Appearance
🎉 your ETH🥳
"Statue in Sheridan Park Patrick Cudahy Jr. (kŭd ŭ hay); March 17, 1849 – July 25, 1919) was an American industrialist in the meat packing business and a patriarch of the Cudahy family. Background Cudahy was born on St. Patrick's Day in Callan, County Kilkenny, Ireland.Cudahy, Patrick 1849 - 1919 - Dictionary of Wisconsin History - Wisconsin Historical Society"Saddle and Sirloin Portrait Catalogue" - North American International Livestock Exposition - (Adobe Acrobat *.PDF document)Sherman, Jeff. "Milwaukee Talks: Michael Cudahy" - OnMilwaukee.com - August 28, 2002 A few months after he was born, his family moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He worked his way up at the Plankinton and Armour meat packing plant in the Menomonee River Valley, becoming the superintendent in 1874. In 1888, the owner, John Plankinton, transferred the company to Patrick and his brother, John. The company became known as Cudahy Brothers.Cudahy Brothers Co. Letterhead. Wisconsin Historical Society."Caught in the Middle: The Seizure and Occupation of the Cudahy Brothers Company, 1944-1945". Wisconsin Magazine of History, vol. 78, no. 3 (Spring, 1995): 200-218.Cudahy Brothers. Encyclopedia of Milwaukee. In 1892, Cudahy moved the company to a 700-acre (2.8 km²) plot of land south of Milwaukee which he and his brother John bought for the purpose. This land was in the former Town of Lake, which is now divided between the municipalities of Milwaukee, St. Francis, and Cudahy. Cudahy "had a bittersweet relationship with the village of Cudahy" in part because he supported temperance and "fought against liquor". He "argued with the Cudahy Common Council about the spread of taverns in the village", although he also worked to assist business development and the construction of a new library. He said, "It is a source of satisfaction to me to look over those 25 years and see what has been accomplished, but I would feel much better if there were not the antagonistic spirit in Cudahy which seems to prevail to a great extent among its citizens."Patrick Cudahy and Michael F. Cudahy WISCONSIN MEAT INDUSTRY HALL OF FAME University of Wisconsin-Madison Patrick Cudahy is buried at Calvary Cemetery in Milwaukee. Family Patrick Cudahy's family includes: Patrick Cudahy Sr., father * Michael Cudahy (1841-1910), brother (president of Armour- Cudahy company, co-founder of Cudahy Packing Company (Omaha), and the city of Cudahy, California * John Cudahy (1843-1915), brother (silent partner of Patrick Jr. in the meat packing plants, Milwaukee and Chicago; Louisville) * Patrick Cudahy Jr. (1849-1919), self ** Michael Francis Cudahy (1886-), son (President of Patrick Cudahy, Inc. from 1919 onwards) *** Richard Dickson Cudahy (1926-2015), grandson (jurist) ***** Robert J. Beck (1961- ), great- great grandson (educator and international law scholar) ** John Clarence Cudahy (1887-1943), son (lawyer, real estate broker, and U.S. ambassador to Poland, Ireland and Belgium) *** Michael Cudahy (1924- ), grandson (Founder of Marquette Electronics and philanthropist) ** Helen Cudahy (1890/1-1917), daughter, committed suicide by leaping from a ship into the ocean"American Girl, Fearing U-boats, Kills Herself", Reading Eagle, October 27, 1917, p. 1. Retrieved July 26, 2015. * Edward Aloysius Cudahy Sr. (1860-1941), brother, co-founder Cudahy Packing Company (Omaha) ** Edward Aloysius Cudahy Jr. (1884-1961), nephew ReferencesFurther reading *Cudahy, Patrick. Patrick Cudahy: his Life, Milwaukee: Burdick & Allen, 1912. External links *Biography of Patrick Cudahy at Patrick Cudahy, Inc. * 1849 births 1919 deaths People from Callan, County Kilkenny Businesspeople from Milwaukee Cudahy family Irish emigrants to the United States (before 1923) "
"Maceo may refer to: Places * Maceo, Antioquia, Colombia, a town and municipality * Maceo, Kentucky, an unincorporated community Other uses * Maceo (name) "
"Shackleton's Expedition in January, 1915 The Caird Coast is that portion of the coast of Coats Land lying between the terminus of Stancomb-Wills Glacier, in 20º00´W, and the vicinity of the Hayes Glacier, in 27º54´W. Shackleton named it for Sir James Key Caird, patron of the expedition. In December 1914 and January 1915, as part of the ill-fated British Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, Ernest Shackleton continued the exploration southward, joining Bruce's discovery to land which Wilhelm Filchner had discovered from the Deutschland in 1912. References Coasts of Antarctica Landforms of Coats Land Argentine Antarctica British Antarctic Territory "