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The architect Joseph Altenbach started construction of the Wagner manufacturing complex in 1890. He was a friend of the family head Mathias Wagner, and was responsible for many of the major buildings in Sidney during that period. [2] The company was incorporated in 1891. The principal owners were Bernard, Milton, Louis, and William Wagner. [3]
Founded in 1891 by brothers Milton M. and Bernard P. of Sidney, Ohio, as the Wagner Manufacturing Company. The Wagner family produced cookware at their cast iron foundry until 1952, when they sold their business to the Randall Company. Subsequent owners continued to operate the Sidney plant until it closed in 1999.
Washington Statesmen (1891) Team was also periodically referred to as the Washington Nationals; Owners J. Earl Wagner (1892–1899) Managers Arthur Irwin (1898–1899) Deacon McGuire (1898) Jack Doyle (1898) Tom Brown (1897–1898) Gus Schmelz (1894–1897) Jim O'Rourke (1893) Danny Richardson (1892) Arthur Irwin (1892) Billy Barnie (1892 ...
Herbert Appleton Wagner. Wagner Electric Corporation was founded by Herbert Appleton Wagner and Ferdinand Schwedtmann (aka Francis Charles Schwedtman) in 1891. The company manufactured electric engines, electric motors and electric starters for early automobiles. They also made electric lights and many other electric-related products.
Title page of Ferdinand Praeger's "Wagner as I Knew Him" (1892) Ferdinand Praeger (22 January 1815 – 2 September 1891) (aka Ferdinand Christian Wilhelm Praeger) was a composer, music teacher, pianist and writer. He is now best known for his controversial biography of Richard Wagner, Wagner As I Knew Him, published in 1892 after Praeger's death.
This is a list of mostly prose works by the German composer Richard Wagner.In addition to writing operas, Wagner was a prolific essayist. Wagner began compiling his prose and poetry in the 1860s, going on to publish them in ten volumes as the Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen (GS&D, Collected Writings and Poems). [1]
Wagner died in 1883. The first production of the opera at Wagner's Bayreuth Festspielhaus (originally constructed for the performance of his Ring Cycle), was undertaken under the supervision of Cosima Wagner in 1891, and adhered closely to the 'Vienna' version.
This new display opened in 1891 and little has been altered since Leidy's time, making the Institute an exceptional example of a Victorian era science museum. [5] In 1892, the first branch of the Philadelphia Public Library, later becoming the Free Library of Philadelphia, opened at the Wagner Institute. [6] The branch remained open until 1962. [6]