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| Â | Ancestors of Hill and Smith |
 | | George Washington ADAIR was born in 1827 in Alabama. |  | | George Washington ADAIR was born on Dec 23 1854 in Alabama. |  | | Parents: George Washington ADAIR and Mary J. She was married to William Issac REA in 1881 in Arkansas. |
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http://users.htcomp.net/benny/d2.htm
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| Â | George Washington - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Washington appointed the following Justices to the Supreme Court of the United States: |  | | Washington, a hugely popular and generally nonpartisan figure, was elected as the first President of the United States (1789–97) after the U.S. Constitution was adopted. |  | | As the first President, Washington appointed the entire Supreme Court, a feat almost repeated by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt during his four terms in office (1933–45). |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington
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| Â | Baker |
 | | George Washington BAKER was born on Jul 10 1852 in Campbell Co., TN. |  | | George Washington "Wash" Baker was married to Jane IRWIN (daughter of George IRWIN and Lucy MILLER) on May 2 1851 in Campbell Co., TN. |  | | George BAKER was born on Apr 3 1861 in Campbell Co., TN. |
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http://members.aol.com/she061360/baker.htm
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| Â | Washington |
 | | George Washington University The George Washington University (GWU) is a private 1821 as The Columbian College. |  | | George Washington Hays was born in Lexington, Virginia. |  | | George, Washington George is a city located in 2000 census, the city had a total population of 528. |
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http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/washington.html
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| Â | Bambooweb: George Washington Campbell |
 | | George Washington Campbell ( February 9, 1769 – February 17, 1848) was an American statesman. |  | | Campbell was unsuccessful in his efforts to raise money through additional bond sales and he resigned that October after only eight months in office, disillusioned and in bad health. |  | | Campbell County, Tennessee is named in his honor. |
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http://www.bambooweb.com/articles/g/e/George_Washington_Campbell.html
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| Â | George Washington |
 | | George Washington University - George Washington University, at Washington, D.C.; coeducational; chartered 1821 as Columbian... |  | | George Washington - Washington, George, 1732–99, 1st President of the United States (1789–97), commander in... |  | | A delegate to the Continental Congress, Washington was selected as commander in chief of the Continental Army and took command at Cambridge, Mass., on July 3, 1775. |
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http://www.factmonster.com/ipka/A0760587.html
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| Â | Cass |
 | | Cass County, Texas Cass County is a United States. |  | | Cass County Cass County is the name of several United States: Cass County, Illinois Cass County, Indiana Cass County, Io... |  | | North Cass, Minnesota North Cass is an unorganized territory located in 2000 census, the unorganized territory had a tot... |
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http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/cass.html
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| Â | George Donaghey Governor of Arkansas George Washington Donaghey Arkansas Encyclopedia |
 | | Donaghey, known through an Arkansas Democrat headline as the "Carpenter From Conway," was a jack of all trades -- a farmer, cook, carpenter, casketmaker, cowboy, cabinetmaker, hunter, plantation owner, town marshal, governor and philanthropist. |  | | Futtrell, president of the Arkansas Senate, became acting governor. |  | | Donaghey was persuaded to seek the governorship, but he was a businessman, not a politician, and his lack of speaking ability proved that. |
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http://www.anythingarkansas.com/arkapedia/pedia/George_Donaghey/
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| Â | Handbook of Texas Online: WHITMORE, GEORGE WASHINGTON |
 | | George Washington Whitmore, Unionist politician and Republican leader, son of John and Elizabeth Whitmore, was born in McMinn County, Tennessee, on August 26, 1824. |  | | George W. Whitmore died on October 14, 1876, at Tyler. |  | | Randolph B. Campbell, "George W. Whitmore: East Texas Unionist," East Texas Historical Journal 28 (Spring 1990). |
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http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/WW/fwh43.html
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| Â | desc_geo_w_campbell |
 | | GEORGE WASHINGTON CAMPBELL was born July 08, 1814 in Tennessee, and died March 16, 1898 in Weakley County, Tennessee. |  | | THOMAS CAMPBELL (GEORGE WASHINGTON) was born August 07, 1838 in Tennessee, and died August 14, 1919 in Greenfield,Weakley County, Tennessee. |  | | ELIZABETH3 CAMPBELL (GEORGE WASHINGTON) was born December 26, 1847, and died April 01, 1910. |
