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William Perkins (born 8 October 1986) is a West Indian cricketer.He is a right-handed batsman who occasionally plays as wicketkeeper.. Perkins first came to prominence playing for the West Indies in the 2006 Under-19 Cricket World Cup, where he scored 133 from 150 balls in a victory against the United States, an innings that won him the man of the match award. [1]
William Perkins Trinidad and Tobago 8 October 1986 (age 38) Right-handed: Right-arm medium fast: 2021: Overseas vice-captain: Bowlers Ali Bangash United States 21 March 1998 (age 26) Right-handed: Right-arm fast: 2021: Jagrit Raj United States 19 September 1987 (age 37) Right-handed: Right-arm fast medium: 2021: Laksh Parikh
William Henry Perkins, better known as Moccasin Bill Perkins (1825–1904), hunter, miner, and frontiersman William L. Perkins (died 1957), American architect William T. Perkins Jr. (1947–1967), United States Marine and Medal of Honor recipient
William O. Perkins III (born February 2, 1964) is an American hedge fund manager and poker player. Perkins manages Skylar Capital, an energy trading hedge fund that had approximately $500 million in assets under management as of 2023.
Perkins, “Moccasin Bill” 1825–1904 1860–1904 United States: William Henry Perkins (Not to be confused with Buffalo Bill. Not to be confused with Moccasin Bill, Cunning Serpent of Ojibwah") Provost, Etienne: 1785–1850 1822–1830 Canada [18] Rose, Edward: 1780–1833 1807–1833 United States Russell, Osborne: 1814–1892 1834–1845
William Nickerson Jr. (January 26, 1879 – November 14, 1945) was a prominent Los Angeles–based businessman and founder of Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company, which at one time was the largest black-owned business west of the Mississippi.
The Texas A&M directors appointed ASC dean Jack Woolf as acting president and eventually permanent president in June 1959. [86] [88] [89] Woolf had been born and raised in Trinidad in East Texas, educated at both Texas A&M and Purdue University, and worked at Convair for five years before returning to A&M to teach in 1956. In 1957, he was named ...
William L. Perkins (died 1957) was an American architect of Chariton, Iowa. His career is documented in a National Park Service study, "Architectural Career of William L. Perkins in Iowa:1917-1957 MPS". [1] Among his works are: Carl L. Caviness Post 102, American Legion, 201 S. Main St., Chariton, Iowa, NRHP-listed [2]