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- Boston Tea Party (4518 bytes)
1: ...'Boston Tea Party''' was a political protest by [[Boston, Massachusetts]] residents against the [[Kingdom ...
2: ...on tea party.jpg|thumb|Destruction of tea at the "Boston Tea party".]]
3: ...reated/published: [[1784]]. Artist: [[Daniel Chodowiecki]]. Engraver: Daniel Berger.]]
5: ...nded by [[John Adams]] and eventually the charges were dropped, though he later faced several hundred...
7: ...ies]] without the usual colonial tax, thereby allowing them to undercut the prices of the colonial me... - Boston, Massachusetts (36071 bytes)
2: city = Boston |
4: nickname = "Beantown," "The Hub," "Athens of America" |
6: seal = boston_city_seal.jpg |
7: map = MAMap-doton-Boston.png |
13: area water = 106.7 km² (41.2 mi²) | - Boston Terrier (4553 bytes)
1: ...r the breed table displayed on the page. Scroll down to get to the main text --->
4: !Boston Terrier
6: ...rindleStand w.jpg|thumb|250px|none|Boston Terrier with brindle coat]]
13: |Boston Bull
15: |Boston Bull & Terrier
Page text matches
- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
35: | [[Delaware]]
36: | [[Dover, Delaware|Dover]]
47: | [[Hawaii]]
48: | [[Honolulu, Hawaii|Honolulu]]
53: ...05]] — [[1913]], [[1919]] — [[1920]] (wings added) - Timeline of the united states history 1990 to present (16426 bytes)
4: ...allons of oil into the sea. The spill becomes the worst oil spill in American history.
6: ....S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords is severely wounded in an assassination attempt
11: ...st single U.S. tornado since the advent of modern weather forecasting
12: ... to a law enforcement officer. She was released a week later because of credit for time served.
13: ..., ending the 30-year shuttle program, which began with the launch of Space Shuttle Columbia on April ... - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
2: ...May 22]], [[1844]] – [[June 14]], [[1926]]) was an [[United States|American]] painter.
4: ...lieved travel was a way to learn, and before she was 10 years old, she visited many of the capitals ...
6: ... to study the [[Old Masters|old masters]] on her own and in [[1866]] she moved to Paris.
8: ... her to paint copies of paintings in Italy, after which she traveled about Europe.
10: ...ums, her style matured, and in Paris, she studied with [[Camille Pissarro]]. - Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
2: ...ates|American]] [[aviator]], known for breaking new ground for female pilots, and remembered for her ...
6: ...a spent the first twelve years of her life living with her mother's parents.
8: ...bbyist. She was even featured in local newspapers while she taught English.
10: ...rhart referred to the marriage as a "partnership" with "dual control."
14: ... Lindbergh]]'s solo flight. However, strong north winds, icy conditions and mechanical problems force... - Phillis Wheatley (3014 bytes)
1: [[image:Phillis_Wheatley.jpg|thumb|right|Phillis Wheatley]]
3: ...shed poet, with her first poem published when she was only 13.
5: ...Huntingdon]] and the [[Earl of Dartmouth]] helped with the publication.
7: ...n]] was among the harshest critics of her poetry, writing "The heroes of [[the Dunciad]] are to her, ...
9: ...a servant. Neither hard work nor artistic ability were to bring her prosperity, and she died in pover... - Jackie Cochran (7825 bytes)
1: ...' ([[May 11]], [[1906]] - [[August 7]], [[1980]]) was a pioneer [[United States|American]] [[aviatrix...
4: ...orking as a hairdresser until she wound up in [[New York City]]. There, she used her looks and drivin...
6: ...nd [[1954]] the [[Associated Press]] named her "''Woman of the Year in Business''."
8: ... products. Years later, her husband used his Hollywood connections to get [[Marilyn Monroe]] to endor...
10: ...e up a story about being adopted to avoid dealing with the reality of her estranged and impoverished ... - Dorothea Dix (5868 bytes)
2: ...tunately for her legacy, these state hospitals grew into enormous "museums of madness" that served as...
4: ...ginning her career as a reformer before the first woman graduated from a U.S. [[medical school]].
6: ...er of insane inmates in disgusting circumstances, which led her to approach the [[Massachusetts]] leg...
8: ...ng]], and began her career as a [[teacher]] and [[writer]].
10: ...he Rathbone family, eminent [[Quaker]] reformers, where she recovered. - Anna Maxwell (1551 bytes)
1: <table align=right><tr><td>[[image:Maxwell4325.jpg]]</td></tr></table>
2: '''Anna Caroline Maxwell''' [[March 14]], [[1851]] - [[January 2]], [[1...
4: Her pioneering activities were crucial to the growth of professional nursing in the US.
6: ...tal|Presbyterian Hospital]] in [[Manhattan]], [[New York]] from 1892-1921.
8: ...m for US army nurses. During World War I, France awarded her the [[Medaille de l'Hygiene Publique]] (... - Julia Child (8199 bytes)
2: ...nd the television series ''[[The French Chef]]'', which premiered in 1963.
4: == Youth and World War II ==
6: ...f Strategic Services]] (OSS) after being turned down by the [[United States Navy | Navy]] for being t...
