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| Â | John Moore (Whig) |
 | | John moved to Iberia Parish and established a plantation called The Shadows. |  | | He died in Franklin on June 17, 1867 and was buried on his estate. |  | | He moved to Franklin, Louisiana, and was elected to the state House of Representatives for St. |
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http://www.freeglossary.com/John_Moore_%28Whig%29
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| Â | North Carolina Rev Web |
 | | Newly appointed Tory Col. David Fanning and his militia of Chatham and Randolph counties guarded the roads leading to the Courthouse and captured most of the Whig militia officers of the county. |  | | The previous day Fanning and 21 to 22 of his men had ridden into Hillsborough in broad daylight and captured the Governor. |  | | January-February, 1781: General Greene led Cornwallis and his army from South Carolina to Virginia, separating them from their supplies in Charleston. |
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http://home.webkorner.com/whigkid/ncrevweb/index.html
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| Â | Hancock County, Ohio History |
 | | John Moore came to Ohio with his parents in 1828 and settled in Richland (now Ashland) County. |  | | MOORE, farmer, P. Findlay, was born September 23, 1827, in Beaver County, Penn., son of William and Nancy (Bayless) Moore, the former a native of Westmoreland County, Penn., and the latter a native of Washington, Penn. They married in 1823 and came to Ohio in 1841. |  | | JOHN F., farmer, P. Findlay, was born June 30, 1854, in Big Lick Township, this county, son of A. and Nancy Moore, the former a native of Beaver County, Penn., and the latter of Ashland County, Ohio, and who came to this county in 1841 and settled in Big Lick Township. |
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http://www.heritagepursuit.com/Hancock/HancockBigLick.htm
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| Â | Roy Genealogical File - Person Page 6 |
 | | John Mayo was born in 1629 at England. |  | | John Mayo left a will on 9 February 1687/88 at Roxbury, Suffolk County, Massachusetts. |  | | John Mayo of Roxbury, Massachusetts 1630-1688 A Genealogical and Biographical Record of His Descendants. |
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http://www.theroyfamily.com/gen/roy/p6.htm
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| Â | Moore JW |
 | | Although John Moore lived in a Whig county in a Whig district, he like his father was an ardent Democrat of the old Jeffersonian school: in 1856 John ran for state senate and lost the election, but in 1860 he served as a presidential elector. |  | | He studied law at home after his marriage and was admitted to the bar in 1855. |  | | As John studied law and other subjects he also taught Harvey. |
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http://www.sallysfamilyplace.com/MapleLawn/MooreJW.html
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| Â | John Mayfield the Tory |
 | | John Mayfield the Tory was born about 1738 in Virginia (VA) Colony, and died in about March 1782 in the Ninety-Six Judicial District of South Carolina (SC). |  | | John Mayfield married Mary Crain in about 1763, probably in Culpepper County VA. She was born about 1742, and died after 1807, probably in Georgia. |  | | John W. Mayfield was born 28 December 1780 in Ninety -Six District, South Carolina; he died 16 August 1838 in Sullivan County, Indiana. |
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http://sc_tories.tripod.com/john_mayfield.htm
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| Â | What's New |
 | | Construction Contrued and Constitutions Vindicated, John Taylor (1820) A commentary on some of the misconstructions of the Constitution by the Marshall Court. |  | | A Short Treatise on Political Power, John Ponet (1556) Argues political power is limited by natural law, and no ruler may exercise absolute power. |  | | Second Amendment Law Library Scholarly articles, federal and supreme court decisions, and legal briefs. |
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http://www.constitution.org/whatsnew.htm
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| Â | John Nuckolls |
 | | John Nuckolls married Miss Nancy Thompson, daughter of William Thompson, better known as “Gentleman Thompson” who lived where Thicketty station on the Southern Railway now is. |  | | Indeed, John Nuckolls was appointed as an under-sheriff for Tryon County, North Carolina in July 1770. |  | | During the Revolution, John Nuckolls strongly supported the Whig Cause and achieved the rank of Captain in the Rebel Militia. |
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http://members.tripod.com/sc_tories/john_nuckolls.htm
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| Â | Biography of Richard J. Moore |
 | | Moore, a farmer of the Fifteenth District, was born March 25, 1818, in Bledsoe County, and came to Hamilton County in 1835, where he has since resided, excepting three years when he lived in Georgia. |  | | The father is of Irish descent, and a lineal descendant of Lord John Moore, of Ireland. |  | | He was mustered out in Louisiana at the close of the war. |
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http://www.hctgs.org/Biographies/bio_moore_richard.htm
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| Â | King's Own Patriots |
