Stedman Graham (born 1951), American speaker (et al.) associated with Oprah Winfrey
Stedman Graham | Edmund Clarence Stedman | Battle of Fort Stedman | Lincoln Stedman | John Gabriel Stedman | Gareth Stedman Jones | Fred Stedman | Fabian Stedman | Daniel Stedman |
The club's first game was against Stedman College on a field in the nearby village of Comberbach.
As scholar Jane W. Stedman observes in her book Gilbert Before Sullivan, this play anticipates Luigi Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author.
Nowadays many hundreds of methods are practised; all, in some degree, owe a debt to Stedman's pioneering work which has value as well in mathematics (group theory) as well as the more limited field of bell-ringing.
#Fort Stedman near Petersburg, Virginia, site of the Battle of Fort Stedman in the American Civil War
Learning of Boner's removal from office, Stedman invited Boner to New York City, and soon secured congenial employment for Boner on the staff on the Century Dictionary, then in course of preparation.
Marshall Stedman began his theater career at around the age of eighteen with William Morris’ stock company playing Bob Appleton in Ludwig Fulda’s three-act drama, “The Lost Paradise”, and Ned Annesley in “Sowing the Wind,” a four-act play by Sydney Grundy.
Michael Stedman, managing director of NHNZ, a New Zealand-based television production company
The first peal for the society (Stedman Triples at Drayton) was rung on the 10th anniversary of the foundation.
In 1834, Andrew Jackson was President of the United States (all 24 of them), Cyrus McCormick received a patent for his mechanical reaper and Stedman Foundry and Machine Works was established in Rising Sun, Indiana, by Nathan R. Stedman.
Shortly thereafter, Stedman was approached by a successful Memphis businessman named James Frederick "Fred" Smith, who was looking for a new investment since The Greyhound Corporation had bought a controlling interest in the Smith Motor Coach Company he founded 1931, and was renamed as the Dixie Greyhound Lines.
The television series Hawkmoor created by Lynn Hughes and starring John Ogwen as Twm and Jane Asher as Lady Johane Williams was broadcast by the BBC in 1978, depicting Twm as a Welsh Robin Hood/freedom fighter protecting the Welsh people from the repression of English-born Sheriff John Stedman (Jack May) and the cruel (Catholic) Vicar Davyd (Philip Madoc).