As U.S. Attorney, Coolidge oversaw the prosecution of Ben Chavis and other members of the Wilmington Ten, and was involved in the early stages of the Jeffrey MacDonald murder investigation.
Calvin Coolidge | Warren G. Harding | Warren | Warren Buffett | Warren Beatty | Earl Warren | Diane Warren | Warren Zevon | Rita Coolidge | Warren G | Warren County | Lesley Ann Warren | Warren E. Burger | Elizabeth Warren | Warren Commission | Warren Township | Charles Warren | Warren Hastings | Frank Warren | Warren William | Warren County, Ohio | Warren Clarke | Warren Spahn | Warren Oates | Warren Ellis | Robert Penn Warren | Rick Warren | Harry Warren | Warren Treadgold | Warren Sapp |
He was a Republican and a Unitarian, a Freemason, serving as Grand Master of Masons (1943–1944) and a member of the American Bar Association and Theta Delta Chi.
Well-known mountaineers who are associated with the area and have made significant first ascents in the range include Leslie Stephen, D. W. Freshfield, W. A. B. Coolidge, Christian Klucker, Paul Güssfeldt and Riccardo Cassin.
A road to the summit of Brockway Mountain was first proposed in the 1920s by Warren H. Manning, a renowned landscape architect.
During an enemy attack on that day and the following three days, east of Belmont-sur-Buttant in France, Coolidge assumed command of his group and showed conspicuous leadership.
Born on a farm in Galesburg, Illinois, he attended Knox College from 1901 to 1903 and received a DDS (Doctor of Dental Surgery) degree from the Chicago College of Dental Surgery, which later became the Loyola University Chicago Dental School.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1892 to the Fifty-third Congress.
He served as an assistant zoologist in Harold J. Coolidge's 1935–36 Asiatic Primate Expedition.
In 1917, the films were purchased and reassembled as Like Babes in the Woods by George Cochrane from a new scenario by Karl R. Coolidge.
During 1967-1972 he served on the staff of California State Senator, later U.S. Congressman, John G. Schmitz.
Apparently among modern phylogenetic systematists, Wagner is alone in having been mentioned in a Hollywood film (A New Leaf, starring Elaine May and Walter Matthau).