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Ben Werner, Student Newspaper Editor
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President Benjamin Harrison, was about to sign the proclamations admitting North and South Dakota as the 39th and 40th states.
Benjamin Harrison, for instance, had received some delegations of supporters at his home in Indianapolis during the campaign of 1888.
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Brian Mengel, Civil Servant
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So Benjamin Harrison replaced Cleveland, but Harrison's dull performance in national policy and his obeisance to Congress eventually allowed Cleveland to win another term as president.
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Keith Tennant, Factory Worker
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Benjamin Harrison, 1889-1893 : Let those who would die for the flag on the field of battle give a better proof of their patriotism and a higher glory to their country by promoting fraternity and justice.
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Rob Verdann, Afterdark Removalist
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Grant or President Benjamin Harrison would alight from their carriages unattended by guards.
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Anita Ganesh, Poet
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This is a portrait of Benjamin Harrison, grandson of William Henry Harrison, who became President in 1889.
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Billie Kirgan, Machinist
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His grandson Benjamin Harrison was also able to expropriate the Tippecanoe moniker and log cabin imagery with success when he won the Presidency in 1888.
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Jack Crawford, WWII Veteran
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Roosevelt was interrupted from writing the History of the West when President Benjamin Harrison selected him as civil service commissioned in 1889, in which capacity Roosevelt served for six years, gaining a reputation as a reformer.
He was appointed by President Benjamin Harrison to serve as Consul to Madagascar from 1891 to 1894.
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Thomas Owens, Police Officer
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Benjamin Harrison , Richard Bland, and at the head of them Peyton Randolph who would immediately be elected president of the convention.
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David Rosenberg, Dermatologist
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PRESIDENT BENJAMIN HARRISON RESEARCH LIBRARY The President Benjamin Harrison Research Library contains the personal library of Benjamin Harrison, as well as collections relating to Harrison and the era in which he lived.
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Mark Harris, Priest
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President Benjamin Harrison for amnesty for all Latter-day Saint polygamists because they had strictly honored the Manifesto of 1890 and, "as shepherds of a patient and suffering people we ask amnesty for them and pledge our faith and honor for their future.
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