During college, Strauss created a partnership with Matt B. Britton where he expanded his nightlife prominence to Boston.
Matt Damon | Matt Dillon | Matt Groening | Matt Lucas | Matt & Kim | Matt Cassel | Matt Smith | Matt Schaub | Matt Thorne | Matt Fraction | Matt Bahr | Matt Stairs | Matt Smith (actor) | Matt Serletic | Matt Mullenweg | Matt LeBlanc | Matt Kemp | Matt Howarth | Matt Houston | Matt Frewer | Matt Drudge | Matt Cardle | Matt Busby | Matt | Matt Wagner | Matt Lindland | Matt Leinart | Matt Lauer | Matt Helm | Matt Hasselbeck |
Heike Kubasch was one of the original principles of Iron Crown Enterprises, along with Pete Fenlon, S. Coleman Charlton, Richard H. Britton, Terry K. Amthor, Bruce Shelley, Bruce Neidlinger, Kurt Fischer, and Olivia Fenlon.
According to a Historic American Engineering Record record, Britton was born in 1839 near Rockville, Indiana, and built approximately 40 bridges in three Indiana counties: Parke, Putnam, and Vermillion.
James H. Britton (1817–1900), mayor of St. Louis, Missouri, United States
In 1859, along with older sister Julia Britton Hooks (later known as a gifted musician and educator, as well as Berea's first African American teacher), she was sent to Louisville, Kentucky, and was placed in the late Mr. WM.
She, Russell Bassett, Sarah Bernhardt, W. Chrystie Miller, Ruby Lafayette, Kate Meek(b. 1838), the veteran character actor Matt B. Snyder and Harold Lloyd regular Anna Townsend were the eight oldest people working in film during the 1910s.
(For other persons of a similar name see Matt Snyder and Matt B. Snyder)
In 1964 Lostutter illustrated "The Things That Are", a book of poems for children by Adrien Stoutenburg, published by the Reilly & Lee Company of Chicago.
Prior to their acceptance of Snow as an Oz author, publisher Reilly & Lee had solicited veteran children's-book writer Mary Dickerson Donahey for the job.