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Matches 11,026 to 11,050 of 11,140 » See Gallery » Slide Show
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11026 |
| WILSONThomasWoodrow18561924portaitpresident.jpg |
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11027 |
| WILSONThomasWoodrow18561924youngWilson.jpg |
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11028 |
| Winter Scene on a wooded mountainside in Shenandoah County, VA, similar to woods in the Zepp, VA area
This photo, downloaded from the web site of the Shenandoah County school system, illustrates the woods and topography that is similar to that surrounding St. James Cemetery, on Still House Lane (gravel), near Zepp Road (asphalt) at Cedar Creek, Zepp, VA. |
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11029 |
| wm gaskill.jpg |
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11030 |
| wm-gaskill-wife-em.jpg |
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11031 |
| Women workers in a shoe factory, late 19th century
"Photocopies of nineteenth-century wood engravings all of which show women at work" Library of Congress |
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11032 |
| WoodieWest&Shirley1980May.jpg |
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11033 |
| Woodland Backyard Swing Dianne and Susan with grandparents Lydia and Bill. This would be about 1945. |
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11034 |
| Woodland Boys - Noah in front, Ephriam, Leonard, and Milton Woodland |
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11035 |
| Woodland brothers Left to right: Noah, Alfred, Leonard (I think) and Bill. |
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11036 |
| Woodland Brothers 2.jpg |
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11037 |
| Woodland gathering.jpg |
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11038 |
| Woodland headstone.jpg |
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11039 |
| Woodland headstone.jpg |
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11040 |
| Woodland Home This was the house the day the family moved in. |
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11041 |
| Woodland home 1937 Real estate photo of the home on 11th East that Dorothy and Phil bought in 1938. It would be their home for more than 60 years. |
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11042 |
| Woodland Home in Caerwent, Wales This same photo was published in The Alfred Woodland Family on page 15 in 1978 with the caption below: "House Grandfather, Alfred Woodland, left in Caerwent, Englnad. The one in which his wife ran the bakery. Still owned by Alfred. Bert Woodland lives in it now." |
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11043 |
| Woodland home, back of house Dorothy said that when they bought this home in suburban Salt Lake, the grass in the back yard was nearly waist high. |
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11044 |
| Woodland home, north side |
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11045 |
| Woodland House in Caerwent.jpg |
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11046 |
| Woodland Swing.jpg |
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11047 |
| Woodrow William West (1914-1982)
Woodrow William West and Shirley LaRue
Received from Mary Mathewson |
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11048 |
| Woodrow William West (1914-1982) & Effie Opal Kinder (1878-1966)
Received from Mary Mathewson |
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11049 |
| Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)
Library of Congress:
"Woodrow Wilson was president of Princeton University (1902–1910), governor of New Jersey (1911–1913), twenty-eighth president of the United States (1913–1921), and creator of the League of Nations.
Although he was sometimes caricatured as a northern academic, Wilson was born in Staunton, Virginia, and considered himself to be southern. As such, he was the first southerner elected president since Zachary Taylor in 1848, and brought to the office a progressive zeal for reform, both economic and social, as well as the typical mindset of the southern white political class, which considered African Americans second-class citizens, that contributed to his decision strictly to segregate the federal workforce. He is perhaps best known for leading the United States into the World War I (1914–1918), despite an election vow to do otherwise, and for helping to negotiate the resulting Treaty of Versailles. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1919." |
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11050 |
| Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924), Family Home, Augusta, GA
http://wilsonboyhoodhome.org/
419 Seventh Street, Augusta, GA 30901
"The Boyhood Home of President Woodrow Wilson was built in 1859 by local stove merchant, Aaron H. Jones, a native of Eastport, Maine. Jones, however, never occupied the house, selling it when it was new for $10,000 in February, 1860 to the Trustees of the First Presbyterian Church. Across Telfair Street from the church, the new house was a convenient location for the manse. The Rev. Dr. Joseph Ruggles Wilson, the minister, also received a raise from $2,500 to $3,000 per year. The First Presbyterian congregation was very pleased with its pastor, and by providing monetary and temporal comforts in this life, hoped to encourage him to remain with them for many years. Thus, 53 McIntosh Street, later known as 419 Seventh Street, would remain the official residence of the pastor of First Presbyterian Church for the next seventy years. . . . The Wilsons lived in the house for almost eleven years, witnessing the Civil War and Reconstruction. . . . Tommy's first memory was standing on the front gate when two men walked by exclaiming that Lincoln had been elected President and that there would be war.
At the end of that war, Tommy watched as Confederate President Jefferson Davis was brought through the streets of Augusta under guard of Union troops. In 1870, Tommy accompanied his father to see the great fallen Confederate hero, Robert E. Lee, during his last tour of the South. Later that year, the Southern Presbyterian Church called the Rev. Dr. Wilson to an important teaching position at its seminary in Columbia, South Carolina."
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