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  1. Pickering began his professional career as an industrial market research executive (1961–62) before being appointed as a lecturer at Durham University (1964–66) and University of Sussex (1966–73).

  2. Quick Reference. (1777–1846), Boston lawyer whose avocation was philology; he learned 20 languages, was the outstanding authority of his time on some languages of North American Indians, made the first study of ...

  3. Biography. The Pickering family originally came from Westmorland, and acquired Titchmarsh, in eastern Northamptonshire, in 1553. 10 Christopher Pickering, a cousin to this Member, sat for Cumberland in 1597.

  4. Apr 4, 2017 · Early Career of John Pickering. Pickering was born on September 22, 1737, in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Upon graduating Harvard University, he began a private law practice. Pickering entered public service in 1983 and served as a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives until 1787.

  5. John Pickering was born in Wolverhampton, England, one of three children of Midlands-born couple Alice Marston and Arthur Pickering Sr. A lifelong resident of the Midlands, Pickering trained in classical sculpture and life drawing at Bilston and Birmingham School of Art.

  6. Mar 15, 2002 · John Pickering (1777–1846), attorney and linguist, was the eldest son of the Federalist leader Timothy Pickering, of Salem, Massachusetts. The younger Pickering graduated from Harvard University in 1796 and, after a brief period studying law in Philadelphia, departed for Europe, where he served first as secretary to William Loughton Smith ...

  7. John Pickering (February 7, 1777 – May 5, 1846) was an American linguist, lawyer, and politician in Salem, Massachusetts. He served as president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, from 1839 to 1846. [1] He was elected to the American Philosophical Society. He is buried at Broad Street Cemetery, Salem.

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