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  1. Rufus Cutler Dawes (July 30, 1867 – January 8, 1940) was an American businessman in oil and banking from a prominent Ohio family. He and his three brothers all became nationally known. In the 1920s he served as an expert on the commissions to prepare the Dawes Plan and the Young Plan to manage German reparations to the Allies after ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Rufus_DawesRufus Dawes - Wikipedia

    Rufus R. Dawes (July 4, 1838 – August 1, 1899) was a military officer in the Union Army during the American Civil War. He used the middle initial "R" but had no middle name. He was noted for his service in the famed Iron Brigade, particularly during the Battle of Gettysburg.

  3. On the battlefields of the Civil War, men young and old, Rufus Dawes and John Kellogg, were given the power to change the world. At Antietam, Dawes and his comrades poured their blood into the soil in service of future generations.

  4. Existence: 1867 - 1940. Found in 1 Collection or Record: Rufus C. and Helen Palmer Dawes Collection, 1870-1941. Collection. Identifier:MS84. Abstract The Rufus C. and Helen Palmer Dawes Collection documents both family life and civic activities of Rufus and Helen between 1870 and 1941.

  5. 13 de jun. de 2013 · Lt. Colonel Rufus Dawes was in command of the 6th Wisconsin Infantry that day. Dawes wrote some excellent postwar accounts of his experiences in the Iron Brigade. Here are some excerpts from one of his accounst of the 6th Wisconsin at Gettysburg. The regiment halted at the fence along the Cashtown Turnpike, and I gave the order to fire.

  6. Rufus Dawes: A True Defender. by Diana Loski. Colonel Rufus Dawes, USA. (U.S. Army War College, Carlisle, PA) On Gettysburg’s first day, no one expected a fight, except General John Buford – who saw the men in gray coming toward town.

  7. Rufus C. and Helen Palmer Dawes Collection, 1870‐1941 MS84 Boxes 1‐9, album 1 History or Biography: Rufus C. Dawes, brother of Charles G. Dawes, and his wife, Helen Palmer Dawes, both born and raised in Ohio, moved to Evanston in 1898 and remained active in community, business