Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Hopkinson John

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-94 of 94    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Hopkinson John:     more books (100)
  1. The lass o' Gourie, arranged with variations for the Piano Forte by J. Hopkinson. Op. 19 by John Hopkinson, 1844
  2. The Canadian boat song, arranged with variations for the Piano Forte by J. Hopkinson. Op. 17 by John Hopkinson, 1843
  3. My lodging is on the cold ground, arranged with variations for the Piano Forte by J. Hopkinson. Op. 18 by John Hopkinson, 1843
  4. Jock o' Hazledean, arranged with variations for the Piano Forte by J. Hopkinson. Op. 14 by John Hopkinson, 1843
  5. An Introduction and Rondo for the Pianoforte by John Hopkinson, 1840
  6. On electric lighting: First paper by John Hopkinson, 1879
  7. A fantasia introducing Russell's ... airs " Woodman spare that tree " and " The Ivy Green " for the Piano Forte. Op. 22 by John Hopkinson, 1844
  8. A song of the wood nymphs [begins: " Come here and dwell " ]. The words by Barry Cornwall by John Hopkinson, 1848
  9. transactions of the Watford Natural History Society and Hertfordshire Field Club, Volume 2 by John Hopkinson, 1880
  10. A nunc dimittis by John Hopkinson, 1848
  11. On electric lighting: Second paper by John Hopkinson, 1880
  12. Exercises and scales for the Piano Forte by John Hopkinson, 1843
  13. Lecture on experiments in dynamics: The quasi-rigidity of a rapidly moving chain--the gyroscope by John Hopkinson, 1880
  14. Group-flashing lights by John Hopkinson, 1874

81. Charles S. Hopkinson's Three Dancing Girls
Jan 2002. My wife grandfather was Charles S. hopkinson, an artistwho was a contemporary of john Singer Sargent. Having recently
http://www.jssgallery.org/Other_Artists/Charles_Hopkinson/Charles_Hopkinson.htm
Charles S. Hopkinson's Three Dancing Girls Frontpage Thumbnail Index More on Charles Hopkinson off site
Three Dancing Girls Charles S. Hopkinson, American artist from MA Owner? Oil 65.5 x 77 in J pg: Charles S. Hopkinson Virtual Gallery From: Charles S. Hopkinson Virtual Gallery Extracted from an essay by Leah Lipton, Charles Hopkinson: Pictures from a New England Past, Framingham Massachusetts, Danforth Museum, 1988. Charles Hopkinson
Family legend gives credit to John Singer Sargent for suggesting the theme of Three Dancing Girls to Hopkinson, after seeing the girls dressed in old-fashioned costumes, dancing on the rocks at Manchester. Sargent visited the Manchester house in 1916 while he was in Boston working on the murals at the Public Library .A postcard from one of Mrs. Hopkinson's sisters to another, written on August 20, 1917, confirms a second Sargent visit, in the company of Isabella Stewart Gardner . Harriot Curtis writes, "John Singer [Sargent] admired it ex-tremely! [a reference to the dress worn by one of the girls] He and Mrs. Gardner, no less, came by tother (sic) day to see how the painting he insisted on Charles painting came on. He likes it but says there must be four, not three, children, and Happy must be definitely curtseying." Although Hopkinson did not add a fourth child, there is evidence in a study he made for the painting that he did change the position of the child in the foreground in response to Sargent's suggestion.
www.cshgallery.org/essay_lipton.htm

82. Mad Minute #98-12 July 4th On The Internet: 56 High Risk Males
Francis Lewis and Lewis Morris (4) 6 New Jersey; Richard Stockton, john Witherspoon,Francis hopkinson, john Hart and Abraham Clark (5) 7 Pennsylvania; Robert
http://vikingphoenix.com/news/madminute/1998/mm980012.htm
Previous Next Index Sun Tzu's Newswire Index ... VikingPhoenix.com
Mad Minute #98-12 July 4th on the Internet: 56 high risk males
Sun Tzu's Newswire
Mad Minute #98-12 July 4th on the Internet: 56 high risk males
by Tristan St.John-Smith
Friday, July 3, 1998 1744 GMT Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 222 years ago 56 high risk males defied their sovereign ruler, Great Britain's King George III. In doing so, they risked their lives, their property and their sacred honor and sealed their fate when on July 4, 1776 they signed the American Declaration of Independence // For those Americans that decide to shake off the chains of lethargy and indifference there is television there are baseball games where the national anthem is sung maybe your old schoolbooks or encyclopedias there are newspapers and there is the Internet to refresh your knowledge about Independence Day, and the Declaration of Independence

