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・ Josiah Quincy I
・ Josiah Quincy II
・ Josiah Quincy III
・ Josiah Quincy, Jr.
・ Josiah Rees
・ Josiah Roberts
・ Josiah Royce
・ Josiah Royce bibliography
・ Josiah S. Carberry
・ Josiah S. Johnston
・ Josiah S. Little
・ Josiah Sandford Brigham
・ Josiah Scott
・ Josiah Scott House
・ Josiah Seton
Josiah Sleeper
・ Josiah Smith
・ Josiah Smith (clergyman)
・ Josiah Smith (disambiguation)
・ Josiah Smith Tennent House
・ Josiah Snelgrove
・ Josiah Snelling
・ Josiah Spaulding
・ Josiah Spode
・ Josiah Stamp, 1st Baron Stamp
・ Josiah Standish
・ Josiah Steinbrick
・ Josiah Strong
・ Josiah Sutherland
・ Josiah Symon


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Josiah Sleeper : ウィキペディア英語版
Josiah Sleeper
Josiah Sleeper (18??-1946) was an American businessman who founded Sleeper's College (sometimes referred to as Sleeper's Business College) in Chester, Pennsylvania, in 1910.〔(Swarthmore photo )〕
Sleeper attended grammar, or perhaps high school, at The Old Academy, located on West 2nd Street between Fulton and Franklin Streets in Chester.〔(OldChesterPA guestbook, 2002 )〕
Sleeper became well known in Delaware County. In the 1890s, he had at least partial control of a baseball team in Marcus Hook, some three miles southwest of Chester. He brought the team to Chester's 12th Street Park, which was bounded by 12th, Upland and Potter Streets. He eventually passed control of the team to local baseball impresario Jesse Frysinger, and it moved in 1900 to Wilmington, Delaware.〔(OldChesterPa: Sports: Baseball: Delaware County - Home of Big Leaguers )〕
In October 1921, Sleeper bought part of the "Brow O' the Hill" estate at 8 Irving Road, Wallingford, Pennsylvania, from D. Edwin Irving for $4,250. He acquired the rest on March 18, 1930, from Samuel Lloyd Irving and his wife and Jeanette Irving Stull and her husband.〔(Real estate listing for 643 S. Orange Street, Media, Pa. ) Retrieved 16 November 2007.〕
Sleeper died August 20, 1946. His will allowed his sister, Lottie Sleeper Hill, to live in "Brow O’ the Hill" until her death. But she had, in fact, already died and so the property was sold for $43,000 to James H. Gorbey, who would go on to be mayor of Chester (1964 to 1967) and U.S. District Court judge from 1970 until his death in 1977.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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