1000 resultados para Williams, William, 1763-1824.


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The site of present-day St. Catharines was settled by 3000 United Empire Loyalists at the end of the 18th century. From 1790, the settlement (then known as "The Twelve") grew as an agricultural community. St. Catharines was once referred to Shipman's Corners after Paul Shipman, owner of a tavern that was an important stagecoach transfer point. In 1815, leading businessman William Hamilton Merritt abandoned his wharf at Queenston and set up another at Shipman's Corners. He became involved in the construction and operation of several lumber and gristmills along Twelve Mile Creek. Shipman's Corners soon became the principal milling site of the eastern Niagara Peninsula. At about the same time, Merritt began to develop the salt springs that were discovered along the river which subsequently gave the village a reputation as a health resort. By this time St. Catharines was the official name of the village; the origin of the name remains obscure, but is thought to be named after Catharine Askin Robertson Hamilton, wife of the Hon. Robert Hamilton, a prominent businessman. Merritt devised a canal scheme from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario that would provide a more reliable water supply for the mills while at the same time function as a canal. He formed the Welland Canal Company, and construction took place from 1824 to 1829. The canal and the mills made St. Catharines the most important industrial centre in Niagara. By 1845, St. Catharines was incorporated as a town, with the town limits extending in 1854. Administrative and political functions were added to St. Catharines in 1862 when it became the county seat of Lincoln. In 1871, construction began on the third Welland Canal, which attracted additional population to the town. As a consequence of continual growth, the town limits were again extended. St. Catharines attained city status in 1876 with its larger population and area. Manufacturing became increasingly important in St. Catharines in the early 1900s with the abundance of hydro-electric power, and its location on important land and water routes. The large increase in population after the 1900s was mainly due to the continued industrialization and urbanization of the northern part of the city and the related expansion of business activity. The fourth Welland Canal was opened in 1932 as the third canal could no longer accommodate the larger ships. The post war years and the automobile brought great change to the urban form of St. Catharines. St. Catharines began to spread its boundaries in all directions with land being added five times during the 1950s. The Town of Merritton, Village of Port Dalhousie and Grantham Township were all incorporated as part of St. Catharines in 1961. In 1970 the Province of Ontario implemented a regional approach to deal with such issues as planning, pollution, transportation and services. As a result, Louth Township on the west side of the city was amalgamated, extending the city's boundary to Fifteen Mile Creek. With its current population of 131,989, St. Catharines has become the dominant centre of the Niagara region. Source: City of St. Catharines website http://www.stcatharines.ca/en/governin/HistoryOfTheCity.asp (January 27, 2011)

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David Skene-Melvin, literary historian and bibliographer, donated his extensive collection of books on Crime, Mystery and Detective fiction to the Popular Culture Program at Brock University in July 2001. The donation forms a significant part of the Skene-Melvin Collection of Crime, Mystery and Detective Fiction, James A. Gibson Library, Brock University.

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William Van Every, son of McGregory and Mary Wilcox (Jaycocks) Van Every, was born in New York state in 1765. During the Revolutionary War he joined Butler’s Rangers and served under Captain John McDonnell. He was granted three lots of land in the Township of Niagara, with additional lands granted at later dates. William married Elizabeth, daughter of George Young. Elizabeth was the widow of Col. Frederick Dochstader and mother of Catherine Dochstader, b. 1781. William Van Every died in 1832, his wife Elizabeth in 1851. Both are buried in the Warner Cemetery, in present day Niagara Falls. The children of William Van Every and Elizabeth Young were Mary, Elizabeth, Phoebe, John, Peter, William, Rebecca, Samuel and Joseph. Source: Mary Blackadar Piersol, The Records of the Van Every Family, Toronto : Best Printing, 1947. And, Patricia M. Orr, Historic Woodend, sponsored by Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority, 1980?

