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Blacker was a member of several lumbering firms in Manistee, including R.R. Blacker & Company; Davies, Blacker & Company and the State Lumber Company. Among other interests, he was also president of the Michigan Steamship Company, original owners of the ill-fated SS Eastland. [1] [2] Robert Blacker preceded his wife in death in 1931.
Custer State Park: Custer County, South Dakota (Black Hills) 1928 Calvin Coolidge: Cedar Island Lodge: Brule, Wisconsin: 1929–1932 Herbert Hoover: Rapidan Camp: Madison County, Virginia: 1933–1939 Franklin D. Roosevelt: Roosevelt Campobello International Park: Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Canada: 1933–1944 Franklin D. Roosevelt ...
D.A.R. State Park is a 95-acre state park in Addison, Vermont, on the shore of Lake Champlain. It is located on Vermont Route 17 . Activities includes camping, swimming, boating, fishing, picnicking, wildlife watching, and winter sports.
"A Song of Ass and Fire" is the eighth episode in the seventeenth season of the American animated television series South Park. The 245th episode of the series overall, it first aired on Comedy Central in the United States on November 20, 2013.
Carrabba's Italian Grill (or simply Carrabba's) is an American restaurant chain featuring Italian-American cuisine. It is owned and operated by Bloomin' Brands , and headquartered in Tampa, Florida .
Fort DeRussy Beach, 1959. The U.S. Army Museum of Hawaiʻi is housed inside Battery Randolph, a former coastal artillery battery. Battery Randolph was constructed in 1911 to defend Honolulu Harbor on Oahu from attack, and was equipped with two 14-inch guns on disappearing carriages, with a range of about 40,000 yards (37 km). [6]
R. J. Reynolds, founder Share of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, issued 15 March 1906. The son of a tobacco farmer in Virginia, Richard Joshua "R. J." Reynolds sold his shares of his father's company in Patrick County, Virginia, and ventured to the nearest town with a railroad connection, Winston-Salem, to start his own tobacco company. [3]
Ermey was born in Emporia, Kansas, on March 24, 1944, to John Edward (1924–2016) and Betty (née Pantle) Ermey (1926–2004). [3] [4] A few years after his birth, his father moved the family (including Ermey and his five brothers) to a small farm outside Kansas City, Kansas. [5]