Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Brant Alyea (born 1940), baseball player who hit a home run on the first pitch he saw in the majors. [57] and grew up in Rutherford [58] Jim Blumenstock (1918–1963), fullback who played for the New York Giants in the 1947 season [59] Deedy Crosson (1898–1973), Negro league shortstop in the 1920s [60] Crowbar (born 1974), former professional ...
In 1921, Anne then purchased the former home of Effingham B. Sutton, at 1 Sutton Place, for $50,000 in the then-new neighborhood of Sutton Place, also in Manhattan. [10] Before her move, along with Elizabeth Marbury, Anne Morgan , [ 11 ] her sister, Emeline Harriman Olin, second wife of Stephen Henry Olin , the neighborhood was known as a ...
Van Buren is reported to have attended the Dutch Reformed church in his home town of Kinderhook, New York, [47] and while in Washington, services at St. John's Lafayette Square. [48] His funeral was held at the Reformed Dutch Church in Kinderhook with burial in a family plot at the nearby church cemetery. [49] William Henry Harrison ...
Get breaking news and the latest headlines on business, entertainment, politics, world news, tech, sports, videos and much more from AOL
Protein is an essential macronutrient for everyone, and if you’re taking a weight loss drug, such as GLP-1 medications, you should be extra mindful about your intake.This is because muscle loss ...
The 15-year-old girl who killed two people and wounded six others when she opened fire at her Wisconsin Christian school had been in therapy over her troubled home life with her parents — who ...
Spiegel Grove, also known as Spiegel Grove State Park, Rutherford B. Hayes House, Rutherford B. Hayes Summer Home and Rutherford B. Hayes State Memorial was the estate of Rutherford B. Hayes, the 19th president of the United States, located at the corner of Hayes and Buckland Avenues in Fremont, Ohio. Spiegel is the German and Dutch word for ...
Fair-Rutherford and Rutherford Houses, refers to a set of two historic homes located at Columbia, South Carolina. The Fair-Rutherford House was built about 1850, and underwent three alterations during the following century (c. 1879, c. 1905, and c. 1950). It was demolished in 2004. The two-story Rutherford House was built in 1924–25.