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The company, W. H. Freeman and Company Publishing [1] was founded in 1946 by William H. Freeman Jr., [2] who had been a salesman and editor at Macmillan Publishing. Freeman later founded Freeman, Cooper and Company in San Francisco. [3] [4] [5] [6]
Battle of Cowpens; Part of the American Revolutionary War: The Battle of Cowpens, painted by William Ranney in 1845. The scene depicts an unnamed black man (left), thought to be Colonel William Washington's waiter, [1] firing his pistol and saving the life of Colonel Washington (on white horse in center).
The Cherry Hill synagogue seats 2,000 people, has a school wing with 19 classrooms, and in 2002 expanded to include a Green Center for Jewish Learning, an expansion of 13,000-square-foot (1,200 m 2), that contains a multimedia resource center and seven high school classrooms. [7]
Macmillan Education was created as an imprint and division of the broader Macmillan publishing business in the UK in the early 1970s. [1] [2] In 1994 it became legally framed within Macmillan Education Ltd, a company in the Macmillan group. [3]
Founded by Patrick Olson in 1992, Hayden-McNeil Publishing is located in Plymouth, MI, and is a subsidiary of Macmillan Publishers. [2] Macmillan Publishers acquired Hayden-McNeil Publishing in 2008, providing for future growth through access to Macmillan's content, educational technology, and distribution assets. [3]
Turner Sargent at the Frankfurt Book Fair 2018. John Turner Sargent Jr. (born c. 1957) is an American book publisher; he was the CEO of Macmillan Publishers USA, and is the executive vice president of the Georg von Holtzbrinck Publishing Group, where he oversees the global trade operations in the U.S., U.K., Germany, and Australia as well as Macmillan Learning, the company's US-based higher ...
The MacMillan Center was created in the 1960s as the Concilium on International and Area Studies and later renamed in the 1980s as the Yale Center for International and Area Studies (YCIAS). [4] In April 2006, YCIAS was renamed as The Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies at Yale. [5] [6]
The English name was given to the mountain by Darrington postmaster W. C. Hiles in 1894, who noted that a snowpatch on the mountain resembled a white horse owned by pioneer Fred Olds that the townspeople were searching for. [3] [6] Whitehorse Mountain appears in the movie War Games starring Matthew Broderick.