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Vashon was the second high school built for black students in the St. Louis Public Schools, after Sumner High School. [5] [6] Four members of the Vashon glee club created the popular singing group The Four Vagabonds in 1933. [7]
Hadley, whom she met at Washington University in St. Louis, became a prominent railroad attorney. They had two daughters before his death in 1945 at 42. Carleton Sturtevant Hadley (Dec. 23, 1902 in Lowell, Massachusetts – Feb. 16, 1945 St. Louis, Missouri) came from the prominent Massachusetts Hadley family. He earned a B.A. (1923), LL.M ...
Hadley Township is a township in St. Louis County, in the U.S. state of Missouri. [1] Its population was 34,816 as of the 2010 census. [2]The community was first established as workers housing in 1907 by Evens and Howard Fire Brick Company for their African American employees due to racial segregation in the St. Louis area.
School Number of Titles Years Won; Advance: 2: 1972, 1975 The Barstow School (Kansas City) 2: 1995, 2015 Beaumont: 6: 1933,1942, 1943, 1947, 1948, 1956 Bell City
Elizabeth Hadley Richardson was born on November 9, 1891, in St. Louis, Missouri, [1] the youngest of five children. Richardson's mother, Florence Wyman Richardson (née Hadley), was an accomplished musician and singer, and her father, James Richardson Jr., worked for a family-owned pharmaceutical company. As a child, Hadley fell out of a ...
Mike Shannon (1939-2023), affiliated with St. Louis Cardinals for over 50 years, as a player (1962–1970), in front office, and, since 1972, radio and TV announcer; Scott Shannon (born 1947), a radio disk jockey hosting WCBS-FM in New York City. Augustus Shapleigh (1810–1902), president of Shapleigh Hardware Company and early pioneer of St ...
This is a list of chancellors of Washington University in St. Louis, ... Herbert S. Hadley: 1923–1927 [8] 8 ... John F. McDonnell Retired Chairman of the Board ...
Herbert Spencer Hadley (February 20, 1872 – December 1, 1927) was an American lawyer and a Republican Party politician from St. Louis, Missouri.Born in Olathe, Kansas, he was Missouri Attorney General from 1905 to 1909 and in 1908 was elected the 32nd Governor of Missouri, serving one term from 1909 to 1913.