Search Details

Word: bayed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...American Canoe Association has offered a cup valued at $300 as a prize for an inter-national canoe contest to be sailed in New York Bay next summer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 12/10/1885 | See Source »

Prof. Shaler will visit Narragansett Bay to-day, in order to review the work of a special student. He will be glad to have any members of N. H. 4 accompany him. Those who go will leave the Old Colony Station at 8.30 and will not return until night...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 10/24/1885 | See Source »

...shapely, high studded, well lighted and ventilated. The walls are handsomely decorated, and on the floor is a brussels carpet of pretty design. Also the new upright piano, just purchased, adds its share of beauty and utility to the room. In the front on Kirkland street is a large bay window, well draped, which is to contain a commodious window seat. One third of the room is curtained off for use as a reading-room. This part is to be furnished with a large table, several easy chairs, book-cases and window seats. In the reading-room there will...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Room of the Christian Brethren. | 10/24/1885 | See Source »

...road before the track can be continued to Harvard Square, so we shall have to wait a year or two without doubt before the much desired means of rapid transit can be ours. The point at which the trial half mile begins is in East Cambridge, near the Bay State Glass Works, in the vicinity of Fourth Street, and it continues from there on the border line between Somerville and Cambridge to the great pork packing establishment of John P. Squire's. The above facts were learned from one of the engineers directly in charge of the construction...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cambridge Elevated Railroad. | 10/20/1885 | See Source »

...Harvard was founded by the General Court of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay and first endowed by an educated son of pious London tradespeople. When I had read these Harvard wills I asked myself how closely the college is bound - after 250 years - to the sort of people who established it. I went to the admission books in which the occupations of parents of students are recorded, and found to my great satisfaction that more than a quarter part of its students are to-day sons of tradesmen, shopkeepers, mechanics, salesmen, foremen, laborers and farmers. I found sons of butchers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JOHN HARVARD. | 10/5/1885 | See Source »

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