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Wangerin was born in Portland, Oregon, where his father was a Lutheran pastor. He was the oldest of seven children. The family moved often, so Walter grew up in various locations including Shelton, Washington, Chicago, Illinois, Grand Forks, North Dakota, Edmonton, Alberta, Milwaukee, Wisconsin and Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Rev. Edward Malloy [41] Former President of the University of Notre Dame. Rev. Julius Nieuwland, [42] [43] Chemist, known for research that led to the invention of neoprene, and botanist who founded the American Midland Naturalist. Fr. John Augustine Zahm, [44] Scientist and writer who defended certain aspects of evolutionary theory as true.
Washington was born in Frankfort, Indiana, and adopted at a young age by Ruthanne and Walter Wangerin. [4] [5] She was raised in Evansville, Indiana, and attended Benjamin Bosse High School. [6] After serving in Costa Rica with the American Field Service, she earned a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from Spelman College in 1996. [7]
Rev. Walter Riley, Worcester Fire Department chaplain, blesses the new Engine 3 during a ceremony July 9, 2020.
The Book of the Dun Cow (1978) is a fantasy novel by Walter Wangerin Jr. It is loosely based upon the beast fable of Chanticleer and the Fox adapted from the story of " The Nun's Priest's Tale " from Geoffrey Chaucer 's Canterbury Tales .
Under the pastorate of Msgr. John O'Brien the cornerstone of Sacred Heart Church was laid on October 4, 1874 by Archbishop John Joseph Williams.Later Bishop of Portland, Maine, James Augustine Healy, then pastor of St. James in Boston delivered the sermon.
Friedrich Heinrich Albert Wangerin (1844-1933), German mathematician Walther Wangerin (1884–1938), German botanist Walter Wangerin, Jr. (1944-2021), American author
Wanger was born Walter Feuchtwanger in San Francisco. He was the son of Stella (Stettheimer) and Sigmund Feuchtwanger, who were from German Jewish families that had emigrated to the United States in the nineteenth century. [2] Wanger was from a non-observant Jewish family, and later attended Episcopalian services with his wife.