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Anne Harriman Sands Rutherfurd Vanderbilt (February 17, 1861 – April 20, 1940) was an American heiress known for her marriages to prominent men [1] and her role in the development of the Sutton Place neighborhood as a fashionable place to live.
City Notes Ref. Wyeth-Tottle Mansion 1879 Italianante: Edmond Eckle St Joseph: Built for John Wyeth, since 1948 is the Museum of St Joseph. Harvey M. Vaile Mansion: 1881 Second Empire: Asa B. Cross: Independence: Today, a museum Robert A. Long House: 1910 Beaux-Arts style: Henry Ford Hoit: Kansas City: Today, the Kansas City Museum Mack B ...
While many Vanderbilt family members had joined the Episcopal Church, [9] [10] [11] Cornelius Vanderbilt remained a member of the Moravian Church to his death. [12] [13] The Vanderbilt family lived on Staten Island until the mid-1800s, when the Commodore built a house on Washington Place (in what is now Greenwich Village).
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This is a list of notable current and former faculty members, alumni (graduating and non-graduating) of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Unless otherwise noted, attendees listed graduated with a bachelor's degree. Names with an asterisk (*) graduated from Peabody College prior to its merger with Vanderbilt.
Memphis was incorporated as a village on April 4, 1865. It did not attain the status of a city until 1953. [5] [6] The area was originally developed for agriculture, as most settlers were farmers. As lumbering became a major industry in Michigan, log rafts were floated down the Belle River into the St. Clair River and south to Detroit. Some ...
This article about a property in Shelby County, Tennessee on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Maryglade College Seminary (Catholic) closed its Memphis, Michigan campus in May 1972. The following year students lived at St. James and later St. Nicholas of Tolentine parishes in the Detroit area, and attended classes at the University of Detroit, a Catholic college run by the Jesuit Fathers.
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