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  1. 14 de jun. de 2024 · The estate was the summer home of lawyer Joseph Hodges Choate, who purchased the land from New York lawyer David Dudley Field in 1884. Interestingly, Field, whom Choate persuaded to sell the 40...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_HayJohn Hay - Wikipedia

    15 de jun. de 2024 · Much of the negotiation of a revised treaty, allowing the U.S. to fortify the canal, took place between Hay's replacement in London, Joseph H. Choate, and the British Foreign Secretary, Lord Lansdowne, and the second Hay–Pauncefote Treaty was ratified by the Senate by a large margin on December 6, 1901.

  3. 6 de jun. de 2024 · The museum “should serve not only for the instruction and entertainment of the people,” intoned the lawyer and diplomat Joseph Hodges Choate at the museum’s dedication in March 1880, “but should also show to the students and artisans of every branch of industry…what the past has accomplished for them to imitate and excel.”

  4. Há 4 dias · He spoke along with great orators of the day, including Mark Twain, Joseph Hodges Choate, and Robert Curtis Ogden; it was the start of a capital campaign to raise $1,800,000 (~$45.8 million in 2023) for the school.

  5. berkshires.com › locations › naumkeagNaumkeag | Berkshires

    Há 4 dias · Joseph Choate, a leading 19th-century attorney, hired the architectural firm of McKim, Mead, & White to design the 44-room “cottage,” Naumkeag, which would serve as a summer retreat for three generations of Choates.

  6. 9 de jun. de 2024 · national themselves: Harvard alumnus and New York lawyer Joseph Hodges Choate spoke in 1882 of the “radical change” that Harvard had undergone, as it “today presents . . . to the world a great and national uni- versity, and the national features and relations of Harvard are now its most striking and attractive ones.” 18 ...

  7. Há 3 dias · Reverential Restoration. I was browsing through the Flikr photographs of the Salem State Archives and Special Collections the other day, when I came across several photographs of crowds in and around the Gardner-Pingree House on Essex Street. This is one of the Peabody Essex Museum’s houses, and it is seldom open, so these crowds caught my eye.