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Brock’s Monument is owned by Parks Canada and maintained by the Niagara Parks Commission in collaboration with the Friends of Fort George and Niagara National Historic Sites. It is located in Queenston Heights Park atop the Niagara Escarpment. On March 14, 1815, Parliament passed an act to erect a monument to the memory of General Isaac Brock. A design by engineer Francis Hall was selected. He envisioned a 135 ft. tall Tuscan column, made out of stone with a winding staircase inside. By the spring of 1824, work had begun on the monument. In June of that year, the cornerstone was laid and William Lyon Mackenzie was in attendance at the ceremony. It was on October 13th, 1824 (the anniversary of Brock’s death) that 6000 people traveled to Queenston to inter the remains of Brock and Lieutenant-Colonel Macdonell. This was the second burial for both. After 3 years the tower had reached 135 feet, but there was no inscription at the base, the fence around the observation deck had not been installed and there was no statue of Brock. Hall submitted a plan to finish the statue, but he was turned down and a simple ornament was placed where the Brock statue should have been. A massive blast of gunpowder destroyed the monument in 1840. It is alleged that an American sympathizer with the Upper Canada Rebellion set off the blast. Brock and Macdonell’s bodies were reburied in the Hamilton Family Cemetery in Queenston. The present monument was rebuilt in 1853. William Thomas (designer of St. Michael’s Cathedral in Toronto) was the architect. Brock and Macdonell were once again laid to rest in separate vaults at the statue. In 1968, Brock’s Monument was declared a national historical site. In 2005, it was closed to the public due to safety concerns, but it reopened in 2010. Source: http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/articles/brocks-monument-queenston-heights

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William Hamilton Merritt (1793-1862) was a soldier, merchant, and politician who was instrumental in the promotion and development of the Welland Canal. After serving with the Lincoln militia during the War of 1812, Merritt became a merchant in St. Catharines, and purchased some land on Twelve Mile Creek on which he ran a sawmill and constructed a grist mill. He initially envisioned a canal between the Welland River and Twelve Mile Creek, which evolved into a plan to link Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. This would enable goods from western Canada to be conveniently shipped to Montreal and Great Britain through the St. Lawrence, while bypassing the Niagara portage. His plan met with opposition for financial and political reasons, as well as from those along the Niagara portage whose businesses would suffer if the canal were built. Despite this opposition, the Welland Canal Company was chartered by the Upper Canadian assembly in January, 1824. Construction on the canal began later that year, and was completed in 1829.

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William Hamilton Merritt (1793-1862) was a soldier, merchant, and politician who was instrumental in the promotion and development of the Welland Canal. After serving with the Lincoln militia during the War of 1812, Merritt became a merchant in St. Catharines, and purchased some land on Twelve Mile Creek on which he ran a sawmill and constructed a grist mill. He initially envisioned a canal between the Welland River and Twelve Mile Creek, which evolved into a plan to link Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. This would enable goods from western Canada to be conveniently shipped to Montreal and Great Britain through the St. Lawrence, while bypassing the Niagara portage. His plan met with opposition for financial and political reasons, as well as from those along the Niagara portage whose businesses would suffer if the canal were built. Despite this opposition, the Welland Canal Company was chartered by the Upper Canadian assembly in January, 1824. Construction on the canal began later that year, and was completed in 1829

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The composite includes photos of: Richard Woodruff (1822-1887) brother of Samuel Woodruff, son of William Woodruff. He married Cornelia McCrumb. His son-in- law was Samuel Zimmerman of the bank. Richard was a director of the Niagara Suspension Bridge. Joseph Woodruff (1820-1886) son of William Woodruff. He married Julia Claus. He was the Sherriff of Lincoln County and one of the incorporators of the Zimmerman Bank. Samuel DeVeaux Woodruff (1819-1904) who was the son of William Woodruff. He married Jane Caroline Sanderson (1827-1912) William Woodruff (1793-1860) who was the son of Ezekiel Woodruff who was born on July 29, 1763 and moved to the Niagara area from Litchfield Connecticut. He died in Niagara on Nov. 26, 1836. Henry Counter Woodruff (1833-1916) was the 7th child of William Woodruff. He married Emma Eloise Osgood (1835-1925) Dr. William Woodruff (1830-1908) of London, Ont. was the son of William Woodruff. Helena Woodruff (1828-1892) was the daughter of William Woodruff. She married Joseph Patterson Boomer. Julia Woodruff (1825-1870) was the sister of Samuel DeVeaux Woodruff and the daughter of William Woodruff.

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Indenture stating that David Secord of the Township of Niagara leased the dam of the sawmill pond in St. Davids to Richard and William Woodruff for 25 shillings per year for their mill business, May 2, 1824.

