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Authority record

Carroll, Jimmy

  • n 93005902
  • Person
  • 1913-1972

New York born bandleader Jimmy Carroll received a bachelor’s degree in Music at Eastman School of Music, and he later attended the Juillard and the Yale Music School. He served in the Army’s Special Services during the war after which his career began. He sang tenor for RCA Victor’s 1951 recording with Al Goodman’s orchestra of six highlights from Victor Herbert’s operetta “Naughty Marietta.” His main talent, however, was arranging music. He arranged for such bands as those of Mitch Miller, Harry James and Vaughan Monroe, and for singers Frankie Laine (for example his “High Noon) and Rosemary Clooney (“Come on a My House”). His arrangements for Miller’s “Yellow Rose of Texas” and “March from the River Kwai” were among his most successful. He also made arrangements for Schaeffer Beer commercials and for Frank Sinatra. He collaborated mainly with Marshall Barer and Paul Parnes. Much of his later work was as a band leader, conducting for his own Jimmy Carroll Orchestra and other bands.

Carroll, Lewis, 1832-1898

  • n 79056546
  • Person
  • 1832-1898

Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known by the pseudonym Lewis Carroll, born in Daresbury, Cheshire, England and died in Guildford, Surrey, England; best known for his Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the looking-glass; attended Christ Church, Oxford, studying Mathematics, and teaching, and he remained at Christ Church, even after his teaching career concluded, until his death; published his children's fiction under the name Lewis Carroll, and published his nonfiction writings under the name Charles Dodgson.

Carruthers, William, 1830-1922

  • Person
  • 1830-1922

William Carruthers was born on May 29, 1830, in Moffat, Dumfriesshire, Scotland.

He was a Scottish botanist, paleobotanist, geologist, and agriculturalist. Educated at Moffat Academy, he graduated from the University of Edinburgh. In 1854, he began to study for the Presbyterian Ministry at New College, Edinburgh, but then decided to specialize in natural sciences. He became a lecturer in botany at the New Veterinary College in Edinburgh and served as assistant secretary to the Royal Society of Edinburgh. He became assistant in the Botany department of the British Museum in 1859, becoming Keeper of Botany in 1871 and retiring in 1895. Carruthers published scientific work on oaks, diatoms, mosses, fossil ferns, fossil Cycads, Calamites, and Lepidodendron. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1871. He was President of the Geologists Association of London from 1875 to 1877. He was President of the Linnean Society from 1886 to 1890 and a member of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh. He was awarded a Ph.D. by the University of Uppsala, Sweden in 1907. Carruthers was skeptical about Darwin's theory of evolution. In his 1876 presidential address to the Geologists Association of London, he argued that "the facts of paleontological botany are opposed to evolution". He was actively involved in the Presbyterian Church throughout his life. He was on its Committee on Publications (1880-1920) and edited the Children’s Messenger (1876-1921). He was keenly interested in the history of Puritanism.

In 1855, he married Jane Couch Moffatt (1838–1925). He died on June 2, 1922, in Surrey, England.

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