carpenter by trade

  • 51Jean Lemire — Notability|date=September 2008 Jean Lemire (1626 ndash; 1685) is the ancestor of most Lemires living in Canada. His father and mother, Mathurin LeMire and Jeanne Vannier, lived in the Saint Vivien district of Rouen, Normandy. Rouen is a port on… …

    Wikipedia

  • 52George Koval — (Russian: Жорж (Георгий) Абрамович Коваль , Zhorzh (Georgij) Abramovich Koval, December 25, 1913 January 31, 2006) was a Soviet intelligence officer, operating under the code name Delmar , whose espionage assisted the Soviet Union with the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 53Coromantee people — Coromantee people, also called Coromantins or Coromanti people was the designation for recent Caribbean and South American people who were enslaved and brought from the Gold Coast or modern day Ghana. Coromantins were from several Akan ethnic… …

    Wikipedia

  • 54Mark Turpin — is an American poet. Contents 1 Life 2 Awards 3 Works 3.1 Ploughshares[dead link] 4 …

    Wikipedia

  • 55Matthew Ewing — (January 10, 1815–1874) was an American carpenter and inventor. He is known as the cofounder of the Vacuum Oil Company with business partner Hiram Bond Everest. Contents 1 Biography 1.1 Marriage and children 1.2 Death and afterward …

    Wikipedia

  • 56Maude, New South Wales — Maude New South Wales Post office and general store …

    Wikipedia

  • 57Robert de La Berge — (1638–1712) was one of the original colonists to New France in 1658. He is also the original LaBarge/LaBerge to arrive in North America. Most people with the surname LaBarge, Laberge, or Labarge can trace their family roots back to him. LaBarge s …

    Wikipedia

  • 58BOURNE, HUGH —    founder of the Primitive Methodists, and a zealous propagator of their principles; he was a carpenter by trade, and he appears to have wrought at his trade while prosecuting his mission, which he did extensively both in Britain and America… …

    The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • 59take up — {v.} 1. To remove by taking in. * /Use a blotter to take up the spilled ink./ * /When the vacuum cleaner bag is full, it will not take up dirt from the rug./ 2. To fill or to occupy. * /All his evenings were taken up with study./ * /The oceans… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 60take up — {v.} 1. To remove by taking in. * /Use a blotter to take up the spilled ink./ * /When the vacuum cleaner bag is full, it will not take up dirt from the rug./ 2. To fill or to occupy. * /All his evenings were taken up with study./ * /The oceans… …

    Dictionary of American idioms