Grigorovitch
Grigorovitch, Gre-go-revia, Dmitri Vasilyevitch, Russian Artist, Novelist And His Torian Of Art: B. 19 March 1822, At The Village Of Nik6lskoye In The Province Of Simbrisk, On The Volga; D. 1900. His Father Was A Retired Hussar Of The Great Katharine's Time. His Mother Was The Daughter Of A French ...
Grillparzer
Grillparzer, Grilipart-or, Franz Aus Trian Poet And Dramatist: B. Vienna, 15 Jan. 1791; D. There, 21 Jan. 1872. His Early Educa Tion Was Conducted In A Desultory Fashion; In 1807 He Began The Study Of Jurisprudence At The University Of Vienna, But His. Father's Death In 1809 Leaving The Family ...
Grimm
Grimm, Friedrich Melchior, Baron Von, French Author: B. Ratisbon, 26 Dec. 1723; D. Gotha, 19 Dec. 1807. Having Completed His Studies At Leipzig He Accompanied The Young Count De Schonberg To Paris. Here He Became Reader To The Crown Prince Of Saxe-gotha, But The Situation Was Not Remunerative, And Grimm ...
Grimm_2
Grimm, Jakob Ludwig, German Philo1o Gist: B. Hanau, Hesse-cassel, 4 Jan. 1785; D. Berlin, 20 Sept 1863. He Studied Philology And Law At Marburg, And Later Studied Many Sub Jects At Paris Under Savigny. He Returned To Germany In 1805 And For A Time Was Employed In The Office Of ...
Grimms Law
Grimm's Law Is The Name Given To The Rule Which Regulates The Lautverschiebung, Or Permutation Of Certain Primitive Consonants, Which Takes Place In The Teutonic Languages. The Law, As Finally Formulated By Jakob Grimm, Is That If The Same Roots Or Words Exist In San Skrit, Greek And Generally In ...
Grimsby
Grimsby, Great, England, Seaport Of Lincolnshire, Also A Municipal, County And Parliamentary Borough, On The South Shore And Near The Mouth Of The Humber River. It Is Situated 20 Miles Southeast Of Hull And 155 Miles East Northeast Of London, On The Great Northern And Great Central Railways. The Principal ...
Grindal
Grindal, Edmund, English Ecclesiastic: B. Near. Bees, Cumberland, 1519; D. 6 July 1583. He Received His Master's Degree From Cam Bridge In 1541 And Three Years Later Was Or Dained Deacon In The Anglican Church. From 1548-49 He Was Proctor And Lady Margaret Preacher At Pembroke Hall. On The Promo ...
Grinding
Grinding, A Mechanical Process In Which The Desired Results Are Produced By Frictional Abrasion. The Term Includes Also Polishing, Huffing And Lapping. This Process Is Of Exten Sive Use In Various Mechanical Arts, As In Grind Ing Corn, Ores And Colors, In Which Cases The Object Is To Reduce The ...
Grisons
Grisons, Gre-zon' (german„ Graubiinden Or Biinden), The Largest Canton Of Switzerland; 90 Miles East And West, With A Total Area Of 2,753 Square Miles. It Is A Mountainous Coun Try, More Than 20 Alpine Peaks Being Above 9,000 Feet. The Population In 1910 Was 118,246. The Valleys Are Generally Narrow, ...
Griswold
Griswold, Rufus Wilmot, American Author And Compiler: B. Benson, Rutland County, Vt., 15 Feb. 1815; D. In New York, 27 Aug. 1857. He Was Apprenticed To The Printing Trade, But Afterward Studied Divinity And Be Came A Preacher In The Baptist Church. He Soon Became Associated In The Editorship Of ...
Griswoldville
Griswoldville, Battle Of. When General Sherman Marched From Atlanta To The Sea, His Right Wing, Commanded By General Howard, Was Under Instructions To Threaten Macon And Strike The Savannah Railroad At Gordon, About 20 Miles East. Upon His Arrival At Clinton, The Cavalry Advance Made A Demonstra Tion On Macon, ...
Grizzly
Grizzly, Adolphus Washington, Ameri Can Arctic Explorer: B. Newbnryport, Mass., 27 March 1844. After Receiving A High School Edu Cation He Enlisted As A Private In The 19th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, Serving In The Civil War From 1861 To 1865. He Entered The Regular Army In 1867 As Second Lieutenant ...
