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      • Samuel Pfrimmer Hays (April 5, 1921 – November 22, 2017) was a pioneering environmental, social and political historian of the United States. Born in Corydon, Indiana and raised on a local dairy farm. He earned a graduates degree from Swarthmore College in 1948, and a Ph.D. at Harvard University under Professor Frederick Merk.
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  2. Called to the Irish bar (1767), Hayes was sheriff (5 February 1773) and joint governor (1779–95) of Co. Wicklow. He was a colonel in the Wicklow Foresters and subsequently lieutenant-colonel in the Wicklow militia.

  3. Samuel Hayes. Actor: Platform 7. Rising British Actor, Samuel Hayes landed his first on-screen role at age 16, playing the lead role of "Toby" in the short film 'VIOLA GETS OUT' (2017).

    • October 27, 2000
    • Forestry at Avondale
    • Keen Antiquarian
    • Hayesbridge
    • Bequeathed to The Parnells
    • Sources

    On building Avondale House, Hayes also established the Avondale forest – extensively planting trees both for timber and ornament. An active member of the Royal Dublin Society, Hayes was a man ahead of his time, believing the future lay in managed woodlands and reforestation at a time when native forests were disappearing. He wrote Ireland’s first b...

    Like many of his contemporaries, Hayes was also a keen antiquarian and member of the Royal Irish Academy – discovering and restoring the remains of Saint Saviours Church at the Glendalough monastic site. As a talented amateur architect his principal achievement was the facade at the Irish House of Commons, now Bank of Ireland, College Green, which ...

    Echoing the new pedestrian bridge at the Avonmore Way, among the designs of Samuel Hayes was a wooden bridge known as Hayesbridge (depicted) – a single span wooden bridge over the Avonmore river at Avondale House. Described as a ‘geometrical or mathematical bridge’ the individual timbers were carefully calculated to form the bridge’s arc similar to...

    As Samuel and his wife Alice Le Hunte did not have children, on his death in 1795 the estate passed to his Parnell relatives on his mother’s side, and subsequently became the home of the celebrated Irish parliamentarian Charles Stewart Parnell. A fitting epitath to Samuel Hayes was written in 1801 by one of his contemporaries Robert Fraser: ‘The la...

    Bowe P., ‘Samuel Hayes’ Avondale’ Irish Arts Review, SUMMER 2009, Vol. 26, No. 2 Fraser, R., General View of the County Wicklow, Dublin 1801 Johnston-Liik, M., History of the Irish Parliament, Vol 4, 2002 McCracken, E., ‘Samuel Hayes of Avondale’. Irish Forestry Journal, Vol. 25, No. 1, 1968 McGuire J. & Quinn J. (eds.), Dictionary of Irish Biograp...

  4. Biography. Landed gentry and amateur artist and architect, with estate at Avondale, member of Wicklow militia; expert on trees in 18th century Ireland, published 'Practical Treatise'; views of antiquities included in Burton's portfolio. His name is mentioned in a print by Thomas Milton (q.v.) in 1786. Bibliography.

  5. A founder member of the Carlton Club in March, Hayes was returned unopposed for Donegal as a Conservative at the general election of 1832 and sat for the rest of his life. He died in June 1860 and was succeeded in turn by his two surviving sons, Samuel Hercules (1840-1901), an army officer, and Edmund Francis (1850-1912), on whose death the ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Samuel_HayesSamuel Hayes - Wikipedia

    Samuel or Sam Hayes may refer to: Samuel E. Hayes Jr. (born 1940), former member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Sir Samuel Hayes, 1st Baronet (1737–1807), MP for Augher and of the Hayes baronets. Sir Samuel Hayes, 2nd Baronet (1773–1827)

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Samuel_HaysSamuel Hays - Wikipedia

    Samuel Hays may refer to: Samuel Hays (Missouri politician), State Treasurer of Missouri from 1871 to 1873. Samuel Hays (Pennsylvania politician) (1783–1868), United States Congress representative for Pennsylvania.

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