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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 5 February 2025. American politician (born 1981) Tulsi Gabbard Gabbard in 2024 Director of National Intelligence Nominee Assuming office TBD President Donald Trump Succeeding Avril Haines Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Hawaii's 2nd district In office January 3, 2013 – January 3, 2021 ...
Abraham Jude [citation needed] Williams (February 26, 1781 – December 30, 1839) was an American politician from Boone County, Missouri. He was the third Governor of Missouri , serving an unelected interim term in 1825 and 1826 following the death of Frederick Bates .
Abram Pease Williams was born in New Portland, Maine on February 3, 1832. [1] He attended the common schools of the time, and completed a course of study at North Anson Academy from 1846 to 1848. He taught school at North Anson before moving to Fairfield, Maine, in 1853. There he engaged in the mercantile business.
Abraham was born enslaved in Georgia in the 1790s and died in the 1870s in what is now Seminole County, Oklahoma. [6] He was described as having ties to Pensacola, having traveled to Washington, D.C., and the Indian Territory, and having had "fluent speech and polished manners."
Left to right: Unknown, Maneckji Nusserwanji Dhalla, A. V. W. Jackson, Henry Clews, and Djelal Munif Bey at Columbia University in 1914 He was born in New York City on February 9, 1862. [1]
Abraham Lincoln's mother Nancy Hanks was claimed to be of African descent (Ethiopian). Since then it has been proven she was white. [15] [17] [18] According to historian William E. Barton, a rumor "current in various forms in several sections of the South" was that Lincoln's biological father was Abraham Enloe, which Barton dismissed as "false ...
William James Abraham (19 December 1947 – 7 October 2021) was a Northern Irish theologian, analytic philosopher, and Methodist pastor known for his contributions to the philosophy of religion, religious epistemology, evangelism, and church renewal.
Abrams is a surname related to Abrahams, Abram, Abrahm and Abraham. It developed independently in the Jewish diaspora, England, Germany and the Netherlands. [1] The name and its variants have been found in England since the medieval era in the Domesday Book and Hundred Rolls. [2] As of 2014, it is most commonly found in the United States. [3]