1,721,642 research outputs found
George Perry Cather
George Perry Cather, son of Oscar Cather and grandson of George P. and Frances (Franc) Smith Cather as an infant
George Perry
George Perry is shown sitting on a couch with another man, as three men stand behind themhttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/1307/thumbnail.jp
George Perry
George Perry is the son of Evan and Geneva Perry. He served in the Army during World War II. He married Barbara Ellen Stevens in 1946. He was born March 23, 1928 and died July 16, 2016
George Perry and D.M. Allen
George Perry and D.M Allen examine shares of Emerson Electrichttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/8581/thumbnail.jp
George Perry (1771–1823): architect and naturalist
George Perry (1771-1823) was an artist, architect and sculptor, with a deep interest in natural history and malacology. (His father, George Perry (c.1718-1771), was a pioneering industrialist, with a particular interest in geology and also the history of Liverpool.) He was the co-author (with John Corry) of The History of Liverpool (1807). He gave lectures on natural history and mineralogy and earned a living as an architect and sculptor. After bankruptcy in Liverpool in 1807, Perry re-established himself in London. There he published two books - A descriptive catalogue of the pictures in the collection of the Marquis of Stafford in London (1807) and Conchology, or the natural history of shells (1811). He also published the serial publication entitled Arcana, or, the Museum of Natural History (1810-1811). After this, he disappeared from the public record until his death in Chelsea in 1823. His life and his contributions to natural history are summarized here
George Perry and Chuck Morey
George Perry, left was honored at a dinner for his twenty year servied to Haliburton Services. The award is being presented by Chuck Morrey
George Perry Rickard, circa 1938
A 2.5"x3.5" photograph of a young man in a Canadian Navy uniform. The photograph is George Perry Rickard (son of William and Edna)
George Perry (c.1718-1771): industrialist, cartographer and naturalist
George Perry (c.1718–1771) is known for his involvement in the development of the iron and engineering industries of Coalbrookdale, Ironbridge Gorge, Shropshire and Liverpool, and also for his ambition to publish a history together with new maps of Liverpool. In 1758, Perry’s best known work, A description of Coalbrookdale in the County of Salop, with two perspective views thereof was published. The aforementioned views, produced in collaboration with Thomas Smith of Derby (1720–1767), are two of the earliest examples of industrial landscapes. Perry also pursued interests in geology and natural history. He maintained a correspondence and exchanged specimens of fossils with, among others, Emanuel Mendes da Costa (1717–1791), Thomas Pennant (1726–1798) and Gustavus Brander (c.1719–1787). His work on the history of Liverpool was absorbed into An essay towards the history of Leverpool drawn up from papers left by the late Mr. George Perry, and from other materials since collected by William Enfield (1773). His son, George Perry (1771–1823), was the author of Conchology, or the natural history of shells (1811). We record Perry’s busy life and career and attempt to give due weight to his several different interests
J. E. Red Ruffin, George Perry
J. E. Red Ruffin is shown shaking hands with George Perry, an MSU alumnus. Perry is holding the plaque he received for being named MSU\u27s Alumnus of the Year.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/6416/thumbnail.jp
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