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Death Records [1] is a San Francisco-based Lo-Fi/Outsider Pop record label. Founded by Brian Wakefield & Colin Arlen in 2014, the label was created to "Represent the 'misfits of this city' who have been left behind to fend for themselves". The label has started an annual festival, Deathstock, to celebrate the labels "birthday". [2]
Ketchum retired to southern California around 1963, settling in San Marino (near Pasadena). In 1964, Ketchum wrote The Discovery of Edgar Cayce, published by the A.R.E. Press. [37] He died on November 28, 1968, in Canoga Park. Wesley Harrington Ketchum was a homeopath who worked with Cayce from 1910 to 1912.
J. Davidson Ketchum was born in 1893. He was originally planning to become a musician but the outbreak of the First World War changed his plans. Ketchum was interned in the Ruhleben internment camp in Germany about which he later wrote in his book Ruhleben: A Prison Camp Society , published in 1965 after his death.
Violent gunfights such as the bloody shootout that resulted in the death of nine trappers in Big Dry Creek (Littleton, Colorado), as well as the lynching and burning of homesteaders Luther M. Mitchell and Ami W. Ketchum, precipitated the Colorado Range War. [25] By 1900, Horn began working for the Swan Land and Cattle Company in northwest Colorado.
John H. Ketcham (1832–1906), ... William Scott Ketchum (1813–1871), Union Army brigadier general of Volunteers This page was last edited on ...
Founded in 1824 by John Allen and Elisha Rumsey, it was named after the wives of the village's founders, both named Ann, and the stands of bur oak trees they found there. A college town, Ann Arbor is home to the University of Michigan, which significantly shapes the city's economy, employing about 30,000 workers. The city's economy is also ...
William Matthew Ketchum (September 2, 1921 – June 24, 1978) was an American businessman and Republican Party politician who was a member of the California State Assembly from 1967 to 1973 and a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1973 until his death.
Zudora (1914–1915), a 20-part serial whose first installment was released just over three months after producer Charles J. Hite's death in an automobile accident; Hite was on the way to his home in New Rochelle, New York, and was crossing the viaduct at 155th Street in Manhattan when his vehicle skidded off the roadway and onto the sidewalk, tore through an iron railing and plunged fifty ...