Meat inspector
Meat Inspector
Samuel Marsden based himself mainly in New South Wales, Australia. He died in Windsor, New South Wales on May 12, 1938.
During the war, their economy seemed to be based on agriculture.
During the time of Mexican rule, the economy in California was largely based on ranching and trade. California became a state on September 9, 1850.
They were called "suffragettes" which is a label based on the term, "suffrage" which means "the right to vote."
The Germans were hoping for real negotiations and a peace based on President Wilson's Fourteen Points. They did not expect a dictated treaty.
was truly based on the amusement park Adventureland in Farmingdale New York...the writer actually worked there during his teen summers and based the movie on it.
Tracy Beaker is based on the seris by Jacqueline Wilson
Samuel Marsden based himself mainly in New South Wales, Australia. He died in Windsor, New South Wales on May 12, 1938.
They are headquartered in Chicago. Wilson is an Amer Sports Company. Amer Sports is based in Helsinki, Finland
Samuel Morse was involved in the invention of the single wire telegraph system. This system was based on the European telegraph.
uncle sam got his beard when john Quincy Adams was president The above answer is not factual!! The U.S. icon 'Uncle Sam' was based on Samuel Wilson who worked during the War of 1812 as a Meat Inspector. The U.S. President at the time was James Madison. The beard came later in about 1830 when cartoonist Thomas Nast and John Tenniel added the goatee. Andrew Jackson was U.S. President at that time. My guess is the goatee was probably added as a tribute to Abraham Lincoln, but there is no references to support that theory.
Jimmy Early was based on Jackie Wilson, James Brown, and Marvin Gaye.
Was there a Cranbrook secretarial college Ilford Essex which worked as a government based scheme which no longer exists?
the whole control engineering is based on balance
no, but they are all based on children characters.
Woodrow Wilson
"Freedom of the Seas" was a speech delivered by Woodrow Wilson in 1917, during World War I. In this speech, Wilson outlined his vision for a world based on the principles of open trade, freedom of navigation, and respect for the rights of neutral nations. The speech played a significant role in shaping public opinion and ultimately influenced the United States' decision to enter the war.