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His successful practice in New Britain led to his election as the second, was born at New Britain, May 22d, 1825. ... He was elected mayor of the city of New Britain in 1872, and held that office for five consecutive years from date of first election. mayor (1872–77). Republican: 1877: 1877: David Nelson Camp (1820-1916) Republican: 1879: ...
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The Boy's Own Paper, front page, 11 April 1891. Magazines intended for boys fall into one of three classifications. These are comics which tell the story by means of strip cartoons; story papers which have several short stories; and pulp magazines which have a single, but complete, novella in them.
Some 18,000 catalogued cartoons were released on CD-ROM in 1996, and three years later all 30,000 catalogued images became available through the BCA website. This catalogue now contains over 200,000 images, and with some major collections researchers can see variant images of a cartoon, including the original artwork, pulls from the printing ...
Her signature shown in facsimile. One of the few 'Spy cartoons' to bear Ward's real name: 13 Jul 1893: Mr Charles Frederic Hamond MP: Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Spy: S 615: 20 Jul 1893: Mr Arthur Hepburn Hastie: he is a smart fellow and an honest lawyer: Spy: M 0569: 27 Jul 1893: Sir John Richard Somers Vine CMG: The Imperial Institute: Spy: M 0570: ...
Mayor John Pappas – New York City, City Hall; Mayor Pinky (Rob Paulsen) – Shiny Pants, Pinky and the Brain; later elected president; Mayor Carter Poole (David Ramsey) – New York City, Blue Bloods; Mayor C. Randall Poopenmeyer (David Herman), New New York City, Earth, Futurama; Mayor Oliver Queen – Star City, DC Comics
Boy meets Girl was started in the Sunday Dispatch in 1940. It was drawn by Rouson and featured amusing ways of boy meeting girl; Carol Day was a strip created by painter David Wright, and continued after his death by Kenneth Inns. It was published initially in 1956 in the Daily Mail, but later in 1971, it was in the Sunday Express. Carol was an ...
Representing the 'East End Barrow boy' type, Vince wears white socks, talks in cockney rhyming slang ("flute" = suit, "jam jar" = car) and is ignorant of the finer points of culture and etiquette at Glyndebourne and the Royal Opera that Alex and Clive revel in. Christian is a European junior working his way through the ranks. Although sometimes ...