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Winthrop Welles Ketcham (sometimes spelled Ketchum, June 29, 1820 – December 6, 1879) was a United States representative from Pennsylvania and a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania.
J. Davidson Ketchum was born in 1893. He was originally planning to become a musician but the outbreak of the First World War changed his plans. Ketchum was interned in the Ruhleben internment camp in Germany about which he later wrote in his book Ruhleben: A Prison Camp Society , published in 1965 after his death.
Ketchum retired to southern California around 1963, settling in San Marino (near Pasadena). In 1964, Ketchum wrote The Discovery of Edgar Cayce, published by the A.R.E. Press. [37] He died on November 28, 1968, in Canoga Park. Wesley Harrington Ketchum was a homeopath who worked with Cayce from 1910 to 1912.
The five family farms that were purchased to make up the new estate were the Mitchell, Ketchum, Brinkerhoff, Skidmore, and Schenck farms. Later, John Hay Whitney and his second wife, Betsey , occupied the main house, where Mrs. Whitney remained in residence there until her death in 1998.
John H. Ketcham (1832–1906), ... William Scott Ketchum (1813–1871), Union Army brigadier general of Volunteers This page was last edited on ...
Richard Ketchum (1773–1845), political figure in New Brunswick; Richard M. Ketchum (1922–2012), American historian and magazine editor; Robert Glenn Ketchum (born 1947), landscape and nature photographer; Rosemary Ketchum, American politician and community organizer; Tom Ketchum (1863–1901), a.k.a. "Black Jack" Ketchum, U.S. Western outlaw
John Ketcham may refer to: John Ketcham (Indiana surveyor) (1782–1865), surveyor, building contractor, and judge; John Ketcham (producer-director), film producer; John C. Ketcham (1873–1941), politician from the U.S. state of Michigan; John H. Ketcham (1832–1906), U.S. Representative from New York
He was born in Spencertown, New York, in 1782 to parents Mollie Robbins Ketchum and Jesse Ketchum Sr. [1] After his mother died, he was taken into a foster home; his foster father was a tanner. He ran away from home in 1799 and joined his brother Seneca (1780–1850), who was farming north of York ( York Mills , now part of Toronto ) in Upper ...