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People from Saint Paul, Minnesota, by occupation (14 C) Pages in category "People from Saint Paul, Minnesota" The following 74 pages are in this category, out of 74 total.
St. Paul Park or Saint Paul Park [3] is a city in Washington County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 5,279 at the 2010 census . [ 5 ] It is on the east bank of the Mississippi River , five miles (8 km) downstream from St. Paul .
The Greater East Side is a neighborhood and city district in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in the United States.The community lies in the northeastern corner of the city and is bounded by Larpenteur Avenue on the north, Minnehaha Avenue on the south, McKnight Road on the east, and Johnson Parkway and English Street on the west. [1]
No. Name Term (elections) Party 1 Thomas R. Potts: 1850–1851 Independent 2 Robert Kennedy: 1851–1852 Independent 3 Bushrod W. Lott: 1852–1854 Democratic
The rate that black drivers are ticketed more often than white drivers is four times more in Escambia County, three times more in Palm Beach County and 2.8 times more in Orange County. In Tampa, black drivers received 575 seat belt citations versus 549 for white drivers even though black people make up only 23 percent of Tampa's population. [18]
A burial mound at Indian Mounds Park. Burial mounds in present-day Indian Mounds Park suggest the area was inhabited by the Hopewell Native Americans about 2,000 years ago. [17] [18] From the early 17th century to 1837, the Mdewakanton Dakota, a band of the Dakota people, lived near the mounds at the village of Kaposia and consider the area encompassing present-day Saint Paul Bdóte, the site ...
Paul M. Lisnek was born on June 19, 1958, and is an attorney, legal consultant, political analyst, public speaker, television and radio talk show host, and interviewer, and author. He has consulted on and analyzed numerous nationally recognized legal cases.
Former Wall Street attorney John Oller, author of White Shoe, credits Paul Drennan Cravath with creating the distinct model adopted by virtually all white-shoe law firms, the Cravath System, just after the turn of the 20th century, about 50 years before the phrase white-shoe firm came into use. [2]