Hull

Brief Life History of Hull

When Hull was born on 3 May 1878, in Barry, Pike, Illinois, United States, her father, Elam Whitney Hull, was 32 and her mother, Olive Jennie Curtis, was 30.

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Family Time Line

Elam Whitney Hull
1845–1920
Olive Jennie Curtis
1848–1926
Arthur Hull
1872–
Charles Otis Hull
1875–1948
Hull
1878–
Earle Whitney Hull
1883–1952
Harry Edwin Hull
1885–1948
John Wilbur Hull
1885–1948

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    Sources

    There are no historical documents attached to Hull.

    World Events (3)

    1881 · The Assassination of James Garfield

    Garfield was shot twice by Charles J. Guitea at Railroad Station in Washington, D.C. on July 2, 1881. After eleven weeks of intensive and other care Garfield died in Elberon, New Jersey, the second of four presidents to be assassinated, following Abraham Lincoln.

    1882 · The Chinese Exclusion Act

    A federal law prohibiting all immigration of Chinese laborers. The Act was the first law to prevent all members of a national group from immigrating to the United States.

    1885 · The First Skyscraper

    The Home Insurance Building is considered to be the first skyscraper in the world. It was supported both inside and outside by steel and metal that were deemed fireproof and also it was reinforced with concrete. It originally had ten stories but in 1891 two more were added.

    Name Meaning

    English: from the Middle English personal name Hulle, a pet form of Hugh or of its common diminutives Hulin, Hulot (see Hewlett and Huling ).

    English: in southwest England and the west and central Midlands sometimes a topographical or habitational name for someone who lived on or by a hill (Middle English atte hulle, from Old English hyll), or from a place with this name. However, this word and the derived names will have usually assumed the standard form Hill in modern times, as in the case of Hill (Gloucestershire), which was usually spelt Hull or Hulle during the Middle Ages. Hull with this origin was also once the name of two other places, now lost, one in Great Budworth (Cheshire), and the other in Inkpen (Berkshire). See also Hell .

    English: perhaps a habitational name from Kingston upon Hull in East Yorkshire, which takes its name from the river Hull (perhaps related to Danish hul ‘hole, hollow’, or perhaps a British name based on the root seul- ‘mud’).

    Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

    Possible Related Names

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