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Hess was born in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania [3] and was educated at Hagerstown Junior College, Maryland and then Penn State College. [4] He owned the Hess Marine, Inc and was a lieutenant in the Navy until discharged in 1958. [4] In 1968, Hess was elected to represent the 1st district of the Florida House of Representatives, succeeding Gordon W ...
John William Hepfer was born in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania, on 9 February 1924, the son of John William and Alice Holtzman Hepfer. He had a sister, Arlene. [1] He graduated from Waynesboro Area Senior High School in 1942, and married Janet L. Miller, a fellow member of his high school class. They had two sons, John William Hepfer III and Stephen ...
Goucher was born on June 7, 1845, in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania (Franklin County, Pennsylvania), as the last of four children to John Goucher and Eleanor Townsend.Periodic illness in his youth delayed his matriculation into high school, but Goucher nonetheless excelled in his studies and enrolled at Dickinson College 1864, from which he graduated in 1868.
The Record Herald is an American daily newspaper published in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania. It was established as Blue Ridge Zephyr when it started publishing on July 2, 1894. [1] It is presently owned by Gannett.
Waynesboro (/ ˈ w eɪ n z b ʌ r oʊ /) is a borough in Franklin County, Pennsylvania, United States. Located on the southern border of the state, Waynesboro is in the Cumberland Valley between Hagerstown , Maryland, and Chambersburg , Pennsylvania.
Snively was a native of Waynesboro, Pennsylvania. [1] He was the son of A. Barr Snively I (c. 1869 – October 1944), a prominent physician and surgeon in Waynesboro, and Mary Carlisle Snively. [ 2 ] Snively played football at Waynesboro High School on a team that The Daily News ( Frederick, Maryland ) called "the best foot ball team ever ...
A tax professional for more than twenty years, Nyce worked at the Lehigh Portland Cement Company in Allentown from 1970 to 1973. A manager of credit taxes and insurance and payroll at the Frick Company in Waynesboro from 1973 to 1975, he then served as a senior tax accountant for the Bethlehem Steel Corporation from 1975 to 1985.
Waynesboro: Centennial History, 1797-1900 (1900) Some Hidden Sources of Fiction (1909) In addition he either wrote or edited dozens of historical addresses, newspaper articles, and monographs. He also wrote and narrated a magic lantern presentation titled "In the Footprints of Pennsylvania's Past." [1] [2] [4]