Gros
Gros, Gee), Baron, French Historical Painter: B. Paris, 16 March 1771; D. Near Paris, 26 June 1835. At 14 He Became A Pupil Of David, And In 1794 Left Paris For Rome. His Means. However, Were Not Sufficient For The Journey, And He Had To Depend On What He Could ...
Grosbeak
Grosbeak, Grifebek, Any Of Various Birds Whose Beaks Seem Disproportionately Large. They Are Mainly Finches Such As The Hawfinch And Bullfinch In Europe, And Their Relatives In The Orient. Bird-dealers Call Ugrosbeaks" A Great Number Of African, Asiatic And American Line Cage-birds, Some Of Which Are Weaver-birds, Or Tanagers, Etc. ...
Groseillers
Groseillers, Medard Chouart, Slant De, Franco-american Trader And Explorer: B. Charly-saint Cyr, Near Meaux, 1621; D. About 1684. He Came To Canada And Soon Earned The Reputation Of An Intrepid Explorer. He Was A Brother-in-law Of The Equally Famous Radisson. The Two Formed An Expedition And Set Out For Lake ...
Grosseteste
Grosseteste, Robert, English Roman Catholic Prelate: B. Stradbrook, Suffolk, About 1175i D. Buckden, 9 Oct. 1253. He Studied Law, Physics And Theology At Oxford And Paris And Upon His Return To England Attained An Enviable Reputation As A Theologian, So Much So That In 1214 He Became Archdeacon Of Wifts ...
Grosvenor
Grosvenor, Edwin Augus Tus, American Educator And Author: B. New Buryport, Mass., 30 Aug. 1845. He Was Gradu Ated At Amherst College In 1867 And At Andover Theological Seminary In 1872, Was Professor Of History At Roberts College, Constantinople, 1873-90, And Of European History At Amherst .college In 1892-99. In ...
Grote
Grote, George, English Historical Writer: B. Clayhill, Kent, 17 Nov. 1794; D. London, 18 June 1871. After Having Studied At The Charter House, In 1809, He Became A Clerk In His Father's Banking House. He Kept On With His Studies, Particularly With Philosophy, And His Liberal Trend Of Thought Gradually ...
Ground Beetles
Ground Beetles, The Family Cara)i R, Predatory Beetles Of Various Sizes And Ap Pearance. It Contains Upwards Of 1,200 De Scribed Species, Nearly All Of Nocturnal Habit, And, Consequently, Dark, Mostly Black In Color. Some Species, However, Are Metallic Green Or Blue, Or Beautifully Variegated. The Family Con Tains Many ...
Ground Rent 1
Ground Rent. (1) A Rent Reserved To Himself And Heirs By The Grantor Of An Estate In Land In Fee Simple Out Of The Land Granted. (2) Rent Paid, Usually On A Lease For A Term Of Years, For The Right To Occupy And Build Upon Land. In Roman Law ...
Ground Sloths
Ground-sloths, A Family (mega Thernda.) Of Extinct Edentates (gramgrcuia) Re Lated To The Modern Sloths But Of Terrestrial Habits, And In Some Genera Of Gigantic Size. They Are Of Special Interest Because Some Sur Vived Into The Human Period. They Have A Gen Eralized Structure, Exhibiting The Head And Teeth ...
Groups
Groups, Theory Of. Everywhere In Mathematics Are Encountered Systems Of Opera Tions, Possessing Definite Laws Of Combination. Thus, Two Geometric Motions Compound Into A Single Motion, Two Algebraic Transformations Into A Single Transformation, Under Laws As Definite As The Primordial 2 X 2 Of Arithmetic But Otherwise Capable Of Infinite ...
Grouse
Grouse, A Family (tetraonide) Of Galli Naceous Game Birds With Feathered Feet Or Tarsi, Inhabitants Of The Northern Hemisphere. In North America Our Best-known Species Is The Ruffed Grouse (bomar° Umbellus) ; The "part Ridge" Of New England And The "pheasants Of The Middle States. This Bird, In One Or ...
Growing Crops
Growing Crops, Legal Status Of. The Farmer Is Frequently Called Upon To Decide Which Products Of His Farm Are Real Estate And Part Of The Land And Which May Become Personal Property To Be Dealt With Without Regard To The Ownership Of The Land. This Division Of The Products Of ...