83. Descendents Of John TONGE Of Dilhorne, Staffs.
7 George Tew 1894 1984 ..6 john Tongue 1854 Ernest E hopkinson 1887 - 1970
http://www.bolton121.fsnet.co.uk/genealogies/rmallard.htm
Email: stephen.tonge@bolton121.fsnet.co.uk Tonge Genealogy Site: http://www.bolton121.fsnet.co.uk Click here for list of other Tonge genealogies TONGE, John of Dilhorne, Staffs. : Descendents of. Genealogy of Ric Mallard of Mooroolbark, Victoria, Australia [Researched by Rik Mallard] The details of those living have been omitted as I have not checked with them that it is OK. Regards Eric oziducks@tpg.com.au Download: Ric_Mallard.ged GEDCOM File (56KB) 1 John Tong
.... +Dorothy
......... 2 John Tong
......... 2 Anne Tong
*2nd Wife of John Tong:
.... +Ann
......... 2 Thomas Tongue
............... +Katharine Lightfoot
.................... 3 John Tongue
.......................... +Ann Moss
............................... 4 John Tongue ...................................... +Catherine Holmes ........................................... 5 Thomas Tongue ................................................. +Lydia Adams 1830 - 1919 ...................................................... 6 Sarah Ann Elizabeth Tongue ...................................................... 6 Jane Tongue

84. St Edmund Hall, Oxford
Guy 1966; Gillingwater, Richard 1974; Hamilton, Michael 1962; Hamilton, Nicholas1977; Haniff, Marcellene 1977; hopkinson, john Michael 1954; Hurren, Ronald S
http://www.seh.ox.ac.uk/index.cfm?do=cam_progress

85. Streaming 07-01-01Pg 2
Oliver Wolcott, William Floyd, Philip Livingston, Francis Lewis, Lewis Morris, RichardStockton, john Witherspoon, Francis hopkinson, john Hart, Abraham Clark
http://www.lightstreamers.com/streaming_07-01-01pg2.htm
Streaming News Pg 2 What's This Fool Thinking About This Week? by Dannion Brinkley July 4, 1776, is, was and always shall be important to Americans. Nevertheless, July 4, 2001, should be the same with all the events happening in the world today. Freedom and the responsibility that comes with that should be on the minds of all, as we head into the Fourth. I think all should be very mindful of the battle over a Patients' Bill Of Rights going on in Congress. This is not just about the rights of those who are seeking to receive the quality of care they are paying for but for the privacy of their medical records, as well. Laws recently passed concerning the latest merging of financial institutions allow Americans' medical records to be at the hands of those multi-national companies to exchange, profile and build data bases on every aspect of their lives. We must take part in this great debate. For without taking part, and without supporting the part of the Constitution found in the Preamble; “to secure the blessings of liberty for ourselves and for our posterity” is at stake. Also, I would like to ask for each of us to strongly support the "White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Policy" to improve the quality of palliative and hospice programs throughout the country.

86. Nalo Hopkinson - Feministische Phantastisch-utopische Literatur
Translate this page hopkinson wurde 1999 mit dem john W. Campbell Award für den besten Nachwuchsautoroder die beste Nachwuchsautorin 1997 oder 1998 ausgezeichnet.
http://www.feministische-sf.de/einzelne_autorinnen/fsf_nalo-hopkinson.html
Mail Umfrage Home AutorInnen ... Z Nalo Hopkinson (1960- ), Kanada
1993 begann Hopkinson zu schreiben. 1995 nahm sie an einem Clarion Workshop teil. Ihren ersten, noch nicht ganz fertigen Roman ( Brown Girl in the Ring Brown Girl in the Ring Skin Folk
Q: Locus Magazine Interview Januar 1999 Locus Juli 1999 Nalo Hopkinsons eigene Website About Nalo Hopkinson - Warner Books ... Locus Online 3.11.2002 Webseiten von und zu Nalo Hopkinson: Interviews mit und Artikel von und zu Nalo Hopkinson:

87. Untitled Document
Baker, Christian Campbell, Coco Fusco, Duriel E. Harris, Nalo hopkinson, john Keene,Ferentz Lafargue, Wahneema Lubiano, Dawn Lundy Martin, Paul D. Miller aka
http://www.dancingimage.com/IA_List.htm

WIRESCAPES 1.0
Virtual Sculpture Interface
Wirescapes 1.0 is an exploration of the machine as conduit to the art idea. As the machine presents infinite, generative moments, the user/artist is offered the opportunity to interact with and capture virtual "sculptures".
WIRESCAPES has been selected for exhibition at alt-x in the Hyper-X online gallery and is installed in gallery space at The Dairy Center for the Arts in Boulder where it will be on exhibition through April 4.
FILMTEXT 2.0
- In collaboration with Mark Amerika, Twine
FILMTEXT is a digital narrative created for cross-media platforms created by Mark Amerika in collaboration with Internet Flash artist John Vega and the sound artists Twine. The net.art piece has been exhibited as a museum installation, a net art site, a conceptual art ebook, an mp3 concept album, a series of live performances, and a looping DVD. The initial 1.0 iteration of the net art site was commissioned by Playstation 2 in conjunction with Amerika's "How To Be An Internet Artist" net art retrospective at the ICA in London. FILMTEXT 2.0, released in late July as part of the international SIGGRAPH exhibition in San Antonio, Texas, will continue to investigate the interrelationship between net art, hypermedia narrative and interactive cinema.

