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James MacGregor Burns (August 3, 1918 – July 15, 2014) [4] was an American historian and political scientist, presidential biographer, and authority on leadership studies. He was the Woodrow Wilson Professor of Government Emeritus at Williams College and Distinguished Leadership Scholar at the James MacGregor Burns Academy of Leadership of ...
James Macnaughton MacGregor (6 January 1829 – 8 October 1894) was a Scottish and New Zealand Presbyterian minister and theologian. He was born in Callander , Perthshire , Scotland on 6 January 1829. [ 1 ] (
McGregor died on 5 March 1729 and was buried in Londonderry, New Hampshire. [1] His son, David McGregor, became the first minister of the western parish of Derry, when the second congregation was formed. [2] David McGregor's son, Robert McGregor, was a Colonel during the Revolutionary War and was an aide-de-camp to Gen. John Stark. [2]
The couple had nine children before Jane Small's death in 1845. [8] Macgregor secondly married Catherine Pendarvis Lochner at St Mary on Paddington Green Church on 11 August 1849, [9] and with her had an additional five children, including Lt.-Col. James Pendarvis Macgregor. [10] A grandson was John Cecil Currie DSO** MC (1898 – 26 June 1944).
James Macgregor (MP) (1808–1858), British MP for Sandwich; Jimmie Macgregor (born 1930), folk singer and broadcaster; James MacGregor (moderator) (1832–1910), Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 1891; James Drummond MacGregor (1759–1830), Scottish Gaelic poet, abolitionist and Presbyterian minister; James Gordon ...
James Clinton Turk, 91, American senior judge, member (since 1972) and Chief Judge (1973–1993) of the U.S. District Court for Western Virginia. [133] Ernesto Ueltschi, 92, Argentine politician, Governor of Mendoza (1958–1961). [134] Martin Van Geneugden, 82, Belgian professional road bicycle racer. [135]
The video titled "A Message to America" purportedly shows Agence-France Press reporter James Foley on his knees giving a statement, while a masked terrorist stands behind him holding a knife.
Two facsimiles, printed by William Forbes Skene in 1862; below are lines from the Countess of Argyll; above is a genealogy of the MacGregors.. The Book of the Dean of Lismore (Scottish Gaelic: Leabhar Deathan Lios Mòir) is a Scottish manuscript, compiled in eastern Perthshire in the first half of the 16th century.