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Richard Baxter (12 November 1615 – 8 December 1691) was an English Nonconformist church leader and theologian from Rowton, Shropshire, who has been described as "the chief of English Protestant Schoolmen".
Buswell, 31, was a prostitute found with her throat cut in her room at 12 Great Coram Street on 25 December 1872. She was murdered by a client who police believed was ship chaplain Dr. Gottfried Hessell, a visiting German. Hessell was arrested, but the case was dismissed because he had an alibi for the time of Buswell's death. [11] 1873–1889
The Leighton family took their name from the village of Leighton in Shropshire, where they were settled in the 12th century. Richard de Leighton represented Shropshire in the House of Commons from 1312 to 1318 and many later members of the family served as Knights of the Shire for the county. The first and fourth Baronets both sat as Members of ...
Pennsylvania State Police investigators are still working to determine a motive in the killing of a 23-year-old Amish woman in her Fish Flats Road home in Sparta Township, Crawford County, on Feb. 26.
Margaret Baxter or Margaret Charlton (1636 – 14 June 1681) was a noble born English religious nonconformist during the English Civil War. She became a follower and later wife and patron of the preacher Richard Baxter.
Oct. 10—Scranton police arrested a woman Saturday in a prostitution sting and soon had the man who drove her around in handcuffs. Officer Kevin Sweeney of the department's Street Crimes Unit ...
Richard Reeve Baxter (14 February 1921 – 25 September 1980) was an American jurist [1] and from 1950 until his death the preeminent figure on the law of war. [2] Baxter served as a judge on the International Court of Justice (1979–1980), as a professor of law at Harvard University (1954 - 1979) and as an enlisted man and officer in the U.S. Army (1942–46,1948–54).
A post office was established at Baxter in 1875, and remained in operation until 1967. [2] The community was named for Richard J. Baxter, who owned a sawmill there. [ 3 ]