Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1908 Sawyier moved his residence to a houseboat, a small tug boat, where he lived all year round. From 1913 until his death, Sawyier lived in a converted chapel at "Highpoint," the estate of art patron Mrs. Marshall L. Emory in the New York Catskills. While in New York, Sawyier began to binge drink using the money from the sale of his paintings.
The Old United States Courthouse and Post Office building is a former post office and courthouse of the United States federal courts in Frankfort, Kentucky.Built during 1883 to 1887, the structure housed the United States District Court for the District of Kentucky from then until 1901 and the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky from 1901 until it was succeeded.
Paul Sawyier (1865−1917), Kentucky Impressionist artist; Arthur St. Clair, 1700s soldier and politician, after which St Clair Street is named; Landon Addison Thomas (1799−1889), state legislator; George Graham Vest (1830−1904), U.S. Senator from Missouri, best known for popularizing the notion that a dog is a man's best friend [62]
A video at the Franklin Lakes Public Library by self-proclaimed constitutional activist Long Island Audit brings online backlash to library, police.
Paul Sawyier (1865–1917) Painter, artist Raised in Frankfort, Kentucky and spent most of his painting career there [210] Gideon Shryock (1802–1880) Architect [211] Born in Lexington [211] Moneta Sleet Jr. (1926–1996) 1969 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography [212] Born in Owensboro [212] Bruce Tinsley (born 1958)
The home contains an elaborate library, with mahogany woodwork. Also, a large parlor and dining room were used for entertaining. The original tapestries, purchased by Mr. Berry for the mansion, still remain in the mansion library today. Portraits or Mr. and Mrs. Berry by Charles Snead Williams are hung within the mansion.
The following list of Carnegie libraries in Minnesota provides detailed information on Carnegie libraries in Minnesota, United States, where 65 public libraries were built from 57 [1] grants (totaling $969,375) awarded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York from 1901 to 1918.
The culmination of centuries of advances in the printing press, moveable type, paper, ink, publishing, and distribution, combined with an ever-growing information-oriented middle class, increased commercial activity and consumption, new radical ideas, massive population growth and higher literacy rates forged the public library into the form that it is today.