8: ...ranking OSS cartographer, and later to [[China]], where she received the Emblem of Meritorious Civili...
10: ...tment]] assigned Mr. Child as an exhibits officer with the [[United States Information Agency | U.S. ... - Nicole Kidman (11782 bytes)
1: ...rn [[June 20]], [[1967]]) is an [[Academy Award]] winning [[Australia|Australian]] [[actress]], [[pro...
2: ... her father was a cancer research specialist in [[Washington, D.C]].
3: ...rned to Australia when Nicole was four years old, when Tony Kidman took on a lectureship at the [[Uni...
8: ...]], but dropped out when her mother was diagnosed with breast cancer, as Kidman concentrated on her f...
10: ...(1991). In 1989 she appeared in ''[[Dead Calm]]'' which gained her notice in the United States. - Mia Hamm (6476 bytes)
1: ...d for 17 years as a member of the [[United States women's national soccer team]].
3: ...r consecutive [[NCAA]] women's championships. She was an All-American and [[Atlantic Coast Conference...
5: ...goals with 103, assists with 72, and total points with 278.
7: ... for ''soccer player of the year'' and the other two for ''Female Athlete of the Year''.
9: ...[[China women's national football team|China]] to win the gold medal. - Martina Navratilova (16246 bytes)
3: ...omen's singles title at [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] a record 9 times.
5: ...962]] her mother Jana married Miroslav Navrátil, who became her first tennis coach. Martina then too...
9: ...n [[1973]], aged 16, she turned professional. She won her first professional singles title in [[Orlan...
11: ... her determination to reach the top of the game saw her embark on a punishing routine to get herself ...
13: ...ty]] and informed them that she wished to defect. Within a month, she received a [[Green Card]]. - Kidney (12846 bytes)
3: ...from the [[blood]] and excrete them, along with [[water]], as [[urine]]. The medical field that studi...
7: ...ch side of the [[spine (anatomy)|spine]] just below the [[liver]] and [[spleen]]. [[Superior]] to eac...
9: ... L3, and the right kidney usually lies slightly lower than the left in order to accommodate the [[liv...
11: ... of fat (the perirenal fat and the pararenal fat) which help to cushion it.
13: ...behind.jpg|thumb|250px|Kidneys viewed from behind with spine removed]] - Ceramics (15941 bytes)
1: ...om clay and other ceramic materials. This article will explore the history, techniques, cultural sign...
3: ...tudio.png|thumb|right|350px|Illustration of a man working in his pottery studio]]
7: ... encompasses the creation of anything from earthenware and porcelain to decorative tiles and modern s...
10:
12: ...renowned for its red and black figure techniques, while Chinese ceramics are famous for their porcela... - George Washington (29551 bytes)
1: {{Infobox President | name=George Washington
4: | wh image name=Gw1.gif
11: | place of birth=[[Westmoreland County, Virginia|Westmoreland]], [[Virginia]]
15: | wife=[[Martha Washington]]
19: ...ontinental Army]] in the [[American Revolutionary War]] ([[1775]]–[[1783]]) and later the first... - John Hancock (8787 bytes)
5: ...show that Hancock always wrote his signature this way.
8: ...nherited the fortune and business, making him the wealthiest man in Massachusetts at the time.
10: ...and virtuously, the same. With his generosity, he was regarded as a man of integrity and honor.
13: ...d him to resist the [[Stamp Act 1765|Stamp Act]], which attempted to restrict colonial trading.
15: ...aws. This caused a [[riot]] among some infuriated Bostonians, depending as they did on the supplies on boa... - John Adams (18716 bytes)
7: | preceded=[[George Washington]]
14: | wife=[[Abigail Adams]]
18: ... United States]]. His son, [[John Quincy Adams]], was the sixth President of the United States ([[182...
22: ...o [[Massachusetts]] in about [[1636]]; his mother was Susanna Boylston Adams.
24: ... of this scene; it is instructive to compare the two accounts. - John Quincy Adams (11783 bytes)
8: | succeeded=[[Andrew Jackson]]
13: | place of death=[[Washington, D.C.]]
14: | wife=[[Louisa Catherine (Johnson) Adams]]
16: | vicepresident=[[John Caldwell Calhoun]]
18: ...d States|President]] of the [[United States]]. He was the son of President [[John Adams]] and First L... - Andrew Jackson (23546 bytes)
1: {{Infobox President | name=Andrew Jackson
10: | place of birth= [[Waxhaw, North Carolina|Waxhaws area]] of [[North Carolina]]
14: | wife= [[Rachel Donelson Robards Jackson]]
18: ...[War of 1812]] and the [[American Civil War|Civil War]].
22: ...s. Jackson admired [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] for his willingness to contest British military supremacy. - Franklin Pierce (19017 bytes)
10: | place of birth=[[Hillsborough]], [[New Hampshire]]
13: | place of death=[[Concord]], [[New Hampshire]]
14: | wife=[[Jane Pierce]]
16: | vicepresident=[[William R. King]]
18: ...[[William R. King]] won in a landslide, beating [[Winfield Scott]] by a 50 to 44 percent margin in th...
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