | Lord Kelvin | Kelvin Han Yee | Kelvin Grove | Kelvin Skerrett | Kelvin Langmead | Kelvin Hall | Kelvin Grove, Queensland | Kelvin Gosnell | Throop, Pennsylvania | Throop, Dorset | QUT Kelvin Grove busway station | Kelvin Thomson | Kelvin Kwan | Kelvin Kight | Kelvin Hughes | Kelvin Hall International Sports Arena | Kelvin Felix | Kelvin Bryant | Kelvin Avon | Kelvin Atkinson | George R. Throop | George B. Throop | Enos T. Throop |
, known for its 360 degree views stretching from the Mojave Desert all the way to the Pacific Ocean, sits on the Pacific Crest Trail and is also named after Mr. Throop.
The same year he was elected to the 14th United States Congress as a supporter of the war measures of the administration.
After their father's death, their mother married George W. Hatch, and among their children were Congressman Israel T. Hatch (1808–1875) and Eliza Hatch (1800–1885) who married first Congressman Gershom Powers (1789–1831) and then Judge William B. Rochester (1789–1838).
George R. Throop (1882–1949), former chancellor of Washington University
•
George B. Throop (1793–1854), American lawyer and politician from New York and Michigan
Gov. Enos T. Throop was his half-brother, being a son of Hatch's mother of her first marriage.