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to teach the children of the fort. The Chief Factor told the New
Englander that "you will have the reputation of teaching the first school in Oregon", making him the first white teacher of Oregon. In the spring of 1833 McLoughlin tried to convince the American to continue running the school, but Ball
284:. These were mainly selected about Grand Rapids and were mostly taken up with internal improvement warrants, and as these warrants could be bought for about forty cents on the dollar, it resulted in a speedy settlement of the
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Ball's sister
Deborah married William Powers who set up an oil cloth factory in New York. When William Powers died Deborah continued to run the factory and hired Ball as foreman who at that point left his law practice.
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and all local enterprises; he provided the first written account of the geology of Oregon. Ball was a key figure in creating
Michigan's public school system.
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education that he got from short times at winter with a local clergyman when his father would let him leave his tough labors at the farm. He graduated from
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where he was shipwrecked and taught school for the winter of 1822–23 to earn his passage back to New York. He was admitted to the bar in 1824.
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to select 300,000 acres (1,200 km) of the 500,000 acres (2,000 km) of land granted to
Michigan by Congress for
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266:, late United States District Judge. Ball represented eastern capitalists in locating lands during the "
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230:, Ball sold his wheat crop to McLoughlin to travel aboard a HBC vessel, the Dryad. He returned via the
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Frank
Webster Ball, Kate Webster (Ball) Powers, Flora (Ball) Hopkins, Mary Johanna, John Helvetia Ball
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134:(November 12, 1794 – February 5, 1884) was a settler, educator, lawyer and member of the
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in 1820, having started there as a student when he was 21. He studied law two years at
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in 1837. He opened a law office and partnered with, among others, the
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McLoughlin gave Ball farming equipment, potatoes, corn, 25 bushels of
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Despite returning to his hometown of
Lansingburgh, Ball settled at
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Democratic Party members of the
Michigan House of Representatives
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What Hath God
Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1848.
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In politics he was a conservative
Democrat and served in the
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John BALL, Grand Rapids City, pp. 944-950 (Chapman 1881)
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area and temporarily resided with retired HBC employee
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Capitol Names: Individuals Woven Into Oregon's
History
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crop. This made him the first American to farm on the
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Portland: Oregon Historical Society. 1967, pp. 64-66
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New York City: Oxford University Press. 2007, p. 525
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Find-a-grave for John Ball and Mary T. Webster Ball
387:Champoeg: Place of Transition, A Disputed History.
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186:'s first expedition, in 1832 he traveled to the
442:Born to Wander; The Autobiography of John Ball
77:Fulton Street Cemetery, Grand Rapids, Michigan
206:. Ball and a friend departed in March to the
413:Charleston: Arcadia Publishing. 2012, p. 16
410:Legendary Locals of Grand Rapids, Michigan.
262:, formerly Chief Justice of Michigan and
199:desired to begin practicing agriculture.
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250:Statue of John Ball in Grand Rapids.
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502:19th-century American legislators
497:People from Hebron, New Hampshire
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125:Nathaniel and Sarah (Nevins) Ball
79:42°57'49.9896", -085°38'52.8216"
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437:The Autobiography of John Ball
407:Lewis Norma and Jay de Vries.
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352:Cogswell, Philip Jr. (1977).
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152:Grafton County, New Hampshire
146:Ball was born at Tenny Hill,
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49:Grafton County, New Hampshire
273:In 1842 he was appointed by
109:Mary Thompson (Webster) Ball
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432:John Ball Zoological Garden
212:Jean Baptiste Depatie McKay
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487:People from Oregon Country
297:Michigan State Legislature
136:Michigan State Legislature
358:Oregon Historical Society
190:. While overwintering at
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472:Dartmouth College alumni
228:United States of America
302:He donated the land in
304:Grand Rapids, Michigan
256:Grand Rapids, Michigan
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184:Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth
164:Lansingburgh, New York
67:Grand Rapids, Michigan
331:Howe, Daniel Walker.
282:internal improvements
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356:. Portland, Oregon:
264:Solomon Lewis Withey
310:and John Ball Zoo.
16:American politician
286:Grand River Valley
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166:and then went to
160:Dartmouth College
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88:Dartmouth College
41:November 12, 1794
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61:(1884-02-05)
467:1884 deaths
462:1794 births
154:. He had a
456:Categories
314:References
278:John Barry
242:Later life
142:Early life
101:Politician
236:Cape Horn
132:John Ball
122:Parent(s)
84:Education
23:John Ball
275:Governor
224:Kalapuya
114:Children
99:Attorney
290:lyceums
270:" era.
97:Teacher
178:Oregon
148:Hebron
106:Spouse
45:Hebron
216:wheat
204:wheat
234:and
56:Died
38:Born
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366:^
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