Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Charles Sumner (ur. 6 stycznia 1811 w Bostonie, zm. 11 marca 1874 w Waszyngtonie) – amerykański polityk i abolicjonista. Życiorys. Urodził się 6 stycznia 1811 w Bostonie. W 1830 roku ukończył studia na Uniwersytecie Harvarda, a trzy lata później Harvard Law School.

  2. Charles Sumner. Charles Sumner, født 6. januar 1811 i Boston, død 11. mars 1874 i Washington, D.C., var en amerikansk republikansk politiker og abolisjonist. Han var en av de ledende radikale republikanske slaverimotstandere som arbeidet for de frigitte slavenes rettigheter. Han representerte delstaten Massachusetts i USAs senat ifra 1851 ...

  3. Charles Sumner ( Boston, 6 de enero de 1811 - Washington D. C., 11 de marzo de 1874) fue un político y estadista estadounidense de Massachusetts. Un profesor universitario y un orador de gran alcance, Sumner fue el líder de las fuerzas antiesclavistas en Massachusetts y un líder de los republicanos radicales en el Senado de los Estados ...

  4. Charles Sumner Tainter ( Watertown, 25 de abril de 1854 — San Diego, 20 de abril de 1940) foi um fabricante, engenheiro e inventor de instrumentos científicos estadunidense, mais conhecido por suas colaborações com Alexander Graham Bell, Chichester Bell, o sogro de Alexander, Gardiner Hubbard, e por seu melhorias significativas para o ...

  5. Charles Sumner. Date of Birth - Death January 6, 1811 – March 11, 1874. Famous for his scathing criticism of the Kansas-Nebraska Act that provoked an attack upon himself in the Senate Chamber, Charles Sumner was a prominent voice of the anti-slavery North. Charles was born in Boston, on January 6, 1811, the son of a Harvard educated lawyer ...

  6. Edgar Charles Sumner Gibson, (1848–1924), Bishop of Gloucester. Alan George Sumner Gibson (1856–1922), Coadjutor Bishop of Cape Town from 1894 [8] Sophia Albertina Sumner (1823–1884), married the Rev. William Henry Ridley [9] George Henry Sumner (1824–1909), Bishop of Guildford, whose wife Mary founded the Mothers' Union.

  7. Charles Pinckney Sumner (January 20, 1776—April 24, 1839) was an American attorney, abolitionist, and politician who served as Sheriff of Suffolk County, Massachusetts from 1825 to 1838. He was an early proponent of racially integrated schools and shocked 19th-century Boston by opposing anti- miscegenation laws. [1]