William Cousins

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William Leigh Brent— (1784–1848) was a lawyer and plantation owner in Maryland and Louisiana, and three-term U.S. Representative representing Louisiana's 3rd congressional district.

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<i>Cameo Kirby</i> (1923 film) 1923 film

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<i>Strictly Modern</i> 1930 film by William A. Seiter

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Samuel Erskine Dimmick was a Pennsylvania lawyer, active in Republican politics. He served as state Attorney General, and died in office.

Ruggles of Red Gap is a lost 1923 American Western silent film directed by James Cruze and written by Anthony Coldeway and Walter Woods, adapted from the novel by Harry Leon Wilson. The film stars Edward Everett Horton, Ernest Torrence, Lois Wilson, Fritzi Ridgeway, Charles Stanton Ogle, Louise Dresser, Anna Lehr and William Austin. The film was released on October 7, 1923, by Paramount Pictures.

Jonathan Remington (1677–1745), was an Associate Justice of Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court appointed by Gov. Jonathan Belcher. Judge Remington married Lucy Remington Bradstreet (1680–1743), a granddaughter of Gov. Simon Bradstreet. Their daughter Ann Remington was the first wife of William Ellery, a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence.

William Cousins, Jr. was an American lawyer, judge, and member of the Chicago City Council.