Books by "Frederick William SANDERSON"

12 books found

A Chronicle History of the London Stage 1559-1642

A Chronicle History of the London Stage 1559-1642

by Frederick Gard Fleay

1890 · London Reeves and Turner 1890.

The Origin and History of the First Or Grenadier Guards

The Origin and History of the First Or Grenadier Guards

by Sir Frederick William Hamilton

1874

Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of Wisconsin

Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of Wisconsin

by Wisconsin. Supreme Court, Abram Daniel Smith, Philip Loring Spooner, Obadiah Milton Conover, Frederic King Conover, Frederick William Arthur, Frederick C. Seibold

1890

History of Wyoming County, N.Y.

History of Wyoming County, N.Y.

by Frederick W. Beers & Co.

2022 · State University of New York Press

Originally published by F.W. Beers & Company in 1880, History of Wyoming County, N.Y. is still one of the most referenced histories of the county. Exploring Wyoming County pre-formation, the book also delves into the history of sixteen towns and their prominent residents and records residents’ Civil War service. Officially named a county in 1841, this southwestern farming county of New York State is the home of several New York landmarks, including Letchworth State Park, Middlebury Academy (listed on the National Register of Historic Places), and Attica Prison. Notable Wyoming County residents have included Josiah Andrews (an abolitionist newspaper owner), Mary Jemison (the "White Woman of the Genesee" who lived among the Seneca), Barber Conable (former President of the World Bank Group and US Congressman from New York), Chester A. Arthur (the twenty-first President of the United States), Ella Hawley Crossett (former President of the New York State Woman Suffrage Association), Lemuel M. Wiles (American landscape painter), and Charlotte Smallwood-Cook (the first woman elected district attorney in New York State). Newly released by SUNY Press with an introduction by Cindy Amrhein, Wyoming County Historian, History of Wyoming County, N.Y. offers a fascinating and comprehensive reference work that is useful to family and local historians, genealogists, and those interested in the development and history of New York State.

Visitation of England and Wales Notes : Volume 6, 1906

Visitation of England and Wales Notes : Volume 6, 1906

by Frederick Arthur Crisp

1997 · Heritage Books

Pierce Genealogy, No. IV.

Pierce Genealogy, No. IV.

by Frederick Clifton Pierce

1889 · Albany, N.Y. : Pub. for the author by J. Munsell's sons

Captain Michael Pierce (ca. 1615-1676), brother of John and Captain William Pierce, immigrated to America ca. 1645 and settled firt at Higham, Massachusetts. He moved to Scituate, Massachusetts, in 1647. He married twice and was the father of ten children. He was killed fighting Indians. Descendants of his sons, Benjamin Pierce (1646-1730), John Pierce (ca. 1660-1738), and Ephraim Pierce (d. 1719), listed lived in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, and elsewhere.

Paintbrush for Hire

Paintbrush for Hire

by Frederick C. Moffatt

2024 · University of Tennessee Press

“I was pulled into the story and read every word.” –Randolph Delehanty, author of Art in the American South: Works from the Odgen Collection Throughout the nineteenth-century, itinerant painters traveled the length and breadth of Europe and American in search of patronage. In the company of the his crupulous wife, Emma S. Cameron (1825–1907), the Scots-born James Cameron (1816–1882) sought to fulfill his ambitious dream of becoming an artist. Working primarily as a landscapist and portraitist—he was also an inventor, a missionary, an ordained minister, a land agent, farmer, clothing merchant, and Sunday school teacher—Cameron produced a small collection of paintings during the ten-year period the couple resided in East Tennessee and the American South. Driven by the wife’s lively journals, correspondence, and Civil War diary, Moffatt’s narrative details the couple’s marriage, their extended honeymoon in revolutionary Italy and, following a brief excursion in the Adirondacks, their subsequent residencies in Knoxville, Chattanooga, Memphis, Nashville, Augusta, central Mississippi, and New Orleans, between 1856 and 1868. While in Chattanooga, they settled near Col. James A. Whiteside’s fashionable summer resort, Lookout Mountain Hotel, where James reigned as resident artist and Emma, reluctantly, served as the house nurse and social entertainer. In the late 1860s they lived in Maine and, after 1874, in California, where they founded separate Presbyterian churches. The book emphasizes Cameron’s painting career, the patrons who supported it, and discusses his best-known works, all of which are reproduced here. The study demonstrated how persisted while working under a cultural cloud that often devalued artistic achievement Emma’s journals reveal her to be a perceptive observer of Protestant middle class “life-on-the-run” and yields insight into historic events in the making, including the Italian Risorgimento, the American Civil War, and the settlement of America’s Western frontier. Moffatt’s detailed joint biography provides a valuable contribution to women’s studies, art history, nineteenth-century frontier expansionism, and social history. Frederick C. Moffatt is emeritus professor of art history at the School of Art, University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He is the author of Arthur Wesley Dow, 1857–1922; Errant Bronzes: George Grey Barnard’s Statue of Abraham Lincoln; and The Life, Art, and Times of Joseph Delaney, 1904–1991.