「postmaster」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

postmaster

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  • He served as postmaster, a member of the Alexandria city council and
  • ally almost everything to Dallas: He was the postmaster, a storeowner, a ferry operator (he operated
  • first settler in Omaha, as well as the first postmaster, a member of the first Omaha City Council an
  • ty was named after the daughter of the first postmaster, A. D. Buzzard.
  • after J.M. Wall, a shopkeeper who served as postmaster after the town's post office opened in 1906.
  • John G. Bunn, appointed postmaster after James McPherson resigned in 1885, buil
  • The town is named for its first postmaster, Almon N. Millspaugh.
  • He was a postmaster and custom officer for Saint-Basile.
  • nd letters in a larger envelope addressed to Postmaster and include city, state and ZIP Code.
  • May 10, 1860 was removed from his office as Postmaster and a warrant was issued for his arrest, acc
  • s established in 1846 with William Daniel as postmaster, and the original mill on the Flat River was
  • By 1854 he was described as ' Postmaster and Letter Receiver'.
  • Cotton being the surname of the merchant and postmaster and not a reference to the crop).
  • bruary 3, 1876 - May 13, 1951) was a lawyer, Postmaster, and Public Works Commissioner in Long Beach
  • On his return, he served as village postmaster and took over ownership of the family farm a
  • His father Thomas Bracken was said to be a postmaster and died when Thomas was aged nine or ten.
  • He served as postmaster and was also manager for several railways.
  • He was Postmaster, and Government Superintendent of Public Wor
  • ed July 31, 1909, with Samuel P. Hertzler as postmaster, and continued until April 30, 1911.
  • r Daniel D. Brockway, local pioneer settler, postmaster and state road commissioner.
  • (1570 - Cologne, 19 May 1627), was a German postmaster and an alleged witch, burned at the stake fo
  • Haarstad, for Ole G. Haarstad - the township postmaster and townsite owner.
  • iam Allan eventually became the city's first postmaster and was appointed to the Legislative Council
  • In 1901, John Ellery Jacobs, the postmaster and civic leader, wrote to the post office d
  • He served as Bell's first postmaster and rose through the ritual ranks of the Mas
  • Madison served as the town's first postmaster and storekeeper, and entries of sales from h
  • sing was also proprietor of a general store, postmaster, and depot agent at the town's rail station.
  • The plan was approved by the Postmaster and the King of Denmark (Christian IX).
  • om Clements (who was at one time the village postmaster) and "H.
  • fice in 1881, with William S. Kelly as first postmaster and by 1900 the population exceeded 300.
  • He was the postmaster and town doctor.
  • to name the town "Lafe" in honor of the new postmaster and the name was officially changed on 21 Ma
  • nt, surveyor, farmer, United States Marshal, postmaster and soldier.
  • Isbister served as town coroner, postmaster and as a member of the board of governors fo
  • he war, Compson worked as a U.S. Marshal and Postmaster and eventually moved to Oregon where he beca
  • , messenger, assistant doorkeeper, assistant postmaster, and finally postmaster.
  • arm, general store, and serving as the local postmaster and justice of the peace.
  • library in Dayton, Ohio, was Dayton's first postmaster and a member of the Board of Trustees for Mi
  • He served as postmaster and mayor of St-Ferdinand d'Halifax.
  • s renamed for Richard Maud, the town's first postmaster and was formerly a stop on the Dayton Short
  • a post office with Martin Davis as the first postmaster and, though on a contract route and not appe
  • ear, and George Price became the town's last postmaster appointed in 1919.
  • here sometime before 1872, and was the first postmaster as of 1886.
  • h was a rural post office founded in 1906 by postmaster Asa Levi Pearce.
  • After leaving Congress, he was postmaster at Dover, New Hampshire from June 1833 until
  • He served as postmaster at La Follette 1904-1909 and as mayor from 1
  • ttamie County (other than log cabin) and was postmaster at Council Bluffs for five years and obtaine
  • He later worked as Postmaster at Doluwa from 1960 to 1962.