88. John Hart, Signer Of The Declaration Of Independance For New Jersey
Images of VIPs of NJ during the Revolution. Signitures of the signers from NJ RichardStockton, john Witherspoon, Francis hopkinson, john Hart, Abraham Clark.
http://users.rcn.com/gvalis/ggv/JHart.html
JOHN HART
Signer of the Declaration of Independence
This outline gets its information from : A BIOGRAPHY OF JOHN HART, SIGNER OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE by Cleon E. Hammond , published by Pioneer Press. Its the best book available on the signer and I recommend it to anyone interested in the colonial or Rev. war period. It is out of print, but you may be able to get it through inter-library loans, or the used market. There is no known picture of John Hart, signer, from during HIS LIFETIME , or I would have put it here. There is a claim of a picture which was painted in the 1860's, supposed copied from an original, but the family knew of no picture when the first biographies were done around 1800. See an artist conception of John Hart, based on family resemblences at: Images of VIPs of NJ during the Revolution Signitures of the signers from NJ- Richard Stockton, John Witherspoon, Francis Hopkinson, John Hart, Abraham Clark.
First, common mistakes in John Hart histories:
John Hart's father did not come from Connecticut, his grandfather came from Long Island, but may have been born across the Sound in Connecticut. The signer was born in Hopewell township. John Hart did not have to hide for months from the British. They were not in the area but from December 8th. 1776, when Washington retreated into Pennsylvania, until at most December 26th, when he captured Trenton. In reality, the actual time was a few days when troops were in the area. They damaged his house and farm, but it was not destroyed. As the outline shows, his wife died in October, so the British did not drive him from her side. Most of his children were grown, so he did not lose them. The two minors went to family nearby while he hid, then everything went back to "normal" after a few days. He did not die a "broken man" from losing his family- he did not lose them, he died of kidney stones after a long, very painful illness- surrounded by family, in his intact home, on his large, still working, farm.

89. HOPKINSON, FRANCIS
(1873), The Scriptural Idea of Man (1883), and Teachings and Counsels (1884)
http://36.1911encyclopedia.org/H/HO/HOPKINSON_FRANCIS.htm
document.write("");
HOPKINSON, FRANCIS
(1873), The Scriptural Idea of Man (1883), and Teachings and Counsels (1884). Dr Hopkins took a lifelong interest in Christian missions, and from 1857 until his death was president of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (the American Congregational Mission Board). He died at Williamstown, on the 17th of June 1887. His son, HENRY HOPKINS (1837—1908), was also from 1903 till his death president of Williams College. See Franklin Carter’s Mark Hopkins (Boston, 1892), in the American Religious Leaders “ series, and Leverett W. Spring’s Mark Hopkins, Teacher (New York, 1888), being No. 4, vol. 1., of the “ Monographs of the Industrial Educational Association.” See Albert C. Sewall’s Life of Professor Albert Hopkins (1879). The best edition of Hopkins’s Works is that published in three volumes at Boston in 1852, containing an excellent biographical sketch by Professor Edwards A. Park. In 1854 was published separately Hopkins’s Treatise on the Millennium, which originally appeared in his System of Doctrines and in which he deduced from prophecies in Daniel and Revelation that the millennium would come “not far from the end of the twentieth century.” See also Stephen West’s Sketches of the Life of the Late Reverend Samuel Hopkins (Hartford, Conn., 1805), Franklin B. Dexter’s Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College and Williston Walker’s Ten New England Leaders (New York, I9of). (W. WR.) Cambridge on the I3th of October 1866. - -

90. I4083: George Henry Hopkinson (1842 - 11 MAR 1919)
. =, . , ,,, George Henry hopkinson. Birth Date, 1842. Birth Place, England. DeathPlace, England. Spouses of George Henry hopkinson. 1, Blanche Isabella Somerset.
http://web.ukonline.co.uk/Members/nigel.battysmith/Database/D0017/I4083.html
George Henry Hopkinson Birth Date Birth Place England Death Date 11 MAR 1919 Death Place England Spouses of George Henry Hopkinson Blanche Isabella Somerset Death Date 14 FEB 1922 Death Place England Father Henry Charles Capel Somerset (20 JUN 1816 - 17 JAN 1905) Mother Alice Elizabeth O'connell (26 JUL 1818 - 29 AUG 1892) Marriage Date 27 JUN 1866 Marriage Place England George Henry Hopkinson and Blanche Isabella Somerset had the following children Henry Charles Barwick Hopkinson Mabel Blanche Hopkinson Cecil Arthur Hopkinson Hugh Fitzroy Hopkinson ... Myles Staveley Hopkinson Descendants of George Henry Hopkinson and Blanche Isabella Somerset

