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  1. Walter C. Rice on Ampersand Mountain, 1920 New York State Archives Memorial tablet on Ampersand Mountain Born: April 7, 1852, Salem, Massachusetts. Died: March 16, 1924, Plainville, Massachusetts Married: Laura J. Miller, in 1885 Children: Herman, Seaver Miller Rice, Irving, Walter Livingston, and Sturgis Walter Channing Rice built the fashionable Villa Dorsey on Dorsey Street that served as ...

  2. BY WALTER CHANNING, M. D.1 The study of criminal insanity has been but little pursued in this country, and this fact accounts, in part, for the large number of insane persons who find their

  3. Dr. Walter Channing, Harvard's first professor of obstetrics and medical jurisprudence, was also Dean of the Medical School for over a quarter of a century. He promoted the use of ether anaesthesia in childbirth and was one of the founders and attending physicians at the Boston Lying-In Hospital. Dr. Channing was a Librarian and one of the last ...

  4. Miss Susan Stockard, daughter of Mrs. Lester N. Stockard of New York, Palm Beach and Southampton, L. I., and the late Mr. Stockard, was married on June 18 to Walter Channing Jr., son of Mr. and ...

  5. 9 de dic. de 2023 · Stockard Channing married Walter Channing Jr. in 1963 and kept the amalgamated name “Stockard Channing” after they divorced in 1967. She has since been married three more times, but has never changed her name again. Carol Channing was born Carol Elaine Channing on January 31, 1921, in Seattle, Washington.

  6. REVIEWS BIRTHING MIDWIFERY Amelie Kass, Midwifery and Medicine in Boston: Walter Channing M.D. 1786–1876. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2001. Pp. xii + 386. US$40.00 HB. By Lorna Barrow Amelie Kass’s book, Midwifery and Medicine in Boston: Walter Channing M.D. 1786–1876, is a biographical work of the highest order.

  7. Page 43 - Such a monstrous conception and impulse as the wanton murder of the President of the United States, arising in the mind of so insignificant a citizen, without his being either insane or degenerate could be nothing short of a miracle, for the reason that we require like causes to explain like results. To assume that he was sane, is to assume that he did a sane act, ie, one based upon ...