Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jim Allen January 5, 1934 40. Joe Emmory February 5, 1934 41. James Swann February 5, 1934 42. Louis Fain February 5, 1934 43. Percy Smith April 4, 1934 44. Frank Mays April 4, 1934 45. Jasper Graham April 4, 1934 46. James Pillow September 1, 1934 47. John Deal September 1, 1934 48. Bill Lee January 2, 1936 49. Walter Kennedy January 2, 1936 50.
4615 TN-64 Wartrace: 5: Gov. Prentice Cooper House ... James Gilliland House: James Gilliland House: May 12, 1975 : 803 Lipscomb St. ... Jenkins Lutheran Chapel and ...
James Jenkins (Methodist) (1764–1847), circuit rider James Graham Jenkins (1834–1921), U.S. federal judge James J. Jenkins (1923–2012), American psychologist
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
James Graham Jenkins (July 18, 1834 – August 6, 1921) was an American lawyer and Judge. He served twelve years as a judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, appointed by President Grover Cleveland. Prior to that, he had been a United States district judge for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
Sentenced to three years for embezzlement, and was registered as prisoner no. 30664 on March 25, 1898, and is known to have written at least 14 of his short stories from the James Hospital building on the west edge of the prison. Released on July 24, 1901.
James Jinkins (born August 8, 1953) is an American animator, cartoonist, and children's author. He is best known as the creator of the animated television series Doug , which was later the basis for a feature film .
The Reverend James Jenkins (1764–1847) was an early Methodist circuit rider and preacher in Tennessee, Kentucky, and frontier Illinois, as well as his home state of South Carolina. Born in Brittons Neck, South Carolina , to Elizabeth Britton Jenkins and her husband Samuel, he was a Methodist minister for fifty-five years.