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Robert Coe (1596 – bef. 1690) was an early English settler, public official, and a founder of five towns in Connecticut and New York: Wethersfield, Stamford, Hempstead, Elmhurst, and Jamaica. Coe took passage from England to the Americas in 1634 during the Puritan migration to New England.
Robert Coe (colonist) (1596–1689), English colonist and early settler of Long Island Robert D. Coe (1902–1985), career diplomat and the U.S. ambassador to Denmark from 1953 to 1957 Robert Glen Coe (1956–2000), American executed for a 1979 rape and murder
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Coe was born on September 6, 1788, in Morristown, New Jersey, to Joel and Huldah Coe (née Horton). [1] Coe is the fourth great-grandson of public official Robert Coe, the colonial public official, and the fifth great-grandson of Barnabas Horton, another colonist who built the first buildings on Long Island and the progenitor of the family that founded Tim Hortons.
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He is a descendant of Robert Coe, a New England Colonist and early politician. [1] [3] Coe manufactured glass in Utica, New York, before enrolling at Queen's College at age 30 to obtain a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery degree. He graduated in 1815 from the New Medical Institute in New York City, obtaining a Doctor of Medicine.
San Francisco resident Robert Gray, 35, was booked on one felony count of vandalism and a misdemeanor violation of civil rights. He currently sits in a county jail after breaking six windows from ...
This category includes people who were notable in the Province of New York prior to the era of American Revolution.That is, they were notable before about 1765. People who are primarily associated with the Revolutionary era are located Category:People of New York (state) in the American Revolution, instead of this category.