  • He was Postmaster at Charlottetown until 1 August 1884 as well
  • handising and as a grain merchant; appointed postmaster at Henderson, Minnesota, February 25, 1856,
  • perator for the Canadian Pacific Railway and postmaster at Knowlton.
  • He served as postmaster at Lawerencetown and was also a commissioner
  • The postmaster at the time was a man by the name of John Ha
  • can community, he was appointed East Lansing postmaster at the beginning of Woodrow Wilson's preside
  • In 1840, he became a postmaster at Nacogdoches, and later served as a deputy
  • He was appointed by President Jackson as postmaster at Olean, New York, December 23, 1830, and s
  • Prevost served as postmaster at Tanana, and left Alaska permanently in 19
  • Saint Clair County from 1949 to 1951 and as postmaster at Port Huron from October 1, 1953, to Febru
  • Postmaster at Glasgow from May 22, 1913, to May 9, 1922
  • DeWolf was postmaster at the village of Mud Creek in Upper Horton
  • On the 17 August 1822 he was appointed postmaster at Hobart and conducted the post office from
  • Dorais was postmaster at Warwick.
  • He was a Councilor, 1810-1815, and was Postmaster at Amherst from May 19, 1819 until his succe
  • n Quebec East; he resigned in 1870 to become postmaster at Quebec, a position he held until 1874.
  • In 1852, he was named postmaster at Brockville and served as associate judge
  • James D. Sholts was postmaster at Hindostan in August 1828.
  • Dr. McRae was the Postmaster at Banana, owned a mercantile store, plantat
  • In November 1792, he was appointed the first postmaster at Rogersville, and the second post office o
  • Only the local Postmaster attended the Funeral.
  • He worked as a postal worker and a postmaster before becoming President of the New South W
  • n he held several posts im Melrose: he was a postmaster between 1879 and 1887, a village recorder an
  • this time, the town's population was one-the postmaster, Billy Rahn, who lived there from about 1922
  • r and spent the next five years working as a postmaster, bootmaker and agent at Quindalup.
  • Newton Martin Curtis, born in the town was a postmaster, brigadier general, and customs inspector.
  • Mary and her husband Jacob, the town's first postmaster, built the stately 14 room Greek Revival inn
  • e and post office with Joseph Winkler as the postmaster, but the post office was discontinued in 192
  • Henry Fanthorp was appointed Postmaster by the Provisional Texas Government in 1835.
  • Elmira, Ontario and became a journalist and postmaster by career.
  • formal dedication ceremony in June 1940, the postmaster called the annex a symbol of the achievement
  • eferred to it as "Wild Hog", however, so the postmaster changed the name to honor his friend Andrews
  • , Charleston took its name from its original postmaster, Charles D. Handy.
  • Owned and edited by Perth postmaster Charles Macfaull, it was originally a four p
  • was formerly known as Cotuit Port until the postmaster, Charles C. Bearse dropped the "port" in 187
  • He also served simultaneously as postmaster, clerk of the circuit court, clerk of the la
  • - January 1, 1993) was an American florist, postmaster, Congressman, and United States Senator from
  • n his community, serving at various times as postmaster, county supervisor, mayor, county court judg
  • of the other recurring characters, including postmaster Dick Huddleston (named after a real life fri
  • ldridge was a Whig politically and served as postmaster during the administrations of Presidents Joh
  • He became the area postmaster during the Jefferson administration in 1807.
  • The community was named after its first postmaster, Ed "Boomer" Matheson.
  • floors of a building owned by Lowell's U.S. Postmaster, Fisher Ames Hildreth, and the theatre venue
  • Hanson Kelly became the postmaster for Pensacola, an office he held until his d
  • He also served as justice of the peace, postmaster for Fort Coulonge and warden for Pontiac Cou
  • d his seat only three months later to become Postmaster for Victoria.
  • his brother Louis-Joseph; he also served as postmaster for the region.
  • He also served as postmaster for Bury's Green.
