229,298 research outputs found

    Charles T. Martin to James C. Furman

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    A one page letter from Charles T. Martin to James C. Furma

    Martin T. Barlow Interview

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    Recorded at Oberwolfach November 4, 1984NOTE: to view these items please visit http://dynkincollection.library.cornell.eduInterview conducted November 4, 1984 at Oberwolfach, Germany by Eugene Dynkin with Martin T. Barlow. The interview is in two parts

    J. T. Martin to C. S. Buchanan, Silas Green, and P. G. Green, September 13, 1861

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    In this letter of September 16, 1861, J. T. Martin writes his friends, C. S. Buchanan, Silas Green, and P. G. Green from his location at Camp Lee in Randolph County, Virginia where he is with the 6th Regiment of the North Carolina Volunteers. Martin authorizes these three boys to make sale of his property, but instructs them to do so only for money

    Sermon Outlines of T. Q. Martin

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    A collection of sermon outlines of the preacher T. Q. Martin, compiled by Morris M. Womack. Contains a preface by Womack, an introduction by Earl West, and a table of contents.https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/crs_books/1542/thumbnail.jp

    Portrait of James T. Martin, M. D.

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    A portrait of James T. Martin, M. D., Pacific University class of 1876.Front of photo: James T. Martin, M. D. Back of photo: James T. Martin

    Letter from W. T. Johnson to W. N. Martin

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    W. T. Johnson enclosed a copy of his report to S. B. Simmons and F. D. Bluford, President of the College, for Dr. W. N. Martin and asked him to write them a note concerning his time spent in the workshop

    t-Martin boundary of killed random walks in the quadrant

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    à paraître dans "Séminaire de Probabilités"International audienceWe compute the tt-Martin boundary of two-dimensional small steps random walks killed at the boundary of the quarter plane. We further provide explicit expressions for the (generating functions of the) discrete tt-harmonic functions. Our approach is uniform in tt, and shows that there are three regimes for the Martin boundary

    J. T. Martin

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    J. T. Martin. Carte-de-visite.https://mds.marshall.edu/mary_reynolds_papers/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Martin, S T, WX16341

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/401892Surname: MARTIN. Given Name(s) or Initials: S T. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: WX16341. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 32769.221538 Item: [2016.0049.34185] "Martin, S T, WX16341

    The Memorandoms of James Martin

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    ** The revised version of this publication is available here: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1558725/. ** Presented here, for the first time, is an annotated edition of the Memorandoms of James Martin, the only extant first-hand account of perhaps the most famous escape by convicts transported to Australia. The bare facts of this episode are these: on the night of 28 March 1791, Martin, in company with fellow prisoners William Bryant, his wife Mary Bryant (née Broad) and their two children Charlotte and Emanuel, William Allen, Samuel Bird alias John Simms, Samuel Broom alias John Butcher, James Cox alias Rolt, Nathaniel Lillie, and William Morton, stole the governor’s six-oared cutter. In it, the party sailed out of Port Jackson, up and along the eastern and northern coasts of the Australian continent, crossed the Gulf of Carpentaria, and landed at Kupang, in West Timor, on 5 June. There they successfully (for a while, at least) posed as the survivors of a shipwreck, and enjoyed the hospitality of their Dutch hosts. Theirs was an incredible feat of endurance and seamanship, in surviving a two-month journey of over five thousand kilometres in an open boat. The manuscripts comprising the Memorandoms are contained within University College London’s vast Jeremy Bentham Papers collection, which runs to some 60,000 manuscript folios. The edition contains an introduction by Dr Tim Causer, which provides information about the manuscripts, Bentham’s interest in convict Australia and his acquisition of the Memorandoms, context and background to the narrative, and a summary of previous works dealing with the escape. This is followed by annotated versions of Martin’s narrative, which are linked to digital versions of the original manuscripts, allowing readers to fully explore this fascinating primary source
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