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James E. Graves Jr. (born 1953), associate justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court; Thomas Graves (judge) (1684–1747), associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court; Waller Washington Graves (1860–1928), associate justice of the Supreme Court of Missouri; William Graves (judge) (born 1935), associate justice of the Kentucky ...
[3] [4] Both Graves and Donahue graduated in 1957. [3] Graves then earned a law degree from the University of Kentucky College of Law. [2] He returned to Paducah and opened a law practice. [2] Graves was a judge advocate general in the United States Army, on active duty and as a reserve, for 35 years. [2]
Jonathan Cilley (July 2, 1802 – February 24, 1838) was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maine.He served part of one term in the 25th Congress, and died as the result of a wound sustained in a duel with another Congressman, William J. Graves of Kentucky.
William Graves may refer to: William Graves (judge) (born 1935), Associate Justice of the Kentucky Supreme Court; William Graves (MP) (1724–1801), who sat for East Looe and West Looe in the British Parliament; William Carey Graves (1895–1966), Texas State Senator; William J. Graves (1805–1848), U.S. Representative from Kentucky
The beginnings of Gospel Assemblies may be traced to Paducah, Kentucky in 1914 during the early American Pentecostal movement.Sowders, a former Louisville policeman, [1] evangelized primarily in the lower Ohio River valley region, settling in Louisville, where he established a congregation and ministered there until his death in 1952. [1]
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John Thomas Graves (Confederate soldier) (1842–1950), last surviving Confederate soldier from the American Civil War; John Woodcock Graves (1795–1886), Anglo-Australian composer and poet; Tom Graves (John Thomas Graves, Jr., born 1970), U.S. politician from georgia; William Graves (judge) (born 1935), American jurist from Kentucky
William Ellis was born near Knottsville, Kentucky, on July 24, 1845. [1] He was one of two sons born Luther R. and Mary M. (Kellum) Ellis. [2] Ellis was educated in the common schools until age sixteen. [1] On October 5, 1861, he enlisted as a private in the First Kentucky Confederate Cavalry. [3] This unit became a part of the Orphan Brigade. [1]