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The Garfield Tea House in Long Branch, New Jersey, is the only remaining structure directly related to President James A. Garfield's final trip to the Jersey Shore. The Garfield Tea House was built from the railroad ties used to lay the emergency track that transported a dying President Garfield from the nearby Elberon train station to the ...
Dr. James Compton House, also known as the Sandy's Oak Ridge Manor Tea House , is a historic home located at Kansas City, Clay County, Missouri. The original section was built about 1829, as a log dwelling. It was later enlarged and expanded through 1952 during its ownership by the Compton family.
Bettys and Taylors of Harrogate Customers enjoying afternoon tea at Lyon's Corner House on Coventry Street, London, 1942. ABC tea shops, now defunct; Bettys and Taylors of Harrogate, chain in Yorkshire; Jacksons of Piccadilly, tea merchant
The Church of the Presidents is a former Episcopal chapel on the Jersey Shore where seven United States presidents worshipped. It was visited by presidents Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, and Woodrow Wilson. [3]
James Taylor (29 March 1835 - 2 May 1892) was a Scottish tea planter who introduced the industry of tea farming to British Ceylon. [1] He arrived to British Ceylon in 1852 and settled down in Loolecondera estate in Delthota .
Christina Praser-Fair told reporters on her return from the Jan. 6 Capitol riot that she didn’t enter the building. But 17 surveillance cameras inside the Capitol said otherwise.
A younger son, Lendall (Boston 1737–1787), was an American Patriot, principal leader of the Boston Tea Party, and the defendant in Gray v. Pitts (1771). James's grandson, Thomas (1779–1835). He was commissioned lieutenant of light artillery in 1808, and captain in 1809, and served through the War of 1812.
In 1816, James Finlay & Co. sent out a shipment of goods and was the first merchant house in Scotland to open up direct connection with India, opening up a branch in Bombay. [4] [1] By the time of Kirkman's death in 1842, James Finlay & Co. was a leading Scottish manufacturer, trading with America, and across Europe and Asia. A measure of his ...