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Indenture stating that George Shaw of Niagara sold 1 acre, 2 roods and 1 perch in the Village of St. Davids to Richard and William Woodruff. The price was 66 pounds - instrument no. 6926, June 9, 1824.

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Bond (1 page, printed) between John Hammell of the Township of Dumphries, Halton County to William Dickson of Niagara for 117 pounds, 10 shillings and 10 pence, Sept. 21, 1824.

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The William Boyce White, Jr. Papers consists of his genealogical research as well as his research related to the history of York County and Rock Hill, SC. The papers also include records and manuscripts relating to several of his published works. Mr. White is a Rock Hill native and taught at the Winthrop Training School (WTS) from 1958-1965 and taught at Rock Hill High School following the closing of the high school portion of the WTS. He also taught in Clover before coming to Winthrop. He was the organist at First Presbyterian Church in Rock Hill from 1945 until he moved to Virginia. His interest in local history covers the Rock Hill train depot (included in the collection is a tintype of the original depot ca. 1860s), Colonel William Hill, the Catawba River, Catawba Indians, Rock Hill and York County schools, historic homes (includes several photographs, many of which were used by Elizabeth Reed in her long running series on historic homes in Rock HillEvening Herald), local churches, as well as Rock Hill, Fort Mill, Blackstocks, and York County in general. Of special interest is a copy of the Indian Land Chronicle dated January 21, 1859. Only three copies of the Chronicle are known to exist in the state of South Carolina. The genealogical research conducted by Mr. White covers many of the prominent names of York County and of South Carolina in general. Below is a list of the prominent family names covered in Mr. White’s research: Anderson; Bankhead; Barringer; Bell; Black; Button; Campbell; Carpenter; Coffey; Cowan; Crawford; Culp; Davis; Fennell; Fewell; Graham; Hanna; Hayes; Hill; Hutchison; Irwin/ Erwin; Johnson; Lee; Martin; Massey; McClain; McConnell; McCullough; McFadden; Miller; Mobley; Morrow; Neely; Neil; Patton; Pettus; Plexico/Plaxco; Rives; Robinson; Roddey; Setzer; Stephenson; Strait; Sturgis; Sutton; Templeton; Waggoner; Wallace; Wherry; White; Williams; Williamson; Workman; Wylie.

