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The last thing Ransom Kent wants is a bride. A woman cost him his peerage and his family in England. Now a rebel with a dangerous job to do for his adopted country, Ransom Kent's word is all he has left to honor his father and so he agrees to an arranged marriage to the scandalous daughter of a duke. Catherine Thorpe has no expectations of marriage in England and owes much to her cousin. She agrees to take her place as the expected bride and sails to a new life. She doesn't believe her impersonation will lead to romance and true love, but she didn't expect to become the Rebel's Bride.
In 1856, Benjamin Hedrick broke with his white North Carolinian peers by taking an antislavery position on the question of the incorporation of the territories. This biography tells the story of how developed that position, the loss of his position as a professor of chemistry and his subsequent exil
This indispensable reference work belongs in public and academic libraries throughout the world and on the shelf of every biologist who works with mammals.
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Fourteen chapters by colleagues and former students celebrating the career of James L. Patton, the emeritus curator of mammals at the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology. All the papers deal with mammalian evolution.
Elder William Wentworth was living at Exeter, New Hampshire, by 1639, and at Wells, Maine, from 1642-1649. In 1649, he moved to Dover, New Hampshire, where he lived most of the rest of his life. He was the father of at least eleven children. He died at Dover ca. 1696/7. Descendants lived in New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusettes, New York, Vermont, Illinois, and elsewhere.
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George Palmer, Jr. (1795-1834) married Phebe Draper (1797-1879) in Canada ca. 1815. Phebe was born in Rome, New York, daughter of William Draper and Lydia Lathrop. Their children were born in Ontario. Phebe joined the L.D.S. Church in 1833. She married (2) Ebenezer Brown and later died in Draper, Utah. Descendants live in Utah, Idaho, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, California, and elsewhere.