 | | John Hamilton's Royal North Carolina Regiment was also referred to as the "North Carolina Volunteers." The relationship between these two units is still unclear. |  | | As a militia regiment it is likely that Bryan's men were not uniformed. |  | | It is possible that many of Bryan's men eventually enlisted in the Royal North Carolina Regiment. |
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http://www.kingsownpatriots.org/ncvols.html
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| Â | The Moorehall Site |
 | | John was captured and tried before several courts, but Spanish influence earned him a reprieve from the gallows in spite of the efforts of Denis Browne (the Irish Chief Justice, commonly known as Soap the Rope). |  | | The English had discovered that the Catholic Church was much more afraid of French-American Egalitarian Republicanism than it was of the Establishment Protestantism, and George Moore was of a Whig Catholic persuasion (ie, a Liberal). |  | | This question can not be answered, but history records that John Moore was the Republican President of Connaught - if only briefly. |
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http://www.oreillydesign.com/moorehall/unctwo.html
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| Â | BookBest: Nonfiction |
 | | If you have read Benjamin Franklin and John Adams you have already read 80% of this book.It was just a review of the dozens of books on the Revolutionary War. |  | | It ends when the presidency of George Washington ends and John Adams is elected, in 1797. |  | | It barely mentioned Dolly Madison and basically stopped with Martha Washington, Abigal Adams and a little bit about Benjamin's roomate. |
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http://nonfiction.bookbest.com/
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| Â | Uncle Dale's Old Mormon Articles: Quincy Whig, Herald, etc. (1842) |
 | | Smith had proclaimed his determination to sustain the Whig nominees for Governor and Lieutenant Governor, we are doubtful whether most of the Whig editors in the State would not have pronounced it a righteous decision; but as the reserve is the fact, it is denounced as an act of high-handed presumption. |  | | John C. Bennett, whil[e] Mayor of the city, commander of the Nauvoo Legion, Master in Chancery for Hancock county, candidate for the legislature, a distinguished leader in the church, &c. |  | | We profess to be too much of a republican, to look on and see this outrage upon the elective franchise, without denouncing it at once. |
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http://www.lavazone2.com/dbroadhu/IL/whig1842.htm
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| Â | Decatur Township and Village, Green County, WI History |
 | | John A. came to the county with his parents. |  | | Here located John Moore, Thomas Chambers, John J. Dawson, Samuel Rowe, Robert Mattox, E. Fleek, William Jones, Benjamin H. Fleek, Samuel Northcraft, Donald Johnson, David Bigelow, Thomas Stewart, J. Bowen, Perry and Washington Mitchell and others. |  | | Clemmer was born in the State of New York, in 1834. |
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http://www.monticellowi.com/GreenCo/decaturhistory.htm
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| Â | WebRoots Library U.S. History |
 | | John Sevier was elected governor and David Campbell judge of the Superior court. |  | | William Blount, a native of this State and brother of John Gray Blount to whom so much land had been granted, was territorial governor of Tennessee until it became a State, and was then elected one of its first senators; but served only from 1796 to 1797. |  | | The cession act was repealed and a judge sent to Tennessee to hold court; but there were two rival governments attempting to exercise power in the Watauga settlement, and there were, in consequence, frequent clashes, between Col. John Tipton's forces, representing North Carolina, and those of John Sevier. |
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http://www.webroots.org/library/usahist/hownc003.html
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| Â | Guide Introduction: Records of Ante-Bellum Southern PlantationsSeries I: |
 | | During the war Moore served as a member of the state legislature, although there are few items and references to political affairs until the latter years of the war when the government was forced to move to northern Louisiana. |  | | David Weeks died in 1834, and his will indicates the disposition of his property among the children, Frances, William, Alfred, Harriet, Charles, and David. |  | | The management of the plantations of Moore and Weeks at Franklin, New Iberia, Grand Cote, and Cypremort constitutes the content of the commercial material. |
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http://www.lexis-nexis.com/academic/guides/southern_hist/plantations/planti6.asp
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | The Project Gutenberg EBook of School History of North Carolina, by John W. Moore Copyright laws are changing all over the world. |  | | At a session of the North Carolina Board of Education, held November 22d, 1881, it was resolved that "the Board expressly reserve to itself the right to require further revisions" in Moore's School History of North Carolina, the second edition of which was then adopted for use in the public schools. |  | | This, familiarly known as "Locke's Grand Model," was called by the Proprietors "The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina," and was a cumbrous and elaborate system, full of titles and dignities. |
