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Yeatman
Yeatman ( ) is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Bill Yeatman (1839–1901), American baseball player * Eric Morgan Yeatman, English engineer * Hoyt Yeatman (born 1955), visual effects artist *Huyshe Yeatman-Biggs (1845–1922), influential Anglican clergyman * James E. Yeatman (1818–1901), American banker and philanthropist *John Pym Yeatman John Pym Yeatman (1830–1910) was a barrister and influential proponent of British Israelism. He has been described as "outspoken, quarrelsome, no respecter of rank and reputation and cursed with a self-destructive streak". Life Yeatman obtained ... (1830–1910), barrister and influential proponent of British Israelism * Pope Yeatman (1861–1953), American mining engineer * R. J. Yeatman (1897–1968), British humorist * Rex Yeatman (1919–1995), English cricketer * Timothy J. Yeatman (born 1958), American oncologist * Thomas Yeatman (1787–1833), American industrialist and banker * Will Yeatman (born 1988), Am ...
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Will Yeatman
William Yeatman (born April 10, 1988) is a former American football offensive tackle who played five seasons during his career. He played college football and college lacrosse at the University of Notre Dame and the University of Maryland. Yeatman was signed by the New England Patriots as an undrafted free agent on July 27, 2011. Yeatman ended his career in 2015 after reaching an injury settlement with the Houston Texans. He credited five seasons in the National Football League (NFL). Early life Yeatman was born in Naples, Italy, to parents Dennis and Bonnie Yeatman. His father played lacrosse for the United States Naval Academy and retired as a Commander after twenty years of naval service. His mother, Bonnie, is a former teacher and graduate of The University of Maryland. Yeatman has four siblings: Grant, who was a member of Navy ROTC and played Club lacrosse at University of Southern California, he now works for Jones Lang & LaSalle in Oakland; Caroline, a former member of S ...
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Pope Yeatman
Pope Yeatman (August 3, 1861 – December 5, 1953) was an American mining engineer and consultant. He was known for his work in mining in South Africa, Chile, and Alaska. He was a member of the War Industries Board during World War I. Early life Pope Yeatman was born on August 3, 1861, in St. Louis, Missouri. He graduated from Washington University in St. Louis's mining school with an Engineer of Mines (E. M.) degree in 1883. His uncle, James E. Yeatman, was a philanthropist in St. Louis. His first name was derived from the name of his grandfather Nathaniel Pope, an early politician in the Illinois territory. As a boy, he lived in New Haven, Connecticut, and with relatives on a ranch in Wyoming. Career After graduating, Yeatman worked in mines in Missouri, New Mexico, Colorado and Mexico. From August 1895 to 1899, he worked in South Africa as an assistant consulting engineer for the Consolidated Gold Fields Company and then was manager of the Robinson Deep gold mine. In 1896, ...
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Huyshe Yeatman-Biggs
Huyshe Wolcott Yeatman-Biggs (2 February 184514 April 1922; until 1898 known as Huyshe Wolcott Yeatman) was an influential Church of England clergyman who served as the only Anglican Bishop of Southwark, Bishop of Southwark to be a suffragan bishop (in the Diocese of Rochester), the 105th Bishop of Worcester and, latterly, as the inaugural bishop of the restored Episcopal see, see of Bishop of Coventry, Coventry in the modern era. Yeatman was born at Manston House, Dorset, the younger son of Harry Farr Yeatman Justice of the Peace, JP by his marriage to Emma, daughter and heiress of Harry Biggs, of Stockton, Wiltshire, Stockton House, Wiltshire. He was educated at Winchester College"Who was Who" 1897–1990 London, A & C Black, 1991 and Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he was a Dixie Scholar, and eventually (1905) an Honorary Fellow. He was ordained in 1869 and after a curacy in Salisbury became chaplain to the Bishop of Salisbury, bishop in 1875. That same year he married fi ...
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Thomas Yeatman
Thomas T. Yeatman Sr. (1787–1833) was the owner of an iron foundry and was a prominent cotton trader, banker, steamboat owner, and commission business partner in Nashville, Tennessee. Yeatman's father was a boatbuilder in Brownsville, Pennsylvania. According to a writer signing as "Progress" in 1879, "Thomas Yeatman Esq. spent several weeks prospecting for iron ore in Stewart County, Tennessee, Stewart county in the summer of 1826 and 1827, and in due time secured about 30,000 acres of land, upon which Dover Furnace was erected in 1828, and in 1830 Bear Spring Furnace was built, and about the same time the Rolling Mill and Forges. The fire brick for the heating furnaces of the Rolling Mill were imported from England, at a cost of one hundred dollars ($100) a thousand. Afterwards, a deposit of fire clay was found on the property, which made as good trick as those imported." With business partners Joseph, Robert, and James Woods, he formed Yeatman, Woods & Co. In 1901 a newsp ...
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