Growth
Growth, Increase In Size Or Volume. It May Be Divided Into Inorganic And Organic Growth. As An Example Of The Former Is The Increase In Size Of Minerals. Inorganic Growth Is Not Always Process And Hence Inorganic Growth Is Really A Misnomer. Living Beings Or Organisms Grow By Adding To ...
Growth And Development Of
Growth And Development Of The Human Being. In This Article Growth Refers To An Increase In Size, And De Velopment To An Increase In Capacity. The Body Begins In A Microscopic Cell, And Passes Through The Various Stages Of Birth, Growth, Develop Ment, Decline, And Death. The Life Of An ...
Guadalajara
Guadalajara, Mex Ico, Capital Of The State Of Jalisco, And Second Only In Population And Importance To The City Of Mexico, From Which It Is 380 Miles Distant By The Line Of The Mexican Central Railway. Its Altitude Above Sea-level Is 3,600 Feet. The City Possesses A Great Advantage In ...
Guadalquivir
Guadalquivir, Gral-ke'ver, Spain, A River Of The Southern Part, Second In Im Portance To The Ebro. It Takes Its Rise Between The Sierra De Cazorla And Sierra Del Pozo In The Eastern Part Of The Province Of Jaen, At A Height Of 4,475 Feet Above Sea-level. It Flows Southwest, And ...
Guadeloupe
Guadeloupe, (fr. Gwid Loop), West Indies, An Island (or Twin-islands, Strictly Speaking) Of The Inner Chain Of The Caribbees. (see Arrrn.u.$). It Lies In Lat. N. And Long. 61° W. And, With Its Dependencies, Has An Area Of 688 Square Miles. A Strait Divides It Into Two Parts, Called Basse-terre ...
Guam
Guam, Gwam Or Or Guajan, Gwa-han, One Of The Ladrone Islands (other Wise Known As The Mariana Archipelago), The Southernmost And Largest, And The Only One With Much Population; East Of The Philippines; Occupied By The United States In 1898. It Lies In Lat. 13° 26' N. And Long. 144° ...
Guanajuato
Guanajuato, Mexico, Capital Of The State Of The Same Name. Elevation 6,200 Feet Above The Sea. Distance From The City Of Mex Ico 165 Miles, And 1,000 Miles By The Mexican Central Railway From The United States Border At El Paso, Texas. It Is Situated In The Heart Of The ...
Guanches
Guanches, Gwin'chis, Guanchos, Guanchis (from Guan, A Person, And Chinet, Teneriffe; Or From Berber Acres, A Son Or Young Man), The Inhabitants Of The Canary Islands Who Are Said To Have Called Themselves Guanchinet, A Term Which The Spaniards Cor Rupted Into Guanches. The Name Seems To Have Been Applied ...
Guano
Guano, Gwa'no (spanish Guano Huano, From Peruvian Huanu, Dung), Is The Name For Deposits Of The Partially Decomposed And Dry Excrementitious Matter Of Birds, Especially Sea Birds, As Those That Frequent Coast Islands. It Is Highly Valued As A Fertilizer. Deposits From Sea-birds Are Found Wherever There Is Good Feeding-ground ...
Guantanamo
Guantanamo, Gwan-tani-mo, Cuba, Town In The Province Of Oriente, Situated Near The Head Of The Most Important Harbor East Of The City Of Santiago On The Southern Coast. Its Surroundings Were Favorably Known Before 1898, For The Beauty Of The Groves Of Lime-trees And Lemon-trees, The Coffee Plantations And The ...
Guaranies
Guaranies, Gwa'ra-nez, A Numerous Family Of Indians Inhabiting The Greater Part Of The Rio De La Plata Region, Paraguay, And A Very Considerable Region In Brazil. They Reach Westward To The Foothills Of The Andes. The Guaranies Are Divided Into Small Tribal Bands Each Of Which Has Its Own Tribal ...
Guardian
Guardian, In Law, One Having Legal Charge Of The Person Or Property Or Both Of Another Who Is Incompetent To Act For Himself, As An Insane Person Or An Infant. The Term More Usually Is Applied To One Who Has Legal Charge Of The Affairs Of Another Who Is Less ...
Guards
Guards. A Guard, In The Primary Sense, Is One Who Watches Or Protects A Person Or Per Sons, A Place, Property, Etc., Against Loss, Danger, Or Harm; As A Body-guard, A Prison-guard, Etc. Body-guards Have Been An Inseparable Accom Paniment Of Monarchy From The Earliest Ages; The Assyrian And Persian ...
