Caleb Luse, son of David Luse, was born 19 May 1793 in Sussex County, New Jersey. He married Margaret Culbertson 2 December 1824 in Mercer County, Pennsylvania. They had ten children. He died 26 February 1872 in Galetown, Sandusky, Ohio. Ddescendants and relatives lived mainly in Pennsylvania, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas and Utah.
This volume invites readers to get up close and personal with one of the most respected and beloved writers of the last four decades. Carolyn J. Sharp has transcribed numerous table conversations between Walter Brueggemann and his colleagues and former students, in addition to several of his addresses and sermons from both academic and congregational settings. The result is the essential Brueggemann: readers will learn about his views on scholarship, faith, and the church; get insights into his "contagious charisma," grace, and charity; and appreciate the candid reflections on the fears, uncertainties, and difficulties he faced over the course of his career. Anyone interested in Brueggemann's work and thoughts will be gifted with thought-provoking, inspirational reading from within these pages.
With more counties than most other states, Missouri posed a unique challenge for Billyo O'Donnell. Setting out to create an outdoor painting on location - en plein air - for each of Missouri's 114 counties plus the city of St. Louis, this award-winning artist devoted years of travel and logged more than 150,000 miles to capture the many textures of a multifaceted state.
Painting Missouri is an extraordinarily rich collection of scenes and seasons along the highways and byways of the Show-Me State. Turn these pages to find a farmer driving a combine in a Ray County cornfield or the Benedictine convent in Nodaway County or mist rising from snow at sunrise in Prairie State Park. Here are scenes both familiar and intimate: farmhouse and barns, Lover's Leap in Hannibal, and the view of St. Louis from the roof of the Cathedral Basilica. O'Donnell even captured Pierce City before a tornado destroyed the town in 2003 - and painted Canton from a vista that another twister had newly opened.
Karen Glines provides essential historical information about the counties, from interesting facts about their foundings and names to the stories behind their courthouses. Drawing on extensive research in many local historical societies, Glines shares what she learned about the early histories and present concerns of the state's diverse regions, including local anecdotes, Civil War stories, and insights into the roles of Native Americans in regional history. Additional comments by O'Donnell relate some of his experiences while creating the paintings. Paintings and essays combine to create a masterful volume that immerses the reader in the passion that both artist and writer feel for the state's beauty.
"In Missouri," observes O'Donnell, "I have found all that an artist needs, and beyond this, I have found an even deeper connection to place." For all who pick up Painting Missouri, that connection will surely resound.
Family history of Samuel Kennedy Irwin (1782-1834), who was born in Ross Co., Ohio, a son of Jared Irwin, Sr. and Jane Kennedy. Jared Irwin, Sr. was born in Ireland and came to America in 1779, settled at Romney, Va., and married Jane Kennedy, who was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1757. Samuel Kennedy Irwin married Esther Dean (1783-1865) 1801 in Ross Co., Ohio. She was born in Pennsylvania, a daughter of Abraham Dean, also an immigrant from Ireland ca. 1780. Samuel lived in Virginia, Kentucky, and later in Ross Co., Ohio in 1797 and he moved to Montgomery co., Indiana in 1829, where he died in 1834. Descendants live in Indiana, Ohio, Texas and elsewhere.