91. Declaration Of Independence Signatories
Lewis Morris New Jersey Richard Stockton, john Witherspoon, FrancisHopkinson, john Hart, Abraham Clark Pennsylvania Robert Morris
http://www.age-of-the-sage.org/philosophy/independence_signatories.html
signers, signing
signatories
The signatories to the
Declaration of Independence
  Although the Declaration of Independence is officially dated from the fourth of July 1776 it was actually signed into formal existence from 2 August of that year. The delay largely arising from the technical processes involved in the preparation, on parchment, of the Declaration of Independence.
  The actual process of the signing of the Declaration of Independence began on 2 August. The first of the signatories was John Hancock, the President of the Congress, who signed, in bold, below the text and in the centre of the Declaration. Other delegates, starting with those from the northernmost state - New Hampshire - and continuing unto the southermost state - Georgia - then began to sign. There were to be in all fifty-six signers, not all of these signed on 2 August. Two delegates that had actually voted in assent on the fourth of July did not, in the event, sign at all!!! One of these John Dickinson seems to have demurred in the hope of a reconciliation with Great Britain, the other, Robert R. Livingston, one of the Committee of Five, seems to have thought that the Declaration was premature.
At the signing of the Declaration of Independence the new established "States of America" were represented as follows:
New Hampshire:
  Josiah Bartlett, William Whipple, Matthew Thornton

92. Shimek State Forest
Lewis Morris. New Jersey Richard Stockton, john Witherspoon, FrancisHopkinson, john Hart, Abraham Clark. Pennsylvania Robert Morris
http://www.osageorange.com/Shimek_State_F.html
Click on the wise old owl to
see the maps and the full
story about Shimek Forest....
These people signed the Declaration of Independence
New Hampshire:
Josiah Bartlett, William Whipple, Matthew Thornton
Massachusetts:
John Hancock, Samual Adams, John Adams, Robert Treat Paine,
Elbridge Gerry
Rhode Island:
Stephen Hopkins, William Ellery Connecticut: Roger Sherman, Samuel Huntington, William Williams, Oliver Wolcott New York: William Floyd, Philip Livingston, Francis Lewis, Lewis Morris New Jersey: Richard Stockton, John Witherspoon, Francis Hopkinson, John Hart, Abraham Clark Pennsylvania: Robert Morris, Benjamin Rush, Benjamin Franklin, John Morton, George Clymer, James Smith, George Taylor, James Wilson, George

93. Rivendell History Essay Winner
Lewis Morris; New Jersey Richard Stockton, john Witherspoon, FrancisHopkinson, john Hart, and Abraham Clark; New Hampshire Josiah
http://www.rivendell.colostate.edu/present/cian.html
American History Essay Contest
Sponsored by the Cache la Poudre Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, 2002. Congratulations to Cian for the entry shown below which won 2nd place in the sixth grade category.
Editor Interviews Two Signers of the Declaration of Independence
July 5, 1776, Philadelphia - Yesterday the thirteen colonies made history. The events of the last few weeks have resulted in the colonies' strong stand in creating a new nation. The Continental Congress, with members from the thirteen colonies, has decided to present England with a Declaration of Independence signed by the 56 Continental Congress members. The Declaration of Independence, drafted by Thomas Jefferson of Virginia between June 11 and 28 of this year, will become a historic document, worthy of praise by all citizens of these thirteen colonies. The Declaration of Independence lays out our claim clearly. The introduction declares the causes that make it unavoidable for us to leave Great Britain. The preamble sets forth the self-evident principles of responsible government. Next, the document gives evidence of how Great Britain repeatedly ignored those principles and how our British cousins ignored our pleas for redress. Finally, the Declaration announces the inevitable conclusion that we must dissolve our government ties to Great Britain. The 56 signers of the Declaration all have good reputations and most have a family history of political participation. Here is list of the signers. Give them credit for taking a stand for freedom.

94. METS Viewer For Photographs From The War Of The Rebellion, Volume
METS Viewer for Photographs from the War of the Rebellion, Volume 20. Photographsfrom the War of the Rebellion, Volume 20. General Descriptive Metadata.
http://dlib.nyu.edu:8083/xmldev/servlet/xt/Test.xml?div=0

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 5     81-94 of 94    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

free hit counter