When Hilda Hall was born on 21 April 1895, in Rockville, Washington, Utah, United States, her father, Alfred Lorenzo Hall, was 36 and her mother, Julia Elzina Hansen, was 35. She married Leo Bringhurst on 10 December 1925, in St. George Utah Temple, St. George, Washington, Utah, United States. They were the parents of at least 1 son and 2 daughters. She lived in Toquerville Election Precinct, Washington, Utah, United States in 1940 and Toquerville, Washington, Utah, United States in 1950. She died on 2 April 1975, in St. George, Washington, Utah, United States, at the age of 79, and was buried in Toquerville Cemetery, Toquerville, Washington, Utah, United States.
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A landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court upholding the constitutionality of racial segregation laws for public facilities if the segregated facilities were equal in quality. It's widely regarded as one of the worst decisions in U.S. Supreme Court history.
After three prior attempts to become a state, the United States Congress accepted Utah into the Union on one condition. This condition was that the new state rewrite their constitution to say that all forms of polygamy were banned. The territory agreed, and Utah became a state on January 4, 1896.
Jeannette Pickering Rankin became the first woman to hold a federal office position in the House of Representatives, and remains the only woman elected to Congress by Montana.
English, Scottish, Irish, German, Norwegian, and Danish: from Middle English hall (Old English heall), Middle High German halle, Old Norse hǫll all meaning ‘hall’ (a spacious residence), hence a topographic name for someone who lived in or near a hall or an occupational name for a servant employed at a hall. In some cases it may be a habitational name from any of the places called with this word, which in some parts of Germany and Austria in the Middle Ages also denoted a salt mine. Hall is one of the commonest and most widely distributed of English surnames, bearing witness to the importance of the hall as a feature of the medieval village. The English surname has been established in Ireland since the 14th century, and, according to MacLysaght, has become numerous in Ulster since the 17th century.
Swedish: ornamental or topographic name from hall ‘hall’ (a spacious residence), or a habitational name from a placename containing the element hall ‘rock’ (from Old Norse hallr).
Chinese: variant Romanization of the surnames 何 and 賀, see He 1 and 2.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
Possible Related NamesForeword To our children and grandchildren, I’m writing this story for two reasons. First I would like to leave with you my testimony of the gospel and second to leave this story because I think m …
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