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Joseph Ray Watkins was the second son and third child of Reverend Benjamin Utter Watkins and Sophronia (Keeler) Watkins. He was born in Cincinnati on August 21, 1840. Joseph and his older brother were educated at the local public schools. Watkins' father sold their homestead in 1862 and moved the family to Minnesota.
William S. Groesbeck – lawyer, Democratic congressman, 1857–1859; John A. Gurley – Republican congressman, 1859–1863; George W. Hayes – slave, Republican Ohio House of Representatives member; William E. Hess – Republican congressman, 1929–1937, 1939–1949, 1951–1961; Dave Hobson – former Republican congressman
Watkins and Scorer were to move their practice around 1871 to St Edmond's Chambers, on the corner of Bank Street with Silver Street, a building that was designed by William Scorer. Two of Watkin's sons, William Gregory Watkins and Henry (or Harry) Garnham Watkins also became architects. William Gregory (1869-1859) was articled to his father and ...
This included, Nathan Bryan Whitfield, William III's nephew, who became the Counselor of State for the State of North Carolina and was a State Senator. He was later commissioned to Major General rank to succeed his father for the militia. His son, Dr. Bryan Watkins Whitfield, was pardoned by U.S. President Andrew Johnson on September 12, 1865.
William Alfred Henry III (January 24, 1950 – June 28, 1994) was an American cultural critic and Pulitzer Prize-winning author. [1] [2] Career.
William Henry (1734–1785) was the son of John and Sarah Winston Syme Henry. William Henry lived in Virginia and served in the House of Burgesses. He was elected to the Assembly as a member from Fluvanna County. [1] He was the older brother of Founding Father Patrick Henry, who is known for his famous "Give me Liberty or give me Death!" speech.
Henry William Watkins (19 January 1844 – 31 August 1922) was an Anglican priest, academic and author. [1] [2] [3] [4]Born in Abergavenny on 19 January 1844, [5] he was educated at King's College London [6] and Balliol College, Oxford. [7]
Watkins was born in about 1803 in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of William Watkins, a founding trustee of the Sharp Street Methodist Church. [1]Watkins attended the Bethel Charity School, which Daniel Coker founded as a school for black children in 1807, despite Maryland laws forbidding the education of black people. [2]