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・ Thomas Klestil
・ Thomas Kling
・ Thomas Kläsener
・ Thomas Knaggs
・ Thomas Knak
・ Thomas Kelly (GC)
・ Thomas Kelly (Irish politician)
・ Thomas Kelly (Medal of Honor)
・ Thomas Kelly (New Zealand politician)
・ Thomas Kelly (politician)
・ Thomas Kelly (rugby union)
・ Thomas Kelly Cheyne
・ Thomas Kelly High School
・ Thomas Kelly-Kenny
・ Thomas Kelsey
Thomas Kelso
・ Thomas Kelso Creighton
・ Thomas Kelway
・ Thomas Kemp
・ Thomas Kemp (business person)
・ Thomas Kemp Sanderson
・ Thomas Kempe
・ Thomas Kempe (footballer)
・ Thomas Kemper
・ Thomas Kempshall
・ Thomas Ken
・ Thomas Kenan (Civil War)
・ Thomas Kendall
・ Thomas Kendrick (Medal of Honor)
・ Thomas Keneally


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Thomas Kelso : ウィキペディア英語版
Thomas Kelso

Thomas Kelso (1784–1878) was an Irish-American philanthropist and businessman, who was born in Clonis, a market town in the north of Ireland, August 28, 1784. He died on the morning of July 26, 1878〔(Baltimore City Death Index, Maryland State Archives )〕 at his home of many years on East Baltimore Street in Baltimore, Maryland, at the age of 94.
==Life==
The parents of Kelso died when he was a child. He had two older brothers and a sister. Kelso came to the United States at age seven in 1791, arriving August 2 with his older brother John. The Kelso boys' oldest brother George was already in the U.S. working as a school teacher, and was known to be in the Baltimore vicinity. By chance, the three brothers were reunited while (and Thomas? ) were visiting the school George taught in. With $100 from George, the three began a successful butchering business.〔The Late Thomas Kelso :Interesting Reminiscences Of The Life Of The Baltimore Philanthropist, (1878, July 28). New York Times, p. 8. ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2004) database. (Document ID: 81727180), Baltimore Sun, July 27, 1878, reprinted The New York Times, July 28, 1878〕 In 1807 he married Miss Ellen Cross, daughter of John and Jane Cross, well known and highly respected citizens of Cecil County in northeast Maryland.
His daughter, Mrs. Jane Kelso Guiteau, later the widow of the Rev. S. Guiteau, never recovered from her father's death and died suddenly in December 1878, at the landmark Carrollton Hotel, at the northeast corner of Light and German (now Redwood) Streets.〔'Sudden Demise of a Daughter of the Late Thomas Kelso at the Carrollton Hotel', The Baltimore Daily News, December 1878〕

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