Henry J. Arnold | |
---|---|
27th Mayor of Denver | |
In office 1912–1913 | |
Preceded by | Robert W. Speer |
Succeeded by | J. M. Perkins |
Personal details | |
Born | Clinton,Missouri,U.S. | March 14,1866
Henry J. Arnold (d. November 22,1926 in Denver) [1] was an American politician who served as the 27th mayor of Denver,Colorado from 1912 to 1913. [2] [3] [4]
George Edward Creel was an American investigative journalist and writer,a politician and government official. He served as the head of the United States Committee on Public Information,a propaganda organization created by President Woodrow Wilson during World War I.
USS Denver (C-14/PG-28/CL-16) was the lead ship of her class of protected cruisers in the United States Navy. She was the first Navy ship named for the city of Denver,the capital of Colorado.
The Archdiocese of Denver is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction,or diocese,of the Catholic Church in northern Colorado in the United States.
Elias Milton Ammons served as the 19th governor of Colorado from 1913 to 1915. Born in 1860 in Macon County,North Carolina,he is perhaps best remembered for ordering National Guard troops into Ludlow,Colorado during the Colorado Coalfield War,which resulted in the Ludlow Massacre. He was also instrumental in starting the National Western Stock Show,which is still active. His son,Teller Ammons,was also governor of Colorado.
Lawrence Cowle Phipps was a United States Senator representing Colorado from 1919 until 1931.
Iliff School of Theology is a graduate Methodist theological school in Denver,Colorado. Founded in 1892,the school's campus is adjacent to the University of Denver. Fewer than 200 students attend the school.
Charles A. Cook was an early settler of present-day Colorado and the second mayor of Denver. He was indicted and tried for conspiracy to defraud the government for falsifying names on homestead and pre-emption land claims and then selling the property. After the first trial,the case resulted in a hung jury. The charges were thrown out at the second trial.
Hygiene is an unincorporated community with a U.S. Post Office in Boulder County,Colorado,United States. Application for the first Hygiene Post Office was made by Jacob Stoner Flory of the United Church of the Brethren on May 28,1883. Originally named Pella,the community's present name stems from a time when it had a sanatorium to work with tuberculosis patients. St. Vrain Church of the Brethren,a historic Church of the Brethren congregation,is located in the town.
Henry White Warren (1831–1912) was an American Methodist Episcopal bishop and author. William Fairfield Warren was his brother.
Daniel Isaac J. Thornton was an American Republican politician who served as the 33rd governor of the state of Colorado from 1951 to 1955.
Teller Ammons was an American attorney and politician who served as the 28th Governor of Colorado from 1937 to 1939. He was the first Colorado governor to be born in the state.
Riverside Cemetery,established in 1876,is Denver,Colorado's oldest operating cemetery. More than 67,000 people are buried there,including 1,000 veterans.
The Evans Memorial Chapel is an historic chapel on the campus of the University of Denver in Colorado. It is the oldest continuously-used building for religious purposes in Denver. Completed in 1878,the Evans Memorial Chapel was built with patronage by John Evans in honor of his daughter Josephine. Evans was governor of the Colorado Territory and a founder of the Colorado Seminary. Once part of Grace Church,a prominent Methodist Episcopal congregation on 13th Avenue and Bannock in downtown Denver,the small Gothic Revival chapel was moved to the University of Denver's campus in 1959. It reopened there in April 1960,and is now the campus's oldest building. It currently serves as an interdenominational chapel and wedding venue.
Arnold Rönnebeck was a German-born American modernist artist and museum administrator. He was a vital member of both the European and American avant-garde movements of the early twentieth century before settling in Denver,Colorado. Rönnebeck was a sculptor and painter,but is best known for his lithographs that featured a range of subjects including New York cityscapes,New Mexico and Colorado landscapes and Native American dances.
Fairmount Cemetery in Denver,Colorado,was founded in 1890 and is Denver's second oldest operating cemetery after Riverside Cemetery. It is located in land south-east of the intersection of the major Denver roadways Alameda Ave. and Quebec St.. The cemetery was designed by German landscape architect Reinhard Schuetze. The cemetery was patterned after Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge and Watertown,Massachusetts. The cemetery occupies 280 acres (110 ha). The first year the cemetery opened over 4500 trees and shrubs were planted by Schuetze. The cemetery is the largest arboretum in the state.
John Henry Tihen was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as bishop of the Diocese of Lincoln in Nebraska (1911–1917) and as bishop of the Diocese of Denver in Colorado (1917–1931).
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Denver,Colorado,United States,from its founding in 1858 to the present.
Margaret Allen Tupper True was an American educator. She was president of the Denver School Board from 1906 to 1908.
Edwin Henry Hackley,also commonly known as Edwin H. Hackley,was the first African-American lawyer admitted to the Colorado Bar Association (1883). Beginning in 1886,he worked as the Denver County Clerk,and then spent almost 14 years as an Abstract Clerk. He practiced law when he could,but after some time he closed his practice because it was not profitable.
Gertrude Vaile was an American social worker. Gertrude became the executive secretary to the committee of the National Conference on Charities and Correction in 1916,and was elected to head the National Welfare Workers in 1925 at the National Conference of Social Work.