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The Family History Research Wiki receives over 100 million views per year. [16] During most months, it is typically the second-most frequently visited section (out of ten sections) of FamilySearch, its host site. As of March 7, 2016, the English edition of the Family History Research Wiki had 150,561 registered users who had contributed to the ...
The company was founded by brothers Amir, Eskandar, and Fraydun Manocherian, who came from a well‐to‐do Iranian family and immigrated to the United States in the 1930s. [ 1 ] [ 8 ] In 2012, a subsidiary of the company acquired the Bond Building in Washington, D.C. for $22 million.
As a museum with a focus on genealogy and family history, it is the first museum of its kind in the world. The Ursuline sisters commissioned Pierre Cuypers to renovate and extend the building in 1899. It is probable that Cuypers entrusted part of the project to Johannes Kayser, a Dutch architect notable for his neogothic designs. [3]
A condensed version of his Masters dissertation was published as a chapter in The great famine (1956) edited by R. D. Edwards and T. D. Williams. In fact as documented by Cormac O Gráda, R.D. Edwards relied on his post graduate student for much of the structuring of that work, and O'Neill was able to contribute a chapter of his choosing.
Jed York John C. York (born April 18, 1949) is a retired American cancer research pathologist, married to Marie Denise DeBartolo York , and former co-owner and current co-chairman of the San Francisco 49ers .
[2] [3] It is an autonomous organization which forms part of the larger social conservative, anticommunist and monarchist [4] international Tradition, Family, Property (TFP) movement founded by Brazilian intellectual, politician, and activist Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira.
The Belfast Project was an oral history project on the Troubles based at Boston College in Massachusetts, U.S. The project began in 2000 [1] and the last interviews were concluded in 2006. [2] The interviews were intended to be released after the participants' deaths [1] and serve as a resource for future historians. Ed Moloney was the project ...
[4] [5] Topics covered included domestic skills, issues relating to family life, home economics and information about new technologies and goods of interest to rural women. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Part of the purpose of the clubs was to make the same kind of information found at colleges and universities available to rural women. [ 5 ]