Harry Parker (other)
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Harry Parker (other)
Harry Parker may refer to: *Harry Parker (baseball) (1947–2012), pitcher in Major League Baseball *Harry Parker (footballer), English footballer * Harry Parker (rower) (1935–2013), rowing coach *Harry Parker (swimmer) (1849–1932), English swimmer *Harry Parker (tennis) (1873–1961), New Zealand tennis player *Harry Parker (wrestler), British Olympic wrestler *Sir Harry Parker, 6th Baronet (1735–1812), secretary of the Board of Longitude *Harry Lee Parker (1894–1959), American and Irish neurologist See also *Henry Parker (other) *Harold Parker (other) Harold Parker (27 August 1873 – 23 April 1962) was a British-born sculptor, raised in Queensland, Australia, and subsequently worked in the United Kingdom. Early life Harold Parker was born in 1873 in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, England. ...
{{human name disambiguation, Parker, Harry ...
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Harry Parker (baseball)
Harry William Parker (September 14, 1947 – May 29, 2012) was an American professional pitcher in Major League Baseball who played in parts of six seasons spanning 1970 to 1976. Listed at , , Parker batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Highland, Illinois and attended Collinsville High School. Parker posted a 15–21 record and a 3.85 earned run average in 128 pitching appearances, while playing for the St. Louis Cardinals, New York Mets and Cleveland Indians. He was traded with Jim Beauchamp, Chuck Taylor and Chip Coulter from the Cardinals to the New York Mets for Art Shamsky, Jim Bibby, Rich Folkers and Charlie Hudson on October 18, 1971. His most productive season came in 1973, when he went 8–4 with a 3.35 ERA and 63 strikeouts in 96 innings of work to become an integral contributor for the Mets' National League pennant run. He appeared once in the National League Championship Series (NLCS) and three times in the World Series and was the losing pitcher once i ...
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Harry Parker (footballer)
Harry Parker was an English footballer who made 54 appearances in the Football League playing for Glossop and Lincoln City. He played non-league football in the Leicestershire Leicestershire ( ; postal abbreviation Leics.) is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county in the East Midlands, England. The county borders Nottinghamshire to the north, Lincolnshire to the north-east, Rutland to the east, Northamptonshire t ... area, for Castle Donington and Midland League club Whitwick White Cross. He played as an outside left or inside left. References Year of birth missing Year of death missing Place of birth missing English men's footballers Men's association football forwards Glossop North End A.F.C. players Whitwick White Cross F.C. players Lincoln City F.C. players English Football League players Midland Football League players Place of death missing {{England-footy-forward-stub ...
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Harry Parker (rower)
Harry Parker (October 28, 1935June 25, 2013) was the head coach of the Harvard varsity rowing program (1963–2013). He also represented the United States in the single scull at the 1960 Summer Olympics. Rowing career Parker attended the University of Pennsylvania as an undergraduate, where he majored in Philosophy and learned rowing. Mentored by Pennsylvania's coach Joe Burk, Parker rowed on the 1955 Penn Varsity crew that won the Grand Challenge Cup at the Henley Royal Regatta. After college, Parker began to scull competitively. He won the single sculls at the 1959 Pan American Games. In 1959, Parker also competed in the Diamond Scull event at the Henley Royal Regatta finishing second to six-time champion Stuart Mackenzie. In 1960, he won the U.S. Olympic trials in the single scull. At the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, Parker made the finals and finished fifth. Coaching career During his training for the national team, Parker's name was forwarded to the athletic direct ...
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Harry Parker (swimmer)
Henry Parker (c. 1849 – 4 December 1932) was an English swimmer. He won the amateur one-mile championship three consecutive times, from 1870 to 1872. These races were held on the River Thames, from Putney to Hammersmith Hammersmith is a district of West London, England, southwest of Charing Cross. It is the administrative centre of the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, and identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London. .... By the 1890s Parker was the lessee of the bathing pools at the Tunnels Beaches at Ilfracombe, where he was billed as an "expert swimmer and instructor" and "one of the foremost professors of ornamental swimming." Harry's younger sister Emily Parker was also an accomplished swimmer.(20 September 1875)A Lady's Seven Miles' Swim '' The New York Times'' Harry and his wife Ellen's son Henry Lloyd Parker was also an accomplished swimmer and escapologist. References English male swimmers British male long- ...
