Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. William Cranch served as a federal judge for more than five decades, and was also reporter of decisions for the supreme court of the united states from 1801 to 1815. Cranch was born July 17, 1769, in Weymouth, Massachusetts. His father, Richard Cranch, was a member of the Massachusetts Legislature and judge of the court of common pleas, and his ...

  2. 14 de abr. de 2023 · Vega est la première étoile en dehors de notre Soleil à avoir été photographiée. L'image a été prise en 1850 par John Adams Whipple et William Cranch Bond en utilisant le télescope "The Great Refractor" de l'observatoire du Collège de Harvard avec une technique de daguerréotype et une exposition de 100 secondes.

  3. William Cranch (1769–1855), a Harvard graduate and nephew of Abigail Adams, came to Washington from Massachusetts in 1794. In February 1801, John Adams nominated him to the U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Columbia, a nomination approved by the Senate on 3 Mch., the day before TJ took office.

  4. William Cranch Bond. William Cranch Bond. William Cranch Bond (* 9. September 1789 in Falmouth, District of Maine, Mass. (heutiges Portland, Maine ), USA; † 29. Januar 1859 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA) war ein amerikanischer Astronom. Er entdeckte Hyperion, den achten Mond des Planeten Saturn . Bond war hauptsächlich Autodidakt und ...

  5. Cranch, William, 1769-1855 Call number MssCol 4262 Physical description.1 linear feet (1 folder) Preferred Citation William Cranch papers, Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library Repository Manuscripts and Archives Division Access to materials Request an in-person research appointment.

  6. William Cranch 是其中的第2人, 编纂了第5-13卷,共9卷(即1–9 Cranch)。 United States Reports 的前90卷,出版时的卷名,除了上面提到的简写外,还会带上编纂者的名字和序号。

  7. cranch, william (1779–1855) President john adams in March 1801 commissioned his nephew, William Cranch, assistant judge of the newly created Circuit Court for the district of columbia. President thomas jefferson in 1806 surprised Cranch, a loyal Federalist, by elevating him to chief judge, a post he filled until his death, half a century later.