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The Cambridge of eighteen hundred and ninety-six: a picture of the city and its industries fifty years after its incorporation (ed. Arthur Gilman) 2 2 Browse Search
Henry Morton Stanley, Dorothy Stanley, The Autobiography of Sir Henry Morton Stanley 1 1 Browse Search
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 1 1 Browse Search
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Henry Morton Stanley, Dorothy Stanley, The Autobiography of Sir Henry Morton Stanley, part 2.13, chapter 2.25 (search)
munion with his loved dead! December 12th, 1893. Sir Charles and Lady, Euan Smith and wife, Mr. E. L. Berkley, of Zanzibar, and Mr. H. Babington Smith lunched with us. Sir Charles told me that he once said to Emin Pasha, Well, Pasha, the whole of Europe is expecting you! There are lots of invitations awaiting your convenience! Emin replied, Ah! I can't go yet. I must kill some more Arabs. Poor old fellow! he did kill a few, and then came a time when the Arabs killed him! January 1st, 1894. Sir Samuel White Baker died yesterday. Some years ago I had the photographs of the four greatest travellers of the period, Livingstone, Burton, Speke, and Baker, enlarged, and framed them all together. They are all dead now, Baker being the last to go! Each was grand in his own way: Livingstone, as a missionary explorer, and the first of the four to begin the work of making known the unexplored heart of Africa, and he was deservedly the most famous; Burton, as a restless wanderer
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Louisiana, (search)
ns of eleven Italians......March 14, 1891 Officers of the Louisiana lottery indieted by the grand jury in Sioux Falls, N. D., under United States laws......Oct. 23, 1891 John A. Morris, in a letter, withdraws his proposition for the renewal of the charter of the Louisiana lottery......Feb. 4, 1892 Convention of United Confederate Veterans meets at New Orleans......April 8, 1892 Proposed constitutional amendment to continue the Louisiana State lottery for twenty-five years from Jan. 1, 1894, is rejected by vote at State election......April 19, 1892 Monument erected to David C. Hennessy (assassinated by Mafia in 1890) by the people of New Orleans, is unveiled at Metarie Cemetery......May 30, 1892 Nicaragua Canal convention opens in New Orleans; delegates from every State and Territory......Nov. 30, 1892 United States Senator Randall L. Gibson dies at Hot Springs, Ark.......Dec. 15, 1892 Donaldson Caffrey appointed by Governor Foster United States Senator to fill
Mount Auburn. This parish was taken from Cambridge and Watertown, and is bounded in Cambridge by Coolidge, Elmwood, Lexington, and Concord avenues. The church building is in Watertown, but the larger portion of the congregation are inhabitants of Cambridge. On August 27, 1893, the corner-stone of this edifice was laid, the construction having been placed in charge of the Rev. Robert P. Stack, of Watertown. This church is not yet completed, though services have been held there since January 1, 1894. After the decease of Father Stack, the Rev. Thomas W. Coughlin was appointed its pastor, and a parish was created January 1, 1896. Capacity, five hundred. Catholic population of parish, seven hundred and fifty. The Catholic Union. The Catholic Union was founded in 1894; its purpose is literary and social, and to improve the Catholic people of Cambridge. It has a membership of two hundred and fourteen, and during the winter lectures on Catholic subjects are given, and they are
8807 persons.3,660 square feet. January 1, 188125 persons. January 1, 188235 persons. January 1, 188340 persons.17, 7 00 square feet. January 1, 188459 persons. January 1, 188565 persons. January 1, 188689 persons. January 1, 1887104 persons.58,831 square feet. January 1, 1888134 persons. January 1, 1889148 persons. January 1, 1890163 persons. January 1, 1891181 persons. January 1, 189216 persons. January 1, 1893280 persons.178, 765 square feet. January 1, 1894366 persons. January 1, 1895422 persons. January 1, 1896975 persons.247,530 square feet. While the original manufacture of the company was hydraulic hose, —still one of its largest products, the annual output reaching many million feet,—the energy of Mr. Cowen, responding to the demand created by Mr. Davis, gradually extended the scope of its business, and belting, packing, gaskets, mould-work, mechanical goods of all kinds, almost everything in rubber except clothing and shoe