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http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext04/schnc10.txt
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| Â | Gilder Lehrman Center Bibliography of Online Documents |
 | | Adams, John Quincy, Argument of John Quincy Adams, before the Supreme Court Delivered on February 24, and March 1, 1841. |  | | and John J. Lalor, The Constitutional and Political History of the United States (Excerpts) Chicago: Callaghan and Company, 1881. |  | | Douglass, Frederick, The Cambria Riot, My Slave Experience, and My Irish Mission Belfast Banner of Ulster, December 9, 1845 and Belfast Northern Whig, December 9, 1845. |
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http://www.yale.edu/glc/archive/
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | John D BRANCH, Jr was born 1847 in FL. |  | | (3) The HARDY JOHNSON plantation on Juniper Sw 2 CONC amp was accessable to JOHN MOORE during his courting days; and in later years, when JOHN an 2 CONC d PENELOPE moved over to Black River to his newly acquired 450 acres they were even closer pr 2 CONC oximity to the HARDY JOHNSON plantation. |  | | It could be that shortly thereafter she received the attention of J 2 CONC OHN MOORE, as JOHN made horseback trips from the MATTHEW MOORE plantation on Black Mingo wes 2 CONC t several miles to Averasboro. |
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http://www.wayman.us/paf/pratt/pratt.ged
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| Â | Schoharie, NY Miscellany |
 | | John S. Frost, of Esperance, and Robert F. Queal, of Richmondville, have been appointed loan commissioners for this county. |  | | Judge Goodyear is a highly respected and honorable citizen, and if elected, will no doubt be found faithful in the service of his constituents. |  | | At a recent election in Utah for Territorial and County offices, the Democrats of Fort Bridger precinct of Green River county, elected their entire ticket by a majority of over 100, upon which W.J. Osborn, formerly of Schoharie county, was their nominee for Representative in the Legislature. |
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http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyschoha/miscell3.html
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| Â | thePeerage.com - Exhibit |
 | | He first reduced the island of St. Lucia, with its great and hitherto impregnable fortress of Morne Fortunée, and left his ablest lieutenant, Moore, to govern his acquisition. |  | | His father was a descendant of the family of Abercromby of Birkenbog, and was the chief whig landed proprietor in the little Scotch county of Clackmannan. |  | | But a change was at hand, and he was asked to contest the county of Clackmannan, which his grandfather and other members of his family had represented, in the whig interest. |
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http://www.thepeerage.com/e45.htm
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| Â | Janet's Genealogy |
 | | John Taylor, son of James Taylor m’d Catherine Pendleton, daughter of Philip Pendleton and Aunt to Judge Edmund Pendleton. |  | | Was instructed by King George through the colonial governor to the magistrates he appointed who were Royalists to put pressure on the planters who was the jury to find John Penn guilty of sedition and fine him heavily. |  | | Clay was the most respected Whig leader, but he was old and had previously been defeated three times for the presidency. |
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http://www.geocities.com/janet_ariciu/Taylor.html
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| Â | Twenty-sixth United States Congress |
 | | \n* Millard Fillmore ( Representative), Whig, NY \n* John Fine ( Representative), Democrat, NY \n* Charles Fisher ( Representative), Republican, NC \n* Isaac Fletcher ( Representative), Democrat, VT \n* John Gelston Floyd ( Representative), Democrat, NY \n* Joseph Fornance ( Representative), Democrat, PA \n* William Savin Fulton ( Senator), Jacksonian, AR \n |  | | \n* Charles Naylor ( Representative), Whig, PA \n* Peter Newhard ( Representative), Democrat, PA \n* Robert Carter Nicholas ( Senator), Jacksonian, LA \n* Alfred Osborn Pope Nicholson ( Senator), Democrat, TN \n* Eugenius Aristides Nisbet ( Representative), Whig, GA \n* John Norvell ( Senator), Jacksonian, MI \n |  | | \n* Nehemiah Hezekiah Earll ( Representative), Democrat, NY \n* Ira Allen Eastman ( Representative), Democrat, NH \n* John Edwards ( Representative), Whig, PA \n* John Ely ( Representative), Democrat, NY \n* George Evans ( Representative), Whig, ME \n* Horace Everett ( Representative), Whig, VT \n |
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http://encyclopedia.codeboy.net/wikipedia/t/tw/twenty_sixth_united_states_congress.html
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| Â | Catalog 251, Page 2; Robert H. Rubin Books (ECONOMICS, LAW, AMERICANA) Brookline, MA USA |
