Micajah, West Virginia — Unincorporated community … Wikipedia
Micajah Pond (Massachusetts) — Micajah Pond Location Plymouth, Massachusetts Coordinates 41°55′13″N 70°41′54″W … Wikipedia
Micajah C. Henley — (1856 1927) was a Richmond, Indiana industrialist and inventor. He was a well known manufacturer of roller skates and bicycles[1] sometimes known as The Roller Skate King. The Henley Roller Skate Works could turn out 2,000 pairs of roller skates… … Wikipedia
Micajah Weiss — (born June 3, 1800?) was in the September 26, 1914, New York Times obituary as a 114 year old claimant to longevity, where it was stated he was New York s oldest person. He was a U.S. Civil War veteran. Census data suggests he was born in 1810 or … Wikipedia
Micajah Thomas Hawkins — (20 May 1790 – 22 December 1858) was a U.S. Congressman from North Carolina from 1803 to 1809. Born near Warrenton, North Carolina in 1790, Hawkins attended Warrenton Academy and then the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A practicing… … Wikipedia
Micajah Heights, Massachusetts — Micajah Heights is a neighborhood in Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States, in the West Plymouth section of the town, southwest of Billington Sea. The neighborhood surrounds Micajah Pond. See also Neighborhoods in Plymouth, Massachusetts … Wikipedia
Micajah Woods — (May 17, 1844 March 14, 1911] was a Virginia lawyer, who served as the Commonwealth s Attorney in Charlottesville, Virginia for 41 years, and was a president of The Virginia Bar Association. Woods began life in Albemarle County, Virginia. He was… … Wikipedia
Micajah Autry — History of Texas This article is part of a series Timeline French Texas (1684–1689 … Wikipedia
Daugherty, Harry Micajah — ▪ American lawyer and political manager born Jan. 26, 1860, Washington Court House, Ohio, U.S. died Oct. 12, 1941, Columbus, Ohio American lawyer and political manager for Warren G. Harding who was accused of corruption during his tenure as… … Universalium
Harpe brothers — Micajah Big Harpe (1768? – August 1799) and Wiley Little Harpe (1770? – January 1804), pronounced (Mick ah zhah) and (Why lee), were murderers, highwaymen, and river pirates, who operated in Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, and Mississippi in the… … Wikipedia