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Mundell was born in 1912, and he died on Christmas Eve 1997, in a 200-year-old farmhouse in South Newfane, Vermont, in the same room in which he was born. [2] He attended Middlebury College but dropped out during the Depression to support his family. [3]
Ronald Read, philanthropist, investor, janitor, and gas station attendant who received media coverage after his death in 2014 due to bequeathing US$1.2 million to Brooks Memorial Library and $4.8 million to Brattleboro Memorial Hospital.
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[5] [7] He donated $4.8 million to Brattleboro Memorial Hospital [4] and $1.2 million to Brooks Memorial Library, [4] which at the time had a $600,000 budget and a $600,000 endowment and was affected by the local budget squeeze like other libraries in the state. [2] Both bequests were the largest donations the institutions had received. [4]
The Brattleboro Daily Reformer celebrated yesterday its 15th anniversary as a daily. As a weekly publication The Reformer dates back to the dim and distant date of 1876, but its debut as a daily – with that word ‘Daily’ in emphatic black-face letter-spaced Gothic type on its first page – came on Monday, March 3, 1913.
Brattleboro, Vermont, US. Occupation: Theoretical physicist: John Hartley Brodie (May 6, 1969 [1] – January 28, 2006), was an American theoretical physicist ...
Timothy J. "Tim" O'Connor Jr. was born in Brattleboro, Vermont, on December 13, 1936. He graduated from College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts and received his law degree from Georgetown University Law Center, afterwards beginning a practice in Brattleboro. From 1965 to 1967 O'Connor served as Brattleboro's Municipal Court Judge. [1]
In 1905, Fuller became a stenographer, legal secretary, and bookkeeper at the Ludlow law firm of John G. Sargent, William W. Stickney, and Paul A. Chase. [8] During Sargent's service as Vermont Attorney General from 1908 to 1912, Fuller was his legal secretary and stenographer as he traveled throughout the state to carry out the duties of his office.