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http://www.rootsweb.com/~tnweakle/desc_geo_w_campbell.htm
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| Â | American Revolution - George Washington - Father of Our Nation |
 | | George Washington was commander in chief of the Continental army during the American Revolution and first president of the United States (1789-97) |  | | Apotheosis of George Washington - How Washington's image has changed and been manipulated to make him the ultimate American hero. |  | | Six Historic Americans: George Washington - Article which sets out to prove that Washington was not a Christian communicant and not a believer in the Christian religion. |
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http://www.americanrevolution.com/GeorgeWashington.htm
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| Â | American President |
 | | George Washington was born into a mildly prosperous Virginia farming family in 1732. |  | | Washington was elected by the Virginia legislature to both the First and the Second Continental Congress, held in 1774 and 1775. |  | | By 1770, Washington had emerged as an experienced leader—a justice of the peace in Fairfax County, a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, and a respected vestryman (a lay leader in his church). |
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http://www.americanpresident.org/history/GeorgeWashington
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| Â | Washington, George -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Exhibit of George Washington's 110 Rules of Civility and Decent Behaviour in Company and Conversation in 1753 as a school training exercise, presented by the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Also provides a brief historical background. |  | | Exhibit featuring George Washington's school copybook, used between 1745 and 1748, presented by the Library of Congress, based in Washington, D.C. Also provides a brief historical background. |  | | Overview of this historic site in Virginia, birthplace of the first President of the United States, George Washington. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=115703
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| Â | President John Adams |
 | | John Adams was the second president of the United States. |  | | John Adams was a diplomat for Europe from 1780- 1788. |  | | John Adams was the first President who was the father of another President. |
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http://www2.lhric.org/POCANTICO/presidents/adams.htm
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| Â | George Washington First President of the United States |
 | | George Washington was born on February 22, 1732 in Westmoreland County, Virginia. |  | | A gripping story of politics and statecraft, here is a dramatic portrait of George Washington in his presidential years. |  | | Patriarch: George Washington and the New American Nation |
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http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/96feb/washington.html
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| Â | John G. Roberts, Jr. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Roberts entered private practice in 1986 as an associate at the Washington, D.C. -based Hogan and Hartson law firm, but left to serve under President George H.W. Bush in the Department of Justice from 1989 to 1993 as Deputy Solicitor General. |  | | On July 19, 2005, Roberts was nominated by President George W. Bush to fill the vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court left by the retirement of Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. |  | | and President George W. Bush on the occasion of Roberts' nomination as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_G._Roberts_Jr.
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| Â | The Benner, Cleaveland and Related Families - Person Page 39 |
 | | Â Â Â Â Â George Washington Adams was born circa 1805 in New Hampshire; The determination that George Washington Adams was the son of the George Adams of Henniker, Hillsboro County, New Hampshire shown in the 1810 Census as having two sons of the appropriate age is highly tentative. |  | | She was the daughter of George Washington Adams and Sabra Streeter. |  | | She is the daughter of George Washington Adams and Sabra Streeter. |
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http://www.rgcle.com/SS/p39.htm
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| Â | New Page 16 |
 | | George Washington Campbell died in Waco, Texas in Apr 1906, he was 75. |  | | On 13 Feb 1860 when George Washington Campbell was 29, he married Sarah A. Chappell, daughter of Dickie Chappell and Susannah Pate Tinsley. |
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http://www.geocities.com/dawggrad73/3B.htm
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| Â | Committee on Ways and Means, George Washington Campbell (JR-TN) |
 | | A Scotland-born lawyer from Tennessee, George Washington Campbell succeeded John Randolph as chairman of Ways and Means in 1807. |  | | Committee on Ways and Means, George Washington Campbell (JR-TN) |  | | Although a lackluster leader, he caught the attention of Congress with a position paper know as "Campbell's Report." The treatise expressed the dismay shared by many lawmakers over the failure of Jefferson's Embargo Act of 1807. |
