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Melville Reuben Bissell (September 25, 1843 – March 15, 1889) was an American entrepreneur who invented the modern carpet sweeper. [1] The Bissell corporation is named after him. Life and career
The county library system is headquartered on the property of 5749 South Loop East. [2] It is in a 83,385-square-foot (7,746.7 m 2) one story building. [3]It was formerly headquartered at 8080 El Rio Street. [4]
Anna Bissell was born on 2nd December 1846 in River John, Nova Scotia, to William and Eleanor Sutherland. They moved to Wisconsin when Anna was a child. [6] Bissell's husband was Melville Reuben Bissell. They had five children. In 1889, Bissell's husband died from pneumonia. On November 8, 1934, Bissell died in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
The Pennsylvania Library Association (PaLA) is the professional association for librarians in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. [1] It represents about 2,000 members affiliated with public , academic , special , and school libraries throughout the state, and was founded in 1901.
The W. L. D. Johnson Neighborhood Library is a Houston Public Library branch in Houston, Texas. It replaced the Carnegie Colored Library , a Carnegie Library established by Houston's African American community in the Fourth Ward that was demolished for Interstate Highway 45 construction in 1962.
In 2009, they outpaced Hoover to take the number one position for floor-care sales in North America. [5] Their top-selling carpet shampooer is Bissell ProHeat 2x Revolution Pet Pro [9] which is the market leader as of 2020. It was the title sponsor for the Bissell Pro Cycling Team. [10] Bissell also has a pet foundation. [11]
Houston Texans YMCA. The Alice McKean Young Neighborhood Library of the Houston Public Library is within Palm Center. [12] The groundbreaking for the new Young Library building was held on Friday December 19, 2014. [13] The Harris Health System Dental Center is in Palm Center. [14] Harris County Constable Precinct 7 has its offices in Palm Center.
The library's first permanent location was in Old Main, with 1,500 books in agriculture and the sciences. [1] In 1904, the library was moved to the Carnegie Building (then "Carnegie Library"), which provided a 50,000 book capacity. By 1940, the library's collection had grown to 150,000, overcrowding Carnegie by three times its capacity.