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William Arthur (December 5, 1796 – October 27, 1875) was an Irish-born Baptist minister and abolitionist. He was the father of the twenty-first president of the United States, Chester A. Arthur . Life
William's mother was born Eliza McHarg and she married Alan Arthur. [13] William graduated from college in Belfast and migrated to the Province of Lower Canada in 1819 or 1820. [14] Malvina Stone met William Arthur when Arthur was teaching school in Dunham, Quebec, near the Vermont border. [15] They married in Dunham on April 12, 1821, soon ...
The William Arthur Memorial Church is located on the NH206 Bangalore-Honavar Road at Gubbi Town, about 80 km from Bangalore. The church is painted turquoise blue and built in the Gothic style, being completed in 1904. [4] [5] The church is named after William Arthur, an Irish Wesleyan missionary and
Before becoming the 42nd president of the United States, Bill Clinton — as he once said— had done 23 different jobs to earn money throughout his life. His first paying gig came at age 13, when ...
William Arthur Ward (December 17, 1921 – March 30, 1994) [1] was an American motivational writer. More than 100 articles, poems and meditations written by Ward were published in such magazines as Reader's Digest , The Phi Delta Kappan , Science of Mind , and various Christian publications.
These stories, aided by photos or other artifacts, are so powerful partly because they are very real to us. #6 Lovely Remake Of Family Image credits: Vestiges of History
William Arthur Smith Benson (also known as W.A.S. Benson) (17 October 1854 – 5 July 1924) was a British designer active in the Arts and Crafts Movement and an early exponent of electrical lighting design. [1] He is regarded as the greatest British arts and craft lighting designer. [2]
William Arthur Bates Goodall was born in Eccles, Greater Manchester in 1880 and was brought up there and in Bedford where he attended Bedford Modern School. [2] [3] At the age of 16 he enlisted as a private in the First Battalion, the Manchester Regiment, and fought in the Second Boer War for which he was awarded the King's South Africa Medal and the Queen's South Africa Medal with 5 clasps. [4]