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http://waysandmeans.house.gov/legacy/portraits/1789-1898/campbell.htm
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| Â | Internet Public Library: POTUS |
 | | George Washington -- from The Presidents of the United States of America |  | | George Washington -- from Politics & Political Campaigns |  | | George Washington on the Frontier -- from The Fort Edwards Foundation |
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http://www.ipl.org/div/potus/gwashington.html
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| Â | George Washington in Williamsburg |
 | | For further reading, see the biography of George Washington or excerpts from Duel in the Wilderness, written by Karin Clafford Farley (a children's book based on George Washington's own diary, published by The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Williamsburg, Virginia). |  | | In 1759, Washington took a seat in the House of Burgesses in the Capitol at the age of 27. |  | | Washington may have known Williamsburg as early as 1749 when, as a 17-year-old, he may have visited his colony's capital to apply for a surveyor's license from the College of William and Mary. |
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http://www.history.org/almanack/people/bios/biowash1.cfm
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| Â | George Washington |
 | | Q2: George Washington was one of only two Presidents to have also been one of the signers of the U.S. Constitution. |  | | Born in Westomoreland County, Virginia in 1732, George Washington was a member of both the First and the Second Continental Congresses. |  | | Once in Philadelphia, Washington was unanimously elected the convention's president, and in September 1787, the convention completed its work, and the delegates signed their new Constitution. |
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http://helios.insnet.com/~tjl1886/p1.htm
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| Â | President George Washington: Health & Medical History |
 | | George Washington's terminal illness: a modern medical analysis of the last illness and death of George Washington. |  | | Thomas Jefferson wrote that Washington was, in all aspects of his life, "inclined to gloomy apprehensions" [3c]. |  | | There is a set of Washington dentures in the University of Maryland Dental Museum in Baltimore [19]. |
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http://www.doctorzebra.com/prez/g01.htm
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| Â | George Washington and the American Revolution |
 | | After victory against England, George Washington was unanimously elected as the first president of the United States of America. |  | | Although he had no children of his own, George Washington was a devoted husband and father to his stepchildren. |  | | Washington served his country with honor, pride, and dignity. |
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http://sln.fi.edu/franklin/statsman/wshngtn.html
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| Â | Brief Biographies of Jackson Era Characters (C) |
 | | He went to Washington with some fear of being hung as a traitor, but was not, and while the federal forces and the South Carolina Military performed threatening maneuvers, Henry Clay proposed a face-saving "compromise" tariff, which was favored by southerners mostly because it was not the compromise proposal that Jackson was backing. |  | | Campbell, Rev. John M. Pastor of the Presbyterian church in Washington DC during Jackson Admin. |  | | Co-owner, with George Coffin, of the "Big Shop", which was used for the large anti-slavery meeting at which Frederick Douglass came to the attention of William Lloyd Garrison. |
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http://www.jmisc.net/BIOG-C.htm
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| Â | GEORGE WASHINGTON |
 | | George Washington, 1st Pres of the United States |  | | George Washington, 1st President of U.S.A. of Moler Family Tree |
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http://www.gencircles.com/users/leslemay/6/data/35517
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| Â | George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress |
 | | George Washington Papers at the Library of Congress |  | | The complete George Washington Papers collection from the Manuscript Division at the Library of Congress consists of approximately 65,000 documents. |  | | Washington's election as delegate to the First and Second Continental Congresses and his command of the American army during the Revolutionary war are well documented as well as his two presidential administrations from 1789 through 1797. |
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http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/gwhtml/gwhome.html
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| Â | CAMPBELL, George Washington |
 | | GEORGE WASHINGTON CAMPBELL Ceaselessly to and fro flies the deft shuttle |  | | George W. Campbell grew to manhood on the home farm in Clinton county where he |  | | Campbell occurred suddenly on April 22, 1913, and his demise was |
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http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~jaheine/GeorgeWashingtonCampbell.html
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