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  2. C. G. Conn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C._G._Conn

    The Conn Loyalist – About Conn Brass Instruments from the days when the C. G. Conn company was still located in Elkhart, Indiana; Review of a Conn 6M Alto Saxophone manufactured in 1944; The C. G. Conn 'Double-Bell Wonder' disc phonograph of 1898; Straube factory in 1922, courtesy of the Indiana Historical Society

  3. Burning of Fairfield (1779) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burning_of_Fairfield_(1779)

    Tryon's force was of extremely high fighting quality, consisting of "two bodies of Fusileers, the Guards, the Fifty-fourth regiment of foot and the King’s American (loyalist) regiment.” [8] The American forces amounted to scattered elements of the 4th Connecticut Militia and Lt. Isaac Jarvis's guns at Grover's Point in present-day ...

  4. Buescher Band Instrument Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buescher_Band_Instrument...

    In the fall of 1893 he opened the Buescher Manufacturing Company at 1119 N. Main Street, which made band instruments and other metal products, in partnership with John L. Collins, a clothing merchant, and Harry L. Young, a salesman. In 1894 his company began production of saxophones, becoming Conn's main competitor over the following two decades.

  5. List of Loyalists (American Revolution) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Loyalists...

    James De Lancey (1746–1804), of Westchester County, New York, led a Loyalist unit known as "De Lancey's Cowboys" and was known as the "Outlaw of the Bronx" Brigadier General Oliver De Lancey (1718–1785), commanded De Lancey's Brigade 1776 [16] Stephen De Lancey (1738–1809), Loyalist lawyer and political figure in New York state and Nova ...

  6. John Connolly (loyalist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Connolly_(loyalist)

    John Connolly (c. 1741 –1813) was an American Loyalist during the American Revolution. [1]Connolly, a man of English descent, was born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania to an Irish Catholic father who served in the British Army.

  7. How a president's death helped kill Washington's "spoils system"

    www.aol.com/presidents-death-helped-kill-washing...

    At the same time, if you eliminate those protections entirely, then you go back to the sort of system that we had in the 19th century, where only political loyalists are serving these positions."

  8. Moses Dunbar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moses_Dunbar

    Moses Dunbar (3 June 1746 – March 19, 1777) was a Connecticut land-owner and officer in a Loyalist regiment during the American Revolutionary War. He was one of the few men in the state of Connecticut to be convicted of high treason and executed. [note 1]

  9. Trump loyalists spew racist, vulgar attacks at Harris and ...

    www.aol.com/trump-loyalists-spew-racist-vulgar...

    A general view inside the arena on the day of a rally for Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump, at Madison Square Garden, in New York, U.S., October 27, 2024.