Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Detail,_grave_of_Stephen_Decatur.jpg (372 × 356 pixels, file size: 32 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Stephen Decatur Sr. (June 1751 – November 11, 1808) was a United States Navy officer and privateer who served in the American Revolutionary War and the Quasi-War. He was commissioned as a captain in the United States Navy, and was the father of Stephen Decatur .
The Old City Cemetery, also known as Linwood Cemetery, is a 28.7-acre (11.6 ha) [1] cemetery on what is now Linwood Boulevard, in Columbus, Georgia. It dates from 1828, when the town of Columbus was founded, or before. It appears in surveyor Edward Lloyd Thomas's original plan for the city. The cemetery consists mostly of rectangular family ...
Columbus, Ohio: Chas. Scott's Steam Press. 1848. hdl:2027/uc1.b3831116. Acts of a Local Nature Passed by the Forty-Eighth General Assembly of the State of Ohio, Begun and Held in the City of Columbus December 3, 1849 and in the Forty-Eighth Year of Said State. Volume XLVIII. Columbus, Ohio: Scott& Bascom. 1850. hdl:2027/osu.32437011486079.
The Stephen Decatur House Museum: Washington, D.C. Archived April 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine; Decatur House: A Home of the Rich and Powerful: National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan; Documents, Official and Unofficial, Relating to the Case of the Capture and Destruction of the Frigate Philadelphia at Tripoli ...
Stephen A. Decatur (born 1813, [1] died 1888 [2] [3] or 1889 [1]), born Stephen Decatur Bross and often referred to as Commodore Decatur, [2] was one of the earliest settlers in Nebraska. He was born and educated in the East, where he became a school teacher and started a family.
You can find instant answers on our AOL Mail help page. Should you need additional assistance we have experts available around the clock at 800-730-2563.
The cemetery was established in part to replace the old St. Patrick's Cemetery, which was located in downtown Columbus and had become encircled by the city's growth. [4] A plot of just over 25 acres (10 ha) of land, outside the city's original limits, was purchased in 1865 by John F. Zimmer in trust for the Diocese of Columbus, and burials on the site also began that year. [1]