1,938 research outputs found

    Thewill of Hardy Clements, 1858

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    An item in the Clements Family Papers Collection

    Hardy Clements gifts a deed to Rufus Hargrove Clements, October 18, 1855

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    An item in the Clements Family Papers Collection

    Clements family papers, MSS.0316

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    Abstract: Papers of a Tuscaloosa family whose members included Hardy Clements, Rufus Hargrove Clements, Martha Lavinia Clements, Frank Bugbee Clements, Luther Morgan Clements, and others. The bulk of the papers relate to Frank Bugbee Clements.Scope and Content Note: The Clements family papers, along with those of the Wynn and Bugbee families, were donated together. Each of these families is related to the others through marriage, and the donor is a direct descendent of all. As the ties between the families are evident only in the genealogical records, the papers have been organized separately. The papers are grouped into the following series: Hardy Clements, Rufus Hargrove Clements, Martha Lavinia Clements, F. B. Clements, Luther Morgan Clements, and Other. The bulk of the papers relate to Frank Bugbee Clements.Biographical/Historical Note: Hardy Clements was born at Edgefield Court House, South Carolina, on October 16, 1783, the son of Ruben and Elizabeth (Stuart) Clements. He and his brother Ruben came to the Mississippi Territory in 1796 or 1798. Hardy Clements' first wife, whom he married on December 30, 1822, was Martha Hargrove of Virginia. Their children were Rufus Hargrove, Luther Morgan, and Early Coleman. On May 13, 1832, Hardy Clements married his second wife, Maria Ann Pegues. Their children were Anne Stuart, Egbert Rush, Asenith Rice, Collier Foster, and Newton Nash. He owned extensive landholdings in Tuscaloosa County.Rufus Hargrove Clements was born in Tuscaloosa County, November 1, 1823. He graduated from The University of Alabama in 1845 and received his LLB degree in 1847 from Harvard University. He married Martha Lavinia Bugbee on November 27, 1850. Their children were Francis Bugbee, Julia Morgan, and Clara Estelle. He died in Tuscaloosa on December 1, 1875.Luther Morgan Clements was born in Tuscaloosa County on November 15, 1827 or 1825. He was a graduate of the University of Alabama (1844) and Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1849). A captain in Company F of the 41st Alabama Infantry, he served as both soldier and surgeon in the Confederate army. He never married and died in Tuscaloosa on November 30, 1903.Francis (Frank) Bugbee Clements was born in Tuscaloosa on May 23, 1864, and graduated from The University of Alabama in 1883. He served as president and director for the Demopolis Electric Power and Light Company and was also employed by the J. L. Yancey Real Estate and Insurance Company of Birmingham. He married Lorna Wynn Wilson on May 25, 1884. Their daughter was Martha Lavinia Clements, who married Charles Theodore Brasfield. Frank Clements died May 19, 1951.Sources: Thomas M. 0wen, History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography. Chicago: S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1921, and Thomas Waverly Palmer, A Register of the Officers and Students of the University of Alabama, 1831-1901. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama, 1901

    Beta Alpha Psi officers, Judy Hardy, Jerry Speed, Larry Russell, Harry Clements, and Shannon Norman holding plaque and banner

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    Beta Alpha Psi officers, Treasurer Judy Hardy, President Jerry Speed, Vice President Larry Russell, Recreational Secretary Harry Clements, and Corresponding Secretary Shannon Norman holding a plaque and banner on September 12, 1972

    How do we do race in design and technology?

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    This chapter deliberately takes a different format to others within this book. The authors and contributors have come together to co-author and collaborate on this work, which we think breaks new ground within design and technology. For the contributors, we are drawing on the teacher as researcher and teacher as reflexive practitioner; the authors are drawing on their lived experiences to explore the question, how do we do race in design and technology, and begin the road to exploring some possible answers. We also wondering: Who are the voices that have shaped the design & technology curriculum around raceissues of decolonisation, definitions and clarifications? The chapter starts with an overview of decolonisation and diversity in design and technology, and then broadens out into understanding the language around race and diversity. The design discourse takes us to globalisation and cultural values and the monolithic space taken by only structuring the current design and technology curriculum with a Eurocentric modelling of design history. The narrative voices of teachers then provide the backdrop to rest of the chapter, their voices speak of the differing experiences, their perspectives asreflective practitioners are there to offer thoughts and reflections, they do not yet provide answers. The chapter ends with a call to reclaim the curriculum and bring the marginalised voices in from the margins

    Regularidad de la función maximal de Hardy-Littlewood

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    We treat some properties of the Hardy-Littlewood maximal function in which the author has made contributions to their knowledge. We will focus on issues related to regularity.Tratamos algunas propiedades de la función maximal de Hardy-Littlewood en las que el autor ha realizado aportaciones a su conocimiento. Nos centraremos en cuestiones relativas a la regularidad

    Weighted Calderón-Hardy spaces

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    summary:We present the weighted Calderón-Hardy spaces on Euclidean spaces and investigate their properties. As an application we show, for certain power weights, that the iterated Laplace operator is a bijection from these spaces onto classical weighted Hardy spaces. The main tools to achieve our result are an atomic decomposition of weighted Hardy spaces furnished by the author, fundamental solutions of iterated Laplacian and pointwise inequalities for certain maximal functions

    Dr. Hardy Jackson, JSU Professor of History and Author 4

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    Dr. Hardy Jackson was an author and a Professor of History at Jacksonville State University.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1990/1903/thumbnail.jp
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