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The LaFollette House (also known as Glen Oaks [2]) is a historic house in LaFollette, Tennessee, U.S.A.. It was built in the 1890s for Grant LaFollette and Harvey Marion LaFollette, two brothers who owned the LaFollette Coal and Iron Company. [3] The LaFollette brothers also built the North Tennessee Railroad. [3]
LaFollette is a city in Campbell County, Tennessee, United States. Its population was 7,456 at the 2010 census , [ 5 ] with an estimated population in 2018 of 6,737. [ 6 ] It is the principal city of the LaFollette, Tennessee micropolitan statistical area , which includes all of Campbell County, and is a component of the Knoxville Metropolitan ...
LaFollette House may refer to: LaFollette House (LaFollette, Tennessee), listed on the NRHP in Tennessee; Robert M. La Follette House, Maple Bluff, Wisconsin, listed ...
La Follette–Bulwinkle Act or Venereal Diseases Control and Prevention Act of 1938 sanctioned federal assistance to U.S. states establishing preventive healthcare for venereal diseases. The United States federal statute commissioned the United States Public Health Service for demonstrations, investigations, and studies as related to the ...
La Follette family; Belle Case La Follette, (1859–1931), women's suffrage activist in Wisconsin; Bronson La Follette (1936–2018), Wisconsin Attorney General, 1965–1969 and 1975–1987; Charles M. La Follette (1898–1974), Congressman from Indiana; Chester La Follette (1897–1993), American painter
An eye examination, commonly known as an eye test, [1] is a series of tests performed to assess vision and ability to focus on and discern objects. [2] It also includes other tests and examinations of the eyes. [2] Eye examinations are primarily performed by an optometrist, ophthalmologist, or an orthoptist.
The Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute, also referred to as the Wilmer Eye Institute, is a component of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Ophthalmologist William Holland Wilmer opened the Wilmer Eye Institute in 1925.
Robert M. La Follette House is a historic house located at 733 Lakewood Boulevard in Maple Bluff, Wisconsin, United States. The house was the home of Robert M. La Follette, Wisconsin governor and U.S. Congressman and presidential candidate, from 1905 until his death in 1925. [3] It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1964. [2] [4]