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Thomas Putnam Fenner was born on November 22, 1829, in Providence, Rhode Island. [1] He was named after his ancestor, Major Thomas Fenner, [2] who is also the namesake of the Thomas Fenner House historic site in Cranston, Rhode Island. [3] In his late teenage years he served in the United States Cavalry during the Mexican–American War (1846 ...
Beane Brothers was dissolved about 1915, and in 1916 Alph Beane entered into a new brokerage firm Fenner, Gatling & Beane. Beane's partner, Charles E. Fenner, came from a distinguished New Orleans family, as his cousin was a justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court. Confederate president Jefferson Davis died in the Fenner home in New Orleans in ...
The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2015.. Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:
[The New York Times obituary, apparently incorrectly, states that he was born in New Orleans.] His father Darwin Ponton Fenner was serving as United States consul to Guatemala when Fenner was born. His father died while serving abroad, and following his father's death Fenner relocated to New Orleans, being 12 years old at the time. [2] [1] [3]
Roswell Fenner Cottrell (January 17, 1814 – March 22, 1892) was a preacher, counselor, writer, hymnist and poet who came from a family of Seventh Day Baptists.He was the son of John Cottrell (1774–1857) and Mary Polly Stillman (1779–1852) [4] After joining the sabbatarian Adventists who eventually organized the Seventh-day Adventist Church, he became one of their leading advocates.
Charles Erasmus Fenner (1834–1911), a justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court, in whose home Confederate President Jefferson Davis died in 1889 Charles Erasmus Fenner, Jr. (1876–1963), founding partner of New Orleans' Fenner & Beane , a brokerage firm which merged in 1941 to become Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Beane
In January 1934, 15-year-old Landis married her first husband, 19-year-old Irving Wheeler. Her mother had the marriage annulled in February 1934. Landis persuaded her father, Alfred Ridste (who had left the family shortly after Landis was born and who, by coincidence, lived near the family in San Bernardino), to allow her to remarry Wheeler.
The Thomas Fenner House or the "Sam Joy Place" is a historic stone-ender house in Cranston, Rhode Island. It the oldest surviving house in the Providence Plantations portion of Rhode Island . The only older structure in the state is the White Horse Tavern in Newport.