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Durante il secolo scorso sono state individuate alcune mutazioni per il colore della buccia della varietà William che invece di essere giallo arriva a maturazione con diverse tonalità di colore rosso. L’intensità e la tipologia del fenotipo dovuto a questa mutazione mostra una variabilità all’interno dei diversi cloni rossi di questa cultivar: Max Red Bartlett, Rosired e Sensation. Questa mutazione è ereditabile e usando come genitore uno dei sopra-citati mutanti per il rosso sono state prodotte altre cultivar caratterizzate da buccia rossa come Cascade. Max Red Bartlett presenta una intensa colorazione rossa nelle prime fasi di maturazione per poi striarsi perdendo di lucentezza e non ricoprendo totalmente la superficie del frutto. Max Red Bartlett ha inoltre il problema di regressione del colore. Questa mutazione infatti non è stabile e dopo qualche anno può regredire e presentare il fenotipo di William. Diverso è invece lo sviluppo per esempio di Rosired che durante le prime fasi di accrescimento del frutto è identica a Williams (di colore verde con la parte del frutto rivolta verso il sole leggermente rossastra) per poi virare e mantenere un vivo colore rosso su tutta la superficie del frutto. Questa tesi si è proposta di caratterizzare questa mutazione che coinvolge in qualche modo la via biosintetica per la sintesi del colore. In particolare si è cercato di investigare sui probabili geni della via degli antociani coinvolti e in quale modo vengono espressi durante la maturazione del frutto, inoltre si è cercato di trovare quali specifiche molecole venissero diversamente sintetizzate. Le cultivar utilizzate sono state William e Max Red Bartlett. Di quest’ultima era già disponibile una mappa molecolare, ottenuta sulla popolazione di’incrocio di Abate Fetel (gialla) x MRB (rossa) con AFLP e SSR, quest’ultimi hanno permesso di denominare i diversi linkage group grazie alla sintenia con le altre mappe di pero e di melo. I semenzali appartenenti a questa popolazione, oltre a dimostrare l’ereditarietà del carattere, erano per il 50% gialli e 50% rossi. Questo ha permesso il mappaggio di questo carattere/mutazione che si è posizionato nel linkage group 4. Una ricerca in banca dati eseguita in parallelo ha permesso di trovare sequenze di melo dei geni coinvolti nella via biosintetica degli antociani (CHS, CHI, F3H, DFR, ANS e UFGT), sulle quali è stato possibile disegnare primer degenerati che amplificassero su DNA genomico di pero. Le amplificazioni hanno dato frammenti di lunghezza diversa. Infatti nel caso di F3H e DFR l’altissima omologia tra melo e pero ha permesso l’amplificazione quasi totale del gene, negli altri casi invece è stato necessario utilizzare primer sempre più vicini in modo da facilitare l’amplificazione. I frammenti ottenuti sono stati clonati sequenziati per confermare la specificità degli amplificati. Non sono stati evidenziati polimorfismi di sequenza in nessuna delle sei sequenze tra William e Max Red Bartlett e nessun polimorfismo con Abate, per questo motivo non è stato possibile mapparli e vedere se qualcuno di questi geni era localizzato nella medesima posizione in cui era stato mappato il “colore/mutazione”. Sulle le sequenze ottenute è stato possibile disegnare altri primer, questa volta specifici, sia per analisi d’espressione. Inizialmente è stato sintetizzato il cDNA dei geni suddetti per retrotrascrizione da RNA estratto sia da bucce sia da foglie appena germogliate (le quali presentano solo in questa fase una colorazione rossastra in MRB ma non in William). Al fine di osservare come varia l’espressione dei geni della via biosintetica delle antocianine durante la fase di maturazione dei frutti, sono stati fatti 4 campionamenti, il primo a 45gg dalla piena fioritura, poi a 60, 90, 120 giorni. Foglie e bucce sono state prelevate in campo e poste immediatamente in azoto liquido. Dai risultati con Real Time è emerso che vi è una maggiore espressione nelle prime fasi di sviluppo in Max Red Bartlett per poi calare enormemente in giugno. Si potrebbe ipotizzare che ci sia una reazione di feed back da parte della piante considerando che in questa fase il frutto non si accresce. I livelli di espressione poi aumentano verso la fase finale della maturazione del frutto. In agosto, con l’ultimo campionamento vi è una espressione assai maggiore in Max Red Bartlett per quei geni posti a valle della via biosintetica per la sintesi delle antocianine. Questo risultato è confermato anche dal livello di espressione che si riscontra nelle foglie. In cui i geni F3H, LDOX e UFGT hanno un livello di espressione nettamente maggiore in Max Red Bartlett rispetto a William. Recentemente Takos et al (2006) hanno pubblicato uno studio su un gene regolatore della famiglia Myb e ciò ha permesso di ampliare i nostri studi anche su questo gene. L’altissima omologia di sequenza, anche a livello di introni, non ha permesso di individuare polimorfismi tra le varietà Abate Fetel e Max Red Bartlett, per nessun gene ad eccezione proprio del gene regolatore Myb. I risultati ottenuti in questa tesi dimostrano che in pero l’espressione relativa del gene Myb codificante per una proteina regolatrice mostra una netta sovra-espressione nel primo stadio di maturazione del frutto, in Max Red Bartlett 25 volte maggiore che in William. All’interno della sequenza del gene un polimorfismo prodotto da un microsatellite ha permesso il mappaggio del gene nel linkage group 9 in Max Red Bartlett e in Abate Fetel. Confrontando questo dato di mappa con quello del carattere morfologico rosso, mappato nel linkage group 4, si deduce che la mutazione non agisce direttamente sulla sequenza di questo gene regolatore, benché sia espresso maggiormente in Max Red Bartlett rispetto a William ma agisca in un altro modo ancora da scoprire. Infine per entrambe le varietà (William e Max Red Bartlett) sono state effettuate analisi fenotipiche in diversi step. Innanzi tutto si è proceduto con una analisi preliminare in HPLC per osservare se vi fossero differenze nella produzione di composti con assorbenza specifica delle antocianine e dei flavonoidi in generale. Si è potuto quindi osservare la presenza di due picchi in Max Red Bartlett ma non in William. La mancanza di standard che coincidessero con i picchi rilevati dallo spettro non ha permesso in questa fase di fare alcuna ipotesi riguardo alla loro natura. Partendo da questo risultato l’investigazione è proceduta attraverso analisi di spettrometria di massa associate ad una cromatografia liquida identificando con una certa precisione due composti: la cianidina-3-0-glucoside e la quercitina-3-o-glucoside. In particolare la cianidina sembra essere la molecola responsabile della colorazione della buccia nei frutti di pero. Successive analisi sono state fatte sempre con lo spettrometro di massa ma collegato ad un gas cromatografo per verificare se vi fossero delle differenze anche nella produzione di zuccheri e più in generale di molecole volatili. L’assenza di variazioni significative ha dimostrato che la mutazione coinvolge solo il colore della buccia e non le caratteristiche gustative e organolettiche di William che restano inalterate nel mutante.

