Joseph Cross
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Joseph Cross
Joseph or Joe Cross may refer to: People * Joseph Cross (actor) (born 1986), American actor * Joseph Cross (cartographer) (1821–1865), English cartographer * Joseph Cross (cricketer) (1849–1918), English cricketer * Joseph Cross (judge) (1843–1913), New Jersey state legislator and judge * Joseph Cross (trade unionist) (1859–1925), British trade unionist * Joe Cross (baseball) (1858–1933), Major League Baseball right fielder * Joe Cross (filmmaker) (born 1966), Australian filmmaker Other * Joseph Cross (tower) The Joseph Cross (German: ''Josephskreuz'') is an observation tower in form of a double cross on the 580-metre-high Großer Auerberg near Stolberg (Harz), Germany. The Joseph Cross is a steel framework construction with a height of 38 metres and ... (German: ''Josephskreuz''), an architecturally significant observation tower {{disambiguation Cross, Joseph ...
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Joseph Cross (actor)
Joseph Michael Cross (born May 28, 1986) is an American actor and producer. He began work as a child actor, starring in the 1998 films '' Desperate Measures'', '' Wide Awake'', and ''Jack Frost''. He won the Satellite Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture for '' Running with Scissors'' (2006), and co-starred in ''Flags of Our Fathers'' (2006), ''Untraceable'' (2008), ''Milk'' (2008), and ''Lincoln'' (2012). From 1999 to 2004, Cross starred as Casey Hughes in the CBS soap opera ''As the World Turns''. In 2017, he appeared in the HBO limited series '' Big Little Lies'' and the Netflix crime drama series '' Mindhunter''. Early life Cross was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, the son of Maureen (née Toumey), a real estate agent, and Michael J. Cