Thomas Brues Neuhausen papers 1850-1936
Related Entities
There are 6 Entities related to this resource.
McNary, Charles Linza, 1874-1944
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6ps8k6q (person)
Charles Linza McNary was not considered much of a campaigner. He gave one or two speeches when he ran for office, preferring to spend the campaign season on his Salem area farm. Despite this understated approach to campaigning, McNary won re-election to the United States Senate five times and became one of the country's leading political figures. McNary was born on a farm just north of Salem in 1874. By age nine, both of his parents had died, leaving his twenty-six year old college educated s...
United States. General Land Office
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6cv869d (corporateBody)
Under regulations approved on March 20, 1915, tracts set aside as villa sites under the provisions of an act of April 12, 1910, within the former Flathead Indian Reservation, Montana, were offered for sale at public auction, beginning at Polson, Montana, on July 26, 1915. The sale was adjourned to Dayton, Montana, on August 6 and concluded at Kalispell, Montana, on August 7, 1915. There were 889 parcels of land, not less than 2 nor more than 5 acres in area, fronting on Flathead Lake, and under ...
Progressive Party (1912)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6vf0mxm (corporateBody)
Neuhausen, Thomas Brues, 1872-1944
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6g5761g (person)
Thomas Brues Neuhausen (1872-1944) was born in Wheeling, West Virginia, and moved to St. Paul, Minnisota, with his father, who became editor of Die Volkszeitung. Neuhausen was educated in Minnesota and at the Lyceum, Bamberg, Bavaria. In 1895 he became city editor of Die Volkszeitung, and in 1899 was the Washington D.C. correspondent of the St. Paul Globe. In 1900 he married Maude Lyon. Neuhausen was appointed special agent of the U. S. Land Office, Ashland, Wisconsin in...
Neuhausen family
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65g3p5v (family)
Stanfield, Robert Nelson, 1877-1945
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6vc0qrx (person)