Ads
related to: auburn ny history book review editor
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
He was born on February 5, 1914, in Auburn, Cayuga County, New York, [1] the son of Edwin Flint Metcalf and Bertha (Rich) Metcalf. He graduated from Northwood School in 1932, from Princeton University in 1936; and from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1937. In 1938, he opened The Auburn Press, a publishing company.
Thornton taught economics at Auburn University. He formerly taught at Columbus State University where he was awarded the Faculty Research and Scholarship Award in 2002. [6] He is now a Senior Fellow at the Ludwig von Mises Institute, [3] where he is book review editor for its Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics. [7]
Eugene Current-Garcia (1908-1995) was a professor at Auburn University and became Auburn's Hargis Professor Emeritus of American Literature. He was a founding editor of the Southern Humanities Review and a noted scholar of Southern literature. He was named the first Phi Kappa Phi American Scholar in 1994, the first year of that biennial award ...
Auburn, New York (1909), by William Bruce (1861–1911) The Auburn Works in 1907 State Street in 1910. The region around Auburn had been Haudenosaunee territory for centuries before European contact and historical records. Auburn was founded in 1793, during the post-Revolutionary period of settlement of western New York.
The William H. Seward House Museum is a historic house museum at 33 South Street in Auburn, New York.Built about 1816, the home of William H. Seward (1801–72), who served as a New York state senator, the governor of New York, a U.S. senator, a presidential candidate, and then Secretary of State under presidents Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson.
South Street Area Historic District is a national historic district located in Auburn. The district contains 164 contributing resources and includes structures dating from 1800 to the 1940s. It is linear in orientation and about a mile in length along South Street from Metcalf Drive to Lincoln Street.