839 research outputs found

    Roosevelt & Cardinal Gibbons

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    From sleeve: Roosevelt & Cardinal Gibbons [Sept. 28, 1918. Oriole Park, Baltimore, Md.] JB.This photograph shows President Theodore Roosevelt and Cardinal Gibbons duing a Liberty Loan campaign drive at Oriole Park in Baltimore. Roosevelt and Gibbons are talking with one another while a third man stands in front of them, with his back to the camera. A large group of men, some of them in uniform, are standing behind Roosevelt and Gibbons and are looking on as they converse. The stadium stands and the roof of the stadium are visible in the background. Two American flags are also visible near the stadium roof

    Ordination Group with Cardinal Gibbons

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    Repository: Woodstock Theological Library. For more information about this item please email [email protected] portrait with Cardinal Gibbons and priests in front of cloth backdro

    Cardinal Gibbons & Bishop Murray

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    From sleeve: Cardinal Gibbons & Bishop Murray SE 15 Sec Spare [Sept. 28, 1918. Oriole Park, Baltimore, MD.] JB.This photograph shows Cardinal Gibbons and Bishop Murray with President Theodore Roosevelt during a Liberty Loan campaign drive in Oriole Park in Baltimore. [http://www.loc.gov/item/mp76000198/] The three men, accompanied by a fourth, are sitting in the front of a long row of wooden chairs set up on the field. There are several more rows of chairs set up behind them, many of them filled with other visitors. A section of the stadium that appears to be mostly full of spectators is visible in the background. Two men in uniforms are standing on the far right side of the photo

    Mark Gibbons Interview, November 1, 2018

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    Mark Gibbons discusses his nearly 15-year friendship with Butte, Montana poet Ed Lahey, author of The Blind Horses and The Thin Air Gang. Gibbons talks about first meeting Lahey in 1996 at the Garden City Reading Series in Missoula, and how much in awe he was of Lahey’s talent and presence. Gibbons describes how author Roger Dunsmore facilitated Gibbons’ first meeting with Lahey at Lahey’s home in Montana, and how that quickly grew into a mutual friendship. Gibbons touches on Lahey’s struggles with alcoholism and mental illness, and notes that he knew Lahey towards the end of his life when he was getting more of his work published. Gibbons recalls Lahey’s struggles with manganese poisoning which causes severe tremoring during his final years. He also discusses Lahey’s writing style, which was a unique voice characteristic of living in Butte, Montana. Gibbons notes how many poets such as himself and Sheryl Noethe were inspired by Lahey’s work.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/edlahey/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Author Gail Gibbons Holds Open Book, circa 1988

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    Author Gail Gibbons is shown holding open a book titled, Sunken Treasure by Gail Gibbons. The book was published in 1988. (circa 1988 or after)https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1980/1142/thumbnail.jp

    10525 – Benediction by Cardinal Gibbons – Presentation of the Sword to Admiral Dewey, Washington, D.C., Oct. 3, 1899.

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    Stereoview of U.S. President William Mckinley and Admiral George Dewey listening to Cardinal James Gibbons' benediction during celebrations of Dewey's return from the Spanish-American War, photographed in Washington, D.C., on 3 October 1899. Copyright, 1899, by B. L. Lingley.Copyright, 1899, by B. L. Lingley. Meadville, Pa. St. Louis, Mo

    Victor and Constance Daniel and Emancipatory Education at the Cardinal Gibbons Institute

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    From 1924 to 1934, Victor and Constance Daniel practiced emancipatory education at the Cardinal Gibbons Institute, a Catholic high school for African Americans in Ridge, Maryland. The purpose of emancipatory education was to liberate Black and White Americans, both mentally and morally, from the vestiges of slavery that created and perpetuated racism in the United States. Emancipatory education placed the study and appreciation of African American history and culture at its center. The Daniels rooted their development of emancipatory education in their experience as Catholic educators, the racial uplift movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and African American scholarship

    Card. Gibbons at Milwaukee

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    Photo shows Cardinal James Gibbons attending a convention of the American Federation of Catholic Societies in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, August 1913. (Source: Flickr Commons project, 2009 and New York Times, August 11, 1913)Title from data provided by the Bain News Service on the negative.Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).General information about the Bain Collection is available at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbai
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