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John Thomas Ralph Augustine James Facenda (/ f ə. ˈ s ɛ n . d ə / fuh- SEN -duh ; August 8, 1913 – September 26, 1984) was an American broadcaster and sports announcer . He was a fixture on Philadelphia radio and television for decades, and achieved national fame as a narrator for NFL Films and Football Follies .
After John Wanamaker's death in 1922, the business carried on under Wanamaker family ownership. Rodman Wanamaker, John's son, enhanced the reputation of the stores as artistic centers and temples of the beautiful, offering imported luxuries from around the world. After his death in 1928, the stores (managed for the family by a trust) continued ...
Family trees are often presented with the oldest generations at the top of the tree and the younger generations at the bottom. An ancestry chart, which is a tree showing the ancestors of an individual and not all members of a family, will more closely resemble a tree in shape, being wider at the top than at the bottom.
With his first wife Katherine (married 1955 - 1995), they had three children, including political consultant and White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, and 10 grandchildren. [ 25 ] [ 26 ] [ 27 ] Summerall was a Christian . [ 28 ]
The family includes: Beverly Carradine (1848–1931), married twice: (i) Laura Green Reid (1851–1882), mother of: Ernest Carradine (died 1880) William Reed Carradine (1872–1909), a correspondent for the Associated Press, and the father of actor John Carradine (see below)
The term "America's Team" is a nickname that refers to the National Football League (NFL)'s Dallas Cowboys.The nickname originated with the team's 1978 highlight film, where the narrator (John Facenda) opens with the following introduction:
"The Autumn Wind" is a combination of musical score by Sam Spence and a sports-themed poem adapted for the 1974 Oakland Raiders season coverage by NFL Films President and co-founder Steve Sabol (1942–2012, son of founder Ed Sabol, 1916–2015).
Eslanda Cardozo Goode was born in Washington, D.C., on December 15, 1895. [2] Her maternal great-grandparents were Isaac Nunez Cardozo, a Sephardic Jew whose family was expelled from Spain in the 17th century, [3] and Lydia Weston, who was of partial African descent and had been enslaved and then manumitted in 1826 by Plowden Weston in Charleston, South Carolina.