Collection for person entities.
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Stephanie Shandera
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Stephanie helped to found KOTO Radio, in Telluride, Colorado. Stephanie was known as Steph the Red. She currently works for KUOW Public Radio, in Seattle. --Taken from https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-shandera-3494b011 and from:
https://voice123.com/stephanieshandera
Links accessed 01/18/19.
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Stephanie Wise
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Assistant Director of LDC for Career Development, Life Directions Center, Colorado Christian University
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Stephen Barnwell "Steve" Johnson
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He was born in Louisville, Kentucky to William Robert Hollingshead and Salome Jean (Shadburne) Johnson. His father was a life insurance salesman and his mother was a homemaker. He attended Oklahoma State University, where he studied agriculture, and graduated in 1912, when he was twenty. He married Myrtle Lewis at that time.
He taught agriculture at North Dakota Agricultural College and was the assistant horticulturalist the University of Arizona for four years. He moved to Olathe, Colorado in 1918, where his brother-in-law had offered him a partnership in his hardware store. He taught agriculture at Montrose High School.
He began Johnson’s House of Flowers in Montrose in 1919, and sold the business to his son Donald in 1937, upon moving to Grand Junction. That same year, he purchased the Arcieri greenhouse operation at 7th Street and Struthers Avenue and opened a Johnson’s House of Flowers storefront on Main Street in Grand Junction. He moved the storefront and greenhouses to 1350 North Avenue in 1939, and remained in business for many years.
His wife Myrtle died in 1968 and he remarried to Harriet Webster in 1973. He was a member of St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church, the Rotary Club, the Masons, the Western Colorado Shrine Club and the Order of the Eastern Star, and the Florist Telegraphy Delivery service. He was also a writer and an expert on automatic or mechanical musical instruments.
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Stephen John Johns
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He moved to Grand Junction, Colorado in 1909 after leaving Aspen, where he was a miner, for health reasons. Took a job as a conductor with the Rural Interurban Line run by the Grand River Valley Railway Company.
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Stephen W. Kearny
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Stephen Watts Kearny (/ˈkɑːrni/ KAR-nee; surname also appears as Kearney in some historic sources; August 30, 1794 – October 31, 1848), was one of the foremost antebellum frontier officers of the United States Army. He is remembered for his significant contributions in the Mexican–American War, especially the conquest of California. The Kearny code, which was proclaimed on September 22, 1846 in Santa Fe, established the law and government of the newly acquired territory of New Mexico, was named after him. His nephew was Major General Philip Kearny of American Civil War fame.
[source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_W._Kearny]
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