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Pat Williams emerged from the Mining City of Butte, Montana with a sense of grassroots, people-oriented politics. His inherent belief in the power of ordinary citizens carried him through the Montana Legislature and into Congress for a record-setting period. The accomplishments of his long career partially obscured his innate progressive and populist instinct that is reflective of the period of “in the Crucible of Change.” This film addresses Pat’s early years when his progressive instincts and activities resulted in pushback from the giant Anaconda Company which had held Montana hostage for 75 years. Pat is joined for part of the film by former campaign staffer, and now prominent media consultant, Michael Fenenbock for reflections on Pat’s 1978 “Door-to-Door to Congress” campaign, which demonstrated the power of his belief in the people on the other side of the doors. Pat Williams (b. 1937) rose from teaching grade school in his hometown of Butte, MT, to serving for the longest number of consecutive terms (9 terms, 18 years) in the US House of Representatives of anyone in Montana history. Pat was a member of the National Guard and attended UM in Missoula and William Jewel College, graduating from the University of Denver. Pat also served in the Montana legislature for 2 terms (1966 & 1968 elections). In 1969. Pat helped his legislative seat-mate John Melcher get elected as Montana’s Eastern District Congressman in the Special Election that June. Pat went to Washington DC as Melcher’s Executive Assistant. Upon returning to Montana, Pat headed up the Montana offices of the innovative Mountain Plains Family Education Program. In 1974, Pat ran unsuccessfully for Montana’s Western District Congressional seat in a three-way race with former Congressman Arnold Olsen and state Legislator Max Baucus. After the drafting and passage of the 1972 Montana Constitution, Pat was named a member of Montana’s first-ever Reapportionment Commission. In 1978 he successfully ran for Congress, conducting a massive grass-roots door-to-door campaign of 1½ years, reaching 50,000 doors. In a hotly contested 6-way Democratic primary, Pat won going away and also handily won the general election. Pat served in Congress from January, 1979 until January of 1997, 14 years representing the Western District and 4 years representing the entire state. Upon his retirement from Congress, in 1997 Williams returned to Montana where has been an instructor at the University of Montana and Senior Fellow and Regional Policy Associate at the Center for the Rocky Mountain West. He is a former member of the Montana Board of Regents and serves on a number of national education-related boards. In Congress Pat was a Deputy Whip of the U.S. House of Representatives and sat on committees on: Budget, Natural Resources, Education and Labor, and Agriculture. Pat’s leadership helped pass trailblazing legislation to assist hard-working middle-class families and ensure opportunities for every child. Pat’s fingerprints are on many pieces of important legislation, including the College Middle Income Assistance Act, the Family and Medical Leave Act, the Toddlers and Childhood Disability Act, the Library Services and Construction Act, and the Museum Services Act. Pat successfully sponsored the Lee Metcalf Wilderness Area and the Rattlesnake Wilderness area, helped save the Bob Marshall Wilderness from oil and gas exploration, and helped ban geothermal energy drilling near the borders of Yellowstone National Park. As Chairman of The Post-Secondary Education Committee, he protected the National Endowment for the Arts from elimination, a remarkable undertaking during a very trying time for the Agency. Pat worked tirelessly with Tribal College Leaders to build Montana’s seven Tribal Colleges. He was also responsible for the legislation that created The American Conservation Corps, which became the Corporation for National Service, giving thousands of America’s young people a chance to serve their country and pursue higher education. Pat lives in Missoula with his wife Carol Griffith Williams, former Montana Senate Majority Leader. They have three children and five grandchildren.