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Roger sherman
Roger sherman













roger sherman

The Menace of Mechanical Music, by John Philip Sousa.

roger sherman

This was Connecticut: images of a vanished world, by T. The Union League Club of New Haven - House Rules. The Union League Club opens new building most auspiciously. The corner stone of the addition to the Union League Club building was laid with fitting ceremonies. Interesting historical paper read by Judge Baldwin last night. A mad world and its inhabitants, by Julius Chambers. Samuel Langhorne Clemens, a doctor of letters. Yale’s bicentennial: the gown laid aside. The celebration of the two hundredth anniversary of the founding of Yale University, October the twentieth to October the twenty-third, A. Decorations: festoons of bunting, imported lanterns. The development of the Green as a public square, by Henry Taylor Blake. Howland, with illustrations by Orson Lowell. Ode to the Frog of the Bandusian Font, by Henry Augustin Beers. The New Haven Symphony Orchestra, by Morris Steinert. Jean Pardee on, “The Yale man Up-to-Date.” Charles Ives on, “After the Ball.” Vanderbilt Hall, gift of Cornelius Vanderbilt in memory of his son. The Warner, student apartments at 1044 Chapel street, by Henry A. The League gave their first shore dinner. Truly living whist is played on the stage. With the help of a few extra players and a piano, by Charles Ives. The only perfectly educated school of horses in the world. Republican wine bibers, and the first annual banquet of the club. 1888Įvery wheel leaves its print upon the soil, by Frederick Douglass. The improvements completed, a vast change in the appearance of the Hyperion. The Republican League purchases the club house on Chapel street. Dedication of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument, on East Rock. Bunnell takes over the lease on May 1, and from that time it will be known as the Hyperion. Winchell takes legal possession and receives the keys. On a dark and stormy night, the New Haven Yacht Club’s first concert. Three prominent men descended from Roger Sherman. 1885Ī Model State Capitol (1885), by Frank Opel. Yale’s first banjo club, by Marshall Bartholomew. Rode on a handcar: Mary Anderson’s exciting effort to fill an engagement. The Carriage Builders’ Convention: inside, a grand banquet, and large tents set up behind Carll’s Opera House. Red Cloud visits a friend: the great Indian chief is the guest of Prof. 1882Īn account of the Junior Promenade of ’82, by Frederick W. Rogers. Peter Carll’s Opera House: from construction to the grand opening night. Merwin house, the William Bartlett house, and the Eighmie patent shirt. The Connecticut shore of the Sound, illustrated by William M. Presentation of the Roger Sherman watch to General William Tecumseh Sherman. 1865įrederick Douglass attended the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln. Gaius Fenn Warner, iron magnate, purchased the Roger Sherman plot, and built a new house, with a double bow front, by architect Henry Austin. The Wide-Awakes of Connecticut: a most remarkable scene. The Rail Splitter speech in New Haven, by Abraham Lincoln. We revere thee, Rock, that long has stood. 1825Īn American Empire style sofa made in about 1825, by Frances Phipps. New Haven Green and the Grove Street Cemetery, by Ellen Strong Bartlett. Among the pithy sayings of Roger Sherman - a Connecticut man. To George Washington, President of the United States of America. The stagecoach tour through New England, when President George Washington dropped in for tea. 1787Ĭharacter sketch of Roger Sherman, by William Pierce. 1786Ī plan of part of Chapel Street, showing the buildings and occupants. Roger Sherman swapped land with a neighbor, and his store accepted non-currency as payment. The Bonhomme Richard and the Serapis fought a battle without parallel in naval history. The British invaded New Haven and ransacked Roger Sherman’s home. Portrait of Roger Sherman, by Ralph Earl. General George Washington reviewed the local troops on the Green, accompanied by Noah Webster with his fife. The first engraving in New Haven, by Amos Doolittle and Ralph Earl.

roger sherman

Roger Sherman completed building his house. Roger Sherman moved to New Haven, and opened a store across from Yale College. 1684Ī map of the plan of New Haven when there were only 157 houses, drawn by Joseph Brown. How the people lived in New Haven Colony. The Southernmost holding of New Haven Colony. 1641Īscent of Agiocochook, by Darby Field and two Abenaki guides. The landing at Quinnipiac, by Ernest Hickock Baldwin. The landforms of Connecticut, by Joseph Bixby Hoyt.Īn ethnic history of New Haven: Pre-1638.īy the long tidal river, by Arthur E.















Roger sherman