 | | This is a quintessential statement of radical Whig constitutional theory, containing discussions of the Act of Settlement, the extent of executive and legislative power, the sovereign power of the people, and more. |  | | Long presentation to Edgar Moore Church, fellow member of the bar, inscribed and signed by Moore, on the front fly-leaf. |  | | Gordon was a political writer who served as amanuensis to John Trenchard. |
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http://www.rubinbooks.com/catalog251_2.html
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| Â | Great Valley House of Valley Forge Bed and Breakfast History |
 | | John Wilson & Judith, by deed dated 6/30/1785 conveyed to Fredrick Houseman messauge (dwelling house) and plantation in Tredyffrin |  | | John Evans was the Lieutenant Governor of Pa. and heavily involved in acquiring land during this period. |  | | John Wilson was the owner during the Revolutionary War and he was a Tredyffrin resident raised on a Wilson farm east of here in what is now known as Chesterbrook. |
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http://www.greatvalleyhouse.com/history.htm
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| Â | alt.history.british Reference Tables |
 | | 1621 John Williams, Bishop of Lincoln LK 1621, dism. |  | | 1688 [Seal in Commission 1689-1693] Sir John Somers, Lord Somers LK 1693, LC 1697, dism. |  | | 1640 Sir John Finch, Lord Finch LK 1640, fled abroad 1640 Sir Edward Lyttleton, Lord Lyttleton LK 1641, d. |
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http://www.geocities.com/alt_history_british/reference.html
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| Â | Kiwi Pundit |
 | | Householders should be able to use whatever force is necessary to defend their homes against criminals, even if it involves killing the intruder, the country's most senior police officer said yesterday. |  | | Sir John suggested replacing it with legislation that put a statutory duty on police, prosecutors and the courts to presume that the force someone used in their home against a violent intruder was within the law, unless the facts clearly disproved this. |  | | He said the current legal test of "reasonable force", which has evolved in common law, seemed to be weighted against householders and left the public confused about their rights. |
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http://www.kearney.blogspot.com/
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| Â | The Battle of Ramsour's Mill |
 | | The late Capt. John H. Roberts, a grandson, lived on the Moore homestead. |  | | The Whigs renewed the action, which soon became general and obstinate on both sides. |  | | Moses Moore, the father of Colonel Moore, was a native of Carlyle, England, married a Miss Winston, near Jamestown, Virginia, and came to this section with the pioneers. |
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http://uswars.net/1775-1783/battles/800620.htm
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| Â | School History Of North Carolina : From 1584 to the prese... by John W. Moore (John Wheeler) e-Book |
 | | The Whigs lost three field officers, one captain and fifty-three privates. |  | | At last Ferguson was slain, after being many times wounded, and soon the British fire slackened, and then to the nine hundred militiamen of the hills the remnant of the Royalists laid down their guns. |  | | It was a most opportune success, and apprised Lord Cornwallis of what dangers might await his further advance. |
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http://www.bookrags.com/ebooks/6080/80.html
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| Â | Twenty-seventh United States Congress |
 | | John White ( Speaker of the House), Whig, US |  | | Henry Bell Van Rensselaer ( Representative), Whig, NY |  | | Alexander Hugh Holmes Stuart ( Representative), Whig, VA |
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http://encyclopedia.codeboy.net/wikipedia/t/tw/twenty_seventh_united_states_congress.html
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| Â | JOHN MOORE FISK |
 | | , farmer, post office, Cantrall, section nineteen, was born in Indiana county, Pennsylvania, September 17, 1822, son of Eli and Margaret (Moore) Fisk, natives of Tolland county, Connecticut, where they were married. |  | | In 1835, came to what is now Mason county, Illinois, where he took up land and made a farm where he remained until his death, which occurred about 1862; mother died in 1859. |  | | In politics, he was an old line Whig. |
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http://www.rootsweb.com/~ilsangam/1881/fisk.htm
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| Â | Bulwer-Lytton |
 | | Even in their failure they are somehow liberating, a challenge to the idea that justice lies with the victors. |  | | The defeated cause, especially after 1745, inspired the most romantic emotions, as captured in Lady Nairne's beautiful songs. |  | | The eighteenth Whig settlement with its all embracing claim to represent freedom and reason was confronted by an alternative. |
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http://www.mith.demon.co.uk/Bulwer.htm
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| Â | Index: The City by the Lake |
 | | Moore Brothers and Carr Company, Columbia, Tenn., 232 |  | | Barnes, John O., Jr., 159, 162, 166, 167, 171 |  | | Durham, John D., 140, 168n, 170, 175, 341 |
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http://www.tn-elderlaw.com/cityindex.html
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