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  1. Andrew Dickson White (November 7, 1832 – November 4, 1918) was an American historian and educator who co-founded Cornell University, one of eight Ivy League universities in the United States, and served as its first president for nearly two decades. He was known for expanding the scope of college curricula. [2]

  2. Feb 19, 2018 · ASK Andrew Dickson to describe his main job in life and he will tell you he is a salesman. ... He had met his wife Pat just as she was going to Reading University and the two finally married when ...

  3. Feb 23, 2020 · Educator, diplomat, president of Cornell University. Andrew D. White was born in 1832 in Homer, New York. He attended Geneva College (now Hobart College), Geneva, New York, and Yale University, graduating in Yales class of 1853. After teaching history and English literature at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, he was elected to the New ...

  4. Nov 29, 2018 · A married couple of eight years who were forced to live 6,000 miles apart have won a visa battle for them to live together in the UK. Andrew Dickson, of ... “When my wife first came in 2007 on a ...

  5. Horace and Clara White had two children: Andrew Dickson and his brother. Andrew was baptized in 1835 at the Calvary Episcopal Church on the town green in Homer. He married twice. His first marriage, on September 27, 1857, was to Mary Amanda Outwater (February 10, 1836 – June 8, 1887), daughter of Peter Outwater and Lucia M. Phillips of Syracuse.

    • Who was Andrew Dickson married to first?1
    • Who was Andrew Dickson married to first?2
    • Who was Andrew Dickson married to first?3
    • Who was Andrew Dickson married to first?4
    • Who was Andrew Dickson married to first?5
  6. The Ann Arbor campus was barely 20 years old when Andrew Dickson White first saw it. Just married, he arrived from Yale in October 1857 to teach history and English literature. He was only 24, the youngest member of the faculty, and he looked even younger. In fact, a student at the train station mistook him for an entering freshman and showed ...

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  8. Cornelia Preston came to Cornell in the fall of 1872 from South Dover, New York, after studying at Vassar for two years. She graduated in 1874 in the Science course. She married one of her classmates, George B. Upham, who became known as the ‘father of the Boston subway system.’ In 1945, she was the oldest living Cornellian.