Guarini
Guarini, Giovanni Battista, Italian Poet: B. Ferrara, 10 Dec. 1537; D. Venice, 1612. He Studied In The Universities Of Pisa, Padua And Ferrara And Was Appointed To The Chair Of Lit Erature In The Latter, And Soon Published Some Sonnets Which Obtained Great Popularity. At The Age Of 30, He ...
Guatemala
Guatemala, A Republic In Central America, Bounded On The North By Mexico, British Honduras And The Bay Of Honduras, On The East And Southeast By The Gulf Of Ama Tique, Honduras And Salvador; On The South And Southwest By The Pacific Ocean; And On The West By Mexico. Its Area ...
Gudrun
Gudrun, Goo-droon', A Middle High Ger Man Folk Epic Composed By An Unknown Poet In Bavaria Or Austria About 1210. It Is A Com Panion Piece To The (nibelungenlied,' Of Which It Is An Evident Imitation, As Is Shown, Among Other Things, By The Form Of The Strophe, Which Is ...
Guerin
Guerin, Jules, American Artist: B. Saint Louis, Mo., 1866. He Was A Pupil Of Benjamin Constant And Of Jean Paul Laurens In Paris. He Was Elected A Member Of The National Insti Tute Of Arts And Letters And Has Received Sev Eral Awards In Recent Years. He Is Regarded As ...
Guerrero
Guerrero, Ga-ra'ro, Mexico, A State Bounded By The States Of Michoacan, Morelos And Mexico On The North, Puebla On The North East% Oaxaca On The East And Southeast, And By The Pacific Ocean On The Southwest. Its Area Is Given As 24,996 Square Miles. It Is Moun Tainous Throughout Almost ...
Guesde
Guesde, Ged, Jules Basile, French Social Ist: B. Paris, 11 Nov. 1845. For Some Time He Was Employed As Translator, But He Soon Aban Doned This Field And Threw Himself Into The Fight Of The Republicans Against The Empire. He Collaborated With Herault In The Latter's La Liberti, And Subsequently ...
Guiana
Guiana, Ge-ena, The Name Often Employed To Designate That Tract Of Country In South America Bounded By The Atlantic Ocean, The Amazon River And Its Branch, The Rio Negro, The Orinco River And The Cassiquiare. It Lies Between Lat. 8° 40' N. And Lat. 3° 30' S., Be Tween Long. ...
Guichard
Guichard, Karl Gottlieb, Or Quintus 'emus, German Military Officer And H;storian: B. Magdeburg, 1724; D. Potsdam, 1775. He Received Training For The Church, But Abandoned It For The More Congenial Pursuit Of Historical Study. He Finally Enlisted In The Service Of The Dutch Army And Fought There For A Year. ...
Guides
Guides, In Military Affairs, Persons Drawn From The Country In Which An Army Is En Camped To Lead Troops In Night Operations Or Through A Strange Country; Also Non-commis Sioned Officers Or- Other Enlisted Men Who Take Positions To Mark The Pivots, Marches, Forma Tions And Alignments In Modern Tactics. ...
Guild
Guild, A Fraternity, Society Or Company, Formerly Active In Commerce And Mechanics. Guilds Played An Important Part In Public Affairs• In The Middle Ages. The Romans Had Various Mechanical Fraternities, But These Seem To Have Been Merely Religious And Political Societies; While The Associations Of Workmen In The Arse Nals ...
Guilford Court House
Guilford Court House, Battle Of, 15 March 1781; In Results One Of The Decisive Battles Of The Revolution. Cornwallis At Hills Boro Proclaimed That He Had Conquered North Carolina, And Called On The Well-disposed To Rally Around Him; Greene, Awaiting Reinforcements Near The Virginia Border, Perceived The Neces Sity Of ...
Guillaume Dorange
Guillaume D'orange, Popularly Known As "short-nose," Because He Had Lost Part Of His Nose In Battle, A Semi-legend Ary, Semi-historical Character, Who Gives The Title To A Large Cycle Of Legends Of The Chivalric And Troubadour Class Which Cluster Round The Orange Family. He Is Also Known As Guil Laume ...