  • When William Smith was appointed postmaster for a new post office to be located about fi
  • miller, a justice of the peace and served as postmaster for West Cape for 30 years.
  • and treasurer for the township and was also postmaster for St. Jacobs.
  • At age 16, David Reid became the first postmaster for the town.
  • barber shop for some time, working assistant postmaster for over a year (less than two years), then
  • He also served as justice of the peace, postmaster for Martintown and sheriff for the Eastern D
  • He was postmaster for Big Bras D'Or and served as a member of
  • c life in 1922, when he was appointed as the postmaster for Prineville, serving in the position unti
  • was a newspaper publisher and was appointed postmaster for Indianapolis, Indiana.
  • Labrosse was also postmaster for St. Eugene from 1862 to 1882.
  • Anna Matilda Rudolf, served several years as postmaster for Lunenburg and died in 1886.
  • led by R.W.Cawdell, C.C., who acted as head postmaster for the service.
  • as named by Bert Ballenger, the town's first postmaster, for a nearby canyon named El Cajon in Spani
  • in the village of Metcalfe where he was also postmaster for 20 years.
  • In later years, Lois C. Naugle was postmaster for twenty years, with the post office house
  • Andrew Jackson Ritchie served as the postmaster for the area for several years.
  • esent-day Marion County), where he served as Postmaster for a time.
  • He also served as postmaster for Corvallis from 1859 to 1860 followed by
  • He served as postmaster for Tignish and operated an inn there.
  • s served as reeve for Mono and was the first postmaster for Granger.
  • obert Lapum, he was a merchant and served as postmaster for Centreville for 20 years.
  • Forbes served as postmaster for Vernon Bridge where he also operated a s
  • Reaman was a postmaster for Yorkton and land agent for the York Farm
  • Flowers served as postmaster for Cleveland, Minnesota and president of th
  • The position of postmaster for Reddick was established on March 14, 188
  • He was also postmaster for Brockville.
  • He was also postmaster for Manchester, Ontario.
  • Sutherland also served as postmaster for Qu'Appelle.
  • Tweed served as postmaster for Medicine Hat.
  • He later became the postmaster for Brooklyn.
  • He served as postmaster for Saint John from 1886 until his death the
  • He was later named postmaster for Charlottetown.
  • nt then Australia Post as a telegraphist and postmaster for a total of 34 years in New South Wales,
  • He served as the third Atchison postmaster for twelve years.
  • set them up in Worcester, where he was also postmaster for a time.
  • Ewing served as postmaster for Grafton from 1832 to 1833.
  • Tisdale was also Snettisham's postmaster for a time.
  • He served as postmaster for Brampton from 1892 to 1923.
  • Matheson was postmaster for Lower L'Ardoise from 1866 to 1886.
  • It was named for its first postmaster, Francis Marion Poteet.
  • The community is named after postmaster Frank W. Slocomb.
  • He served as the town's postmaster from 1869 until his death in 1871 of complic
  • clerk from 1858 to 1873, and was the city's Postmaster from 1872 until his death.
  • d practiced in Jericho, Vermont where he was postmaster from 1831 to 1836.
  • War as a private in Company D and regimental postmaster from August 14, 1862, to July 19, 1865.
  • William N. Jaynes was postmaster from March 25, 1903, until mail was disconti
  • of the county board of supervisors, and the postmaster from 1866 to 1876.
  • ractice in Bridgton, where he also served as postmaster from 1827-1841.
  • Mrs. Willie Lou Lochridge served as the last Postmaster from May 1971 till the end.
  • as named for Mary Octavia Tabb who served as postmaster from 21 December 1893 until early 1910, as p
  • ity of Berkeley from 1913 to 1915 and as its Postmaster from 1925 to 1933.
  • He returned to Ridgely, where he was postmaster from August 4, 1885, to November 25, 1889.
  • , as its mayor from 1889 to 1901, and as its postmaster from 1901 to 1914.
