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The Siders had their beginnings in Lancaster Pennsylvania 200 years ago. A young German man by the name of Jacob Seider married a young Swiss woman by the name of Maria Wenger. The Sider name was adopted from the German name of Seider in the early 1800s in Canada. George Sider was born ca 1730 in Germany and married Anna Margaret Reinhardt in 1754. They had three sons and four daughters. He died ca 1802 in Dauphin county Pennsylvania.
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Footprints in Stone is the definitive guide to the Steven C. Minkin (Union Chapel) Paleozoic Footprint Site in northwest Alabama, the discovery of whose vast quantity of 310-million-year-old fossil tetrapod footprints and other traces is one of the most significant developments in modern paleontology.
NSA is a comprehensive collection of international nuclear science and technology literature for the period 1948 through 1976, pre-dating the prestigious INIS database, which began in 1970. NSA existed as a printed product (Volumes 1-33) initially, created by DOE's predecessor, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). NSA includes citations to scientific and technical reports from the AEC, the U.S. Energy Research and Development Administration and its contractors, plus other agencies and international organizations, universities, and industrial and research organizations. References to books, conference proceedings, papers, patents, dissertations, engineering drawings, and journal articles from worldwide sources are also included. Abstracts and full text are provided if available.
Ernst Miller (ca. 1740-1806) married Christina Veit in 1769, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. They had two sons. Prior to 1800, Ernst married Elizabeth who had two daughters. They had one son, David, who married Ann Longenecker. Descendants lived in Pennsylvania, for many generations, but eventually scattered throughout the United States. They include Mormons.
From the 1890s to the 1970s, the thriving area of Birmingham between Eighteenth and Twenty-first Streets along First, Second, and Third Avenues was the bustling heart of this quickly growing city. Before the age of the shopping mall, the downtown was the center of retail and entertainment in Birmingham. Along these streets, entrepreneurial immigrants built department storesincluding Pizitz and Loveman, Joseph, and Loebwhile the marquees of the Alabama, Ritz, and Lyric theaters, among others, shined over the busy downtown sidewalks.