Guillotine
Guillotine, Gil'o-ten, A Machine For 'beheading, So Called From Dr. Joseph Ignace Guillotin, And Introduced During The French Revolution. It Consists Of Two Posts United At The Top By A Cross Beam And Furnished 'with Grooves, In 'which A Broad Steel. Blade Heavily Weighted With Lead Descends By The Impetus ...
Guinea
Guinea, Gulf Of, That Portion Of The At Lantic On The Coast Of Africa, Between Capes Lopez And Palmas. Two Of Its Arms Are 'the Bights Of Benin And Biafra. The Niger Flows Into This Gulf South Of The Bight Of Benin. A Number Of Small Streams Enter From French ...
Guinea Pepper
Guinea Pepper, Specifically The Grim Of The Plant Ansommu Meleguetta, But Also A General Term For The Seeds Of Different Plants Because Of Their Peppery Nature. Thus The Seeds Of The Shrub Xylopio Letkiopica Ig, So Called, Although It Is Often Termed Ethiopian Pepper. In The 18th Century The Trade ...
Guizot
Guizot, Givezw, Elizabeth Charlotte Pauline, French Authoress: B. Paris, 1773; D. 1827. She Was The First Wife Of Francois Guizot, And An Author Of Considerable Repute. In 1800 Appeared Her Novel 'les Contradictions.' Shortly Afterward She Became Literary And Artis Tic Editor For Le Publiciste, And Published Her Contributions To ...
Gullivers Travels
Gulliver's Travels. 'gulliver's Travels,' Or More Fully, 'the Travels Of Lemuel Gulliver,' Was Published Late In 1726, During The Last Visit Of The Author, Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) To England. It Was Im Mediately Popular And Has Since Its Publica Tion Enjoyed The Reputation Of Being At Once A Popular Child's ...
Gulls
Gulls, A Large Group Of Sea-birds Found Throughout The World And Constituting, Together With The Terns (q.v.), Skinners (q.v.), And Skuas Or Jaeger-gulls, The Family Lorick' (q.v.). Some 53 Species Of Gulls Are Known, Ranging In Size From That Of A Pigeon To That Of A Goose. The Prevailing Color ...
Gunboat
Gunboat, A Term Originally Applied To Small Craft Mounting Usually A Single Gun And Employed Exclusively In The Defense Of Coasts And Rivers. Experiences In The Crimean War Suggested The Extension Of The Use Of Gunboats To Offensive Warfare. In The United States The Gunboat Figured To A Very Considerable ...
Guncotton
Guncotton Is The Name Originally As Signed To The Material Produced By Schoenbein, Of Basle, Switzerland, In 1845 By Treating Cotton With A Mixture Of Strong Nitric And Sulphuric Acids. The Discovery That Starch, Woody Fibre, And Similar Substances Give Rise To The Forma Tion Of Highly Combustible Bodies When ...
Gundulich
Gundulich, Ivan, Goon'doo-litch, E-van, Illyrian Poet : B. Ragusa, 1588; D. 1638. As Son Of A Nobleman His Education Was Most Care Fully Conducted From The Earliest Childhood By Jesuits And Humanists. Later He Studied Juris Prudence And Became President Of The Ragusan Republic. As A Very Young Man He ...
Gunnery
Gunnery Is The Science And Art Of Handling Guns, The Object Being To Inflict The Maximum Destructive Effect Upon The Enemy In Personnel, Material And Morale (i.e., Troops And Ship's Crews; Protective Works, Ships, Guns, War Materials And Supplies; And Mental Condition As Regards Zeal, Energy, Hopeful And Confident Com ...
Gunnison
Gunnison, Jqhn W., American Army Officer And Explorer : B. Goshen, N. H., 11 Nov. 1812; D. Near Sevier Lake, Utah, 26 Oct. 1853. Attended An Academy At Hopkinton, N. H., Finishing His Course In December 1832. On 7 July 1838 He Was Graduated From The United States Military Academy ...
Gunpowder
Gunpowder, An Explosive Substance Formed By Mixing Saltpeter, Charcoal And Sul Phur Together. The Mixture Mayin Com Position Between Quite Wide Limits Yetpos Sess Explosive Properties; But The Proportions Adopted By The United States Governmental Au Thorities Are Saltpeter, 75 Per Cent; Charcoal, 15 Per Cent, And Sulphur, 10 Per ...
