enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Seabury Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabury_Hall

    The annual Seabury Hall Craft Fair is a gathering of arts and entertainment located at the Seabury Hall campus. [6] It is always held on the Saturday before Mother's Day in May. The fair features over 100 artists and crafters, including Maui-based woodworkers , traditional Hawaiian artists , jewelers, ceramists , and weavers .

  3. Seabury Capital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabury_Capital

    The firm's name comes from Samuel Seabury, the first Anglican Bishop in the US who is an ancestor of Luth's wife. Luth, a former banker was previously the Chief financial officer of Continental Airlines who used his restructuring experience to carve out a niche that provided advice to other airline companies.

  4. Trinity College Long Walk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_College_Long_Walk

    Seabury Hall (left) and Northam Tower (right) The Trinity College Long Walk is a trio of conjoined buildings that form the core of Trinity College's campus in Hartford, Connecticut, United States. The three, Seabury Hall (built 1878), Northam Tower (built 1883), and Jarvis Hall (built 1878), are the oldest buildings on the college's current campus.

  5. Seabury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabury

    Seabury Commission, a commission investigating corruption in New York City in 1930-32; Seabury Hall, a college preparatory high school in Hawaii; Bishop Seabury Academy, a college preparatory high school in Kansas; Merchant's House Museum or Seabury Tredwell House, in the Bowery, Manhattan; Charles L. Seabury Company, a former New York shipyard

  6. Merchant's House Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchant's_House_Museum

    The house was first occupied by Seabury Tredwell, a merchant born in 1780 to a prominent Long Island family; [5] [14] he was a descendant of Samuel Seabury, an Episcopal bishop. [17] Tredwell established a business on Pearl Street in Lower Manhattan around 1803 or 1804, which later became Tredwell, Kissam & Company.

  7. Roxanne Hart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roxanne_Hart

    Roxanne Hart (born July 27, 1952) is an American actress. She played Brenda Wyatt in the 1986 film Highlander, and Nurse Camille Shutt on the CBS medical drama series Chicago Hope (1994–1998).

  8. Ruth Isabel Seabury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Isabel_Seabury

    She was the eldest of five siblings born to George Edwin Seabury, an executive with Boston Edison Power, and Emma Augusta Hodgdon. Seabury graduated from Smith College in 1914 and, after two years teaching, she was elected young people's secretary of the Congregational Woman's Board of Missions. Ten years later, she became educational secretary ...

  9. Ned O'Gorman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ned_O'Gorman

    While at Princeton University in 1957, he rented a room in the house of novelist Caroline Gordon Tate, former (and future) wife of poet Allen Tate. O'Gorman would later research (but never complete) a biography of Allen Tate. [2] His sister Pat O'Gorman Schonfeld was married to CNN executive Reese Schonfeld. [3] [4]