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  1. Oct 10, 2012 · Description: American-German painter, artist and architectural draftsperson: Date of birth/death: 24 May 1816 18 July 1868 Location of birth/death

  2. Gallaudet Memorial by Daniel Chester French (1925) at American School for the Deaf. During the winter of 1818–1819, the American School for the Deaf became the first school of primary and secondary education to receive aid from the federal government when it was granted $300,000 (equivalent to $8.47 million in 2023).

  3. Birthplace of Filippo Mazzei in Poggio a Caiano. Mazzei was born in Poggio a Caiano in Tuscany as a son of Domenico and Elisabetta. [1] After his studies in medicine between Prato and Florence, in 1752, following disagreements with his older brother Jacopo over the management of the family heritage, he settled in Pisa [2] and then in Livorno, practicing as a doctor but after only two years he ...

  4. John Gregg Fee (September 9, 1816 – January 11, 1901) was an abolitionist, minister and educator, the founder of the town of Berea, Kentucky, The Church of Christ, Union in Berea (1853), Berea College (1855), the first in the U.S. South with interracial and coeducational admissions, and late in his life another congregation that would become First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 2 ...

  5. Treaty of 1818 at Wikisource The Convention respecting fisheries, boundary and the restoration of slaves , also known as the London Convention , Anglo-American Convention of 1818 , Convention of 1818 , or simply the Treaty of 1818 , is an international treaty signed in 1818 between the United States and the United Kingdom .

  6. Influential abolitionist Theodore Weld, assisted by his new wife Angelina Grimké and her sister Sarah, exposes the reality of American slavery in American Slavery As It Is. He uses as evidence the slave owners' own words, as found in Southern newspaper advertisements and articles seeking the recapture of fugitives.

  7. John Lathrop (1740-1816) was a congregationalist minister in Boston, Massachusetts, during the revolutionary and early republic periods.. Lathrop was born 1740 and served as minister of the Second Church, Boston, 1768-1816, when it was located in the North End—first on North Square, and after 1779, on Hanover Street.

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