Guns
Guns, History And Development. The Early History Of Guns Is Involved In The Mists Of Legend, Doubt And Conjecture. Their Evo Lution Necessarily Followed The Development Of Gunpowder From The Point Of Its Ascertained Capabilities As A Propellant. According To Reli Able Testimony, Incendiary Compositions Pos Sessing Some Explosive Force ...
Gunshot Wound
Gunshot Wound. The Chief Causes Of Wounds In Modern Warfare Are Small-arms Bullets, Shrapnel Balls, Fragments Of Shell, And Grenades. Rifle Bullets Are Of A Roughly Conical Shape, And Are Generally Made With A Lead Core And A German Silver Or Steel Jacket. They Have, Besides Their Motion Of Progress, ...
Gunther
Gunther, Archibald Clavering, Amer. Ican Novelist And Dramatist: B. Liverpool, Eng Land, 25 Oct. 1847; D. New York, 23 Feb. 1907. While He Was Quite Young His Parents Went To California. There He Studied Engineering In The State University. For Six Years He Worked As A Mining Engineer; Then For ...
Guntown
Guntown, Battle Of. After General Forrest's Capture Of Fort Pillow, 12 April 1864, General Sturgis Was Ordered To March From Memphis To Intercept Him, But Before The Expe Dition Got Fairly Under Way It Was Ascertained That Forrest Had Fallen Back To Northern Mis Sissippi. On 1 June Sturgis Started ...
Gussenbauer
Gussenbauer, Karl, Austrian Surgeon: B. Carinthia, 1842; D. 1903. After Studying At Vienna, He Occupied The Chair Of Surgery At Liege (1875); Three Years Later He Was Appointed To A Similar Post At Prague And In 1894 At Vienna. His Researches Were Principally In The Surgery Of The Larynx, Partial ...
Gustavus
Gustavus (gfis-trviis) I (commonly Called Gustavus Vasa), King Of Sweden: B. Lindholmen, 12 May 1496; D. Stockholm, 29 Sept. 1560. He Studied At The University Of Upsala, And Entered The Service Of Sten Sture The Younger, Administrator Of The Kingdom, In 1514. Sweden Had, By The Union Of Calmar, Become ...
Gustavus Ii Gustavus Adolphus
Gustavus Ii (gustavus Adolphus), King Of Sweden, Grandson Of Gustavus Vasa: B. Stockholm, 9 Dec. 1594; D. Liitzen, Saxony, 16 Nov. 1632. He Was Trained To War Under Experienced Generals, And At 16 Took His Place In The State Council. Charles Ix, The Father Of Gustavus, Had Been Declared King ...
Gustavus Iii
Gustavus Iii, King Of Sweden: B. Stockholm, 24 Jan. 1746; D. There, 29 March 1792. He Was The Eldest Son Of Adolphus Frederick, Duke Of Holstein, Who Had Been Called To The Swedish Crown In 1743, And Succeeded His Father On 12 Feb. 1771. He Found The Country Divided Between ...
Gutenberg
Gutenberg, Johannes Or Heim, German Inventor Of Printing With Movable Types : B. Mainz, About 1400; D. There, 23 Feb. 1468. Little Or Nothing Is Known Of His Early Life. In 1434 He Was Living In Strassburg And In 1436 Entered Into A Contract With One Andreas Dryzehn Or Dritzehn ...
Guthrie
Guthrie, William Norman, American Clergyman, Educator And Author: B. Dundee, Scotland, 4 May 1868. He Was Graduated At The University Of The South 1889. (a.m., 1891). He Became Assistant Professor Of Modern Lan Guages In The University Of The South 1889-90; And Professor Of Modern Languages, Kenyon College, 1892-93; Was ...
Guthrie_2
Guthrie, Okla., Once Capital Of The Terri Tory Of Oklahoma And The County-seat Of Logan County, On The Cottonwood River And On The Atchison, Topeka And Santa Fe, The Chicago, Rock Island And Pacific, The Oklahoma Eastern, The Missouri, Kansas And Texas, And Fort Smith And Western Denver, Enid And ...
Gutierrez De Lara
Gutierrez De Lara, Bernardo, Mexican Patriot: B. Quanajuato, 1778; D. San Antonio, Bejar, 15 March 1814. When Hidalgo And Allende, After The Defeat Of Cal Deron In 1811, Were On Their Way To The United States To Reorganize Their Forces, Gutierrez Met Them Early In March And Offered His Services. ...