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Harry Parker (tennis)
Harry Parker was a New Zealand tennis player who was active during the first two decades of the 20th century. Parker won the doubles title at the Australasian Championships, the future Australian Open, alongside Bill Gregg in 1907. He also reached two singles finals at the Australasian Championships in 1907 and 1913, and two doubles finals in 1906 and 1913. He reached the Wimbeldon Championships doubles final, alongside Stanley Doust in 1909, and the quarter finals alongside Anthony Wilding in 1905 As the second year of the massive Russo-Japanese War begins, more than 100,000 die in the largest world battles of that era, and the war chaos leads to the 1905 Russian Revolution against Nicholas II of Russia (Shostakovich's 11th Symphony i .... Grand Slam finals Singles (2 runners-up) Doubles (1 title, 3 runners-up) References External links * Australasian Championships (tennis) champions New Zealand male tennis players Grand Slam (tennis) champions in m ...
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Harry Parker (wrestler)
Harold Parker (9 April 1917 – 7 August 2008) was a British wrestler. He competed in the men's freestyle flyweight at the 1948 Summer Olympics The 1948 Summer Olympics (officially the Games of the XIV Olympiad and also known as London 1948) were an international multi-sport event held from 29 July to 14 August 1948 in London, England, United Kingdom. Following a twelve-year hiatus ca .... References External links * 1917 births 2008 deaths British male sport wrestlers Olympic wrestlers for Great Britain Wrestlers at the 1948 Summer Olympics Place of birth missing {{UK-wrestling-bio-stub ...
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Sir Harry Parker, 6th Baronet
Sir Harry Parker, 6th Baronet (1735–1812), was from a distinguished naval family and inherited his title on the death of his father, Vice-Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, in 1782. Harry Parker bought Melford Hall in Suffolk in 1786, and the Baronetcy subsequently became known as "of Melford Hall". He was Chief Clerk to the Secretaries of the Board of Admiralty and, between 1782 and 1795, he was the secretary of the Board of Longitude. He retired from public service in 1795, and received a pension of £400. He married Bridget Cresswell in 1775 and had five children, William (who succeeded him as 7th Baronet), Louisa, Edmund, Hyde (who became 8th Baronet), and Sophia. He is buried in a vault in the churchyard of Holy Trinity Church, Long Melford in Suffolk, and there is a large memorial to him and his wife within the church. There is a portrait of him at Melford Hall, now a National Trust The National Trust, formally the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Bea ...
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Harry Lee Parker
Harry Lee Parker (1894–1959) was an American and Irish neurologist at the Mayo Clinic. He reported distinct sudden symptoms in people with multiple sclerosis Multiple (cerebral) sclerosis (MS), also known as encephalomyelitis disseminata or disseminated sclerosis, is the most common demyelinating disease, in which the insulating covers of nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord are damaged. This d ..., and authored ''Clinical Studies in Neurology'', published in 1956. References 1894 births 1959 deaths Irish neurologists 20th-century American physicians Place of birth missing Medical doctors from County Limerick 20th-century Irish medical doctors {{US-med-bio-stub ...
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Henry Parker (other)
Henry Parker may refer to: * Henry Parker (MP for Bedford) (by 1509–1551), MP for Bedford * Sir Henry Parker (MP for Hertfordshire) (died 1552), MP for Hertfordshire * Sir Henry Parker, 2nd Baronet (1638–1713), English politician * Henry Meredith Parker (1796–1868), British writer * Henry Parker (bishop) (1852–1888), Anglican bishop in Africa * Henry Parker (writer) (1604–1652), political writer during the English Civil War * Henry Parker (Georgia official) (c. 1690–c. 1777), colonial governor of the U.S. state of Georgia * Sir Henry Parker (Australian politician) (1808–1881), Premier of New South Wales * Henry Parker (cricketer) (1819–1901), English clergyman and cricketer * Henry Taylor Parker (1867–1934), American theater and music critic * Henry Wise Parker (1875–1940), British admiral * Henry Parker (author), British engineer in 19th century colonial Sri Lanka, author of ''Ancient Ceylon'' and ''Village folk-tales of Ceylon'' * Henry H. Parker (1858†...
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