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Springfield, Massachusetts Anthony M. Scibelli (1911-1998) was the longest-serving representative in the history of the Massachusetts House of Representatives . He served the South End of Springfield, Massachusetts, the Tenth District in Hampden County, for 48 years, until he died in 1999.
Springfield Cemetery is located in the Connecticut River Valley city of Springfield, Massachusetts. The cemetery opened in 1841 and was planned on the model of a rural cemetery. With the relocation of remains from the city's earliest burying ground, the cemetery became the final resting place for many of Springfield's 17th and 18th century ...
He set two world records in Paris in 1907 for the half-mile standing start at 0:42 1 ⁄ 5 and the quarter-mile standing start at 0:25 2 ⁄ 5. Taylor also returned to Europe for the racing season in 1908 and in 1909. He finally broke his long-standing decision to avoid Sunday races in 1909 when he was nearing the end of his racing career.
Mary Parsons also appears to have enslaved a Black man named Tobee the year before her death in Springfield. [32] [33] [34] Tobee is listed in local records as the "servant" of the "Widow Mary Parsons" at his death in December 1711, but local historians indicate that the term servant in this time and era was a euphemism for an enslaved person.
Gary Lee Sampson (September 29, 1959 – December 21, 2021) was an American bank robber and later spree killer who killed three people and was sentenced to death by a federal jury in Massachusetts.
MA: 1869–1933 1922–1933 — — Harding: death 11 Hugh Dean McLellan: MA: 1876–1953 1932–1941 — — Hoover: resignation 12 George Clinton Sweeney: MA: 1895–1966 1935–1966 1948–1965 1966 F. Roosevelt: death 13 Francis Ford: MA: 1882–1975 1938–1972 — 1972–1975 F. Roosevelt: death 14 Arthur Daniel Healey: MA: 1889–1948 ...
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Samuel Chapin (baptized October 8, 1598 – November 11, 1675) was a prominent early settler of Springfield, Massachusetts. [1] He served the town as selectman, magistrate and deacon (in the Massachusetts Bay Colony there was little separation between the church and government).