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・ President's House (Keene State College)
・ President's House (Philadelphia)
・ President's House (Princeton University)
・ President's House (Southern Arkansas University)
・ President's House (Tempe, Arizona)
・ President's House (University of Florida)
・ President's House (University of Georgia)
・ President's House, Bluefield State College
・ President's House, Colombo
・ President's House, Gallaudet College
・ President's House, Naval War College
・ President's House, Trinidad and Tobago
・ President's Hundred Tab
・ President's Inauguration Medal
・ President's Intelligence Advisory Board
President's Island
・ President's Leadership Class
・ President's Management Advisory Board
・ President's Management Agenda
・ President's Management Council
・ President's Mansion (University of Alabama)
・ President's Medal
・ President's Medal (Israel)
・ President's Medal for Shooting
・ President's Office, George Washington University
・ President's Organization for Unemployment Relief
・ President's Overseas XV
・ President's Own Guard Regiment
・ President's Park
・ President's Pavilion


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President's Island : ウィキペディア英語版
President's Island

President's Island is a peninsula on the Mississippi River in southwest Memphis, Tennessee. The city's major river port and an industrial park are located there.
==History==
The name ''President'' or ''President's'' Island appeared as early as 1801 or 1802 in a river guide called ''Cramer's Navigator''.〔(Vrettos, N. ''Story of Presidents Island.'' ) Presidents Island, Industrial Association, 2005.〕 The name referred to the island's size, then the largest on the Mississippi River.〔 At that time President's Island was an actual island. Some old river maps identify the northern third of the present island as Vice President's Island.
The Freedmen's Bureau established a camp on the island for freed slaves in 1865, and about 1,500 former slaves stayed there for a time.〔 Some years later, Nathan Bedford Forrest contracted with local officials to establish a penal farm on the island to raise corn and cotton.〔 Forrest offered to pay Shelby County 10 cents a day for each worker.〔 Forrest died in 1877, possibly of dysentery contracted by drinking impure island water.〔 In the late 1870s the island served as a refuge for many people fleeing the yellow fever epidemics that swept the city, killing thousands.〔
The development plan devised in the 1940s called for closing the Tennessee Chute that had separated the island from the eastern bank.〔 This created a deep-water harbor (later named ''McKellar Lake'') accessible from the Mississippi by the channel at the south end of the island. The Flood Control Act of 1946 allocated $17 million for the project, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began construction in 1948.
The flood control and industrial development project in the late 1940s dammed the section of river between the island and the eastern bank and created a peninsula. Prior to that time, the island was surrounded by the river and subject to its power. Floods interfered with various attempts to raise crops and endangered the lives of those who had settled there. The island's relative isolation and untamed landscape made it a favored location for illicit activities, including gambling, cockfights, and moonshining.
Four Memphians were most responsible for transforming President's Island into an industrial center: businessman Frank C. Pidgeon, E.H. Crump, U.S. Senator Kenneth McKellar, and Jack Carley, an editorial writer for the Commercial Appeal newspaper. McKellar was chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which was instrumental in funding the project. Gen. M.C. Tyler, former president of the Mississippi River Commission, was also instrumental in plans for island development. The island was annexed by the city in 1947.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「President's Island」の詳細全文を読む



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