  • He was the Hammond postmaster from 1944 until his death, one week before h
  • Iyambo was Namibia's first Black postmaster from 1962 to 1963 but fled into exile with S
  • ing in 1900 by William Stuthers who was also Postmaster from 1911 until its closure in 1915 when it
  • settled at Dickinson's Landing where he was postmaster from 1841 to 1863 and operated a general sto
  • in earnest there, becoming the Harpursville postmaster from 1830 to 1839, a judge in the Broome Cou
  • He was a Postmaster, Galveston, Texas from 1874 to 1882.
  • of the Canadian House of Commons, he was the Postmaster General and the Minister of Railways and Can
  • xistence to the fact that Thomas Jefferson's postmaster general in 1806: Gideon Granger talked Easto
  • uebec and was re-appointed to the Cabinet as Postmaster General of Canada.
  • James Marshall and Lavinia Folger Brown, was Postmaster General of the United States from 1929 throu
  • r and National Service from 1945 to 1950 and Postmaster General from 1950 to 1951.
  • Ebenezer Hazard - United States Postmaster General from 1782 to 1789
  • son was Solicitor General from 1854 to 1856, postmaster general from 1857 to 1859, speaker for the h
  • The NTC was taken over by the Postmaster General in 1912 and the ownership transferre
  • In 1913 he was appointed Postmaster General by Woodrow Wilson.
  • rn May 31, 1931) served as the United States Postmaster General from 1988 to 1992.
  • . Wickliffe, former governor of Kentucky and Postmaster General under President John Tyler.
  • eat vacated on the appointment of Spencer as Postmaster General
  • After assuming the position of Postmaster General of the Imperial Reichspost during th
  • A Liberal, he was the Postmaster General from 1940 to 1945.
  • But in 1907, the postmaster general decreed the village was within the s
  • mittee on Postal Operations, and worked with Postmaster General Arthur Summerfield to pass the Grana
  • nephew Anthony M. Frank became United States Postmaster General in 1988.
  • The Postmaster General apparently could not confirm the con
  • In 1963 the postmaster general in another decree closed the West Mi
  • He was appointed U.S. Postmaster General by President Abraham Lincoln, and se
  • senior partner of Durundur Station ‑ but the Postmaster General would not accept that name.
  • He was the Postmaster General from 1963 until the Post Office patr
  • this capacity ibn Khordadbeh served as both postmaster general and the Caliph's personal spymaster
  • federal election, aided by his opponent, the Postmaster General Sydney Smith, residing outside the e
  • He was appointed Assistant Postmaster General and served from 1829 until 1851, whe
  • ilfrid Laurier as the Minister of Labour and Postmaster General of Canada from 16 October 1905-3 Jun
  • a newspaper, almanac and book publisher, the Postmaster General of Vermont and one of the Jeffersoni
  • nd Means between 1874 and 1880 and served as Postmaster General between 1886 and 1891.
  • ennessee General Assembly, Key was appointed Postmaster General in 1877 by President Hayes, and serv
  • His appointment as Postmaster General was part of the Compromise of 1877,
  • In June 1873 he was appointed Postmaster General of the Province.
  • However, he was appointed postmaster general in 1861 and chose to rerun in North
  • As Postmaster General he signed off on New Zealand's first
  • , 1924-29 and 1931-35 and was then appointed Postmaster General in 1935, serving until 1940.
  • Tory, he was one of the joint holders of the Postmaster General position from 1691.
  • e Collamer, after President Zachary Taylor's Postmaster General Jacob Collamer.
  • He was then appointed Postmaster General in the cabinet of President Warren G
  • He served as Postmaster General and on the Board of Railway Commissi
  • Appointment of Fawcett as Postmaster General and Holms as a Lord Commissioner of
  • rst Commissioner of Works and also served as Postmaster General and President of the Local Governmen
  • rch 8, 1859) was a Governor of Tennessee and Postmaster General in the Buchanan administration.
  • ley, a native of the Haverstraw area who was Postmaster General at that time.
  • Jewell then served as the Postmaster General between 1874 and 1876.
  • 965 he published a humorous memoir about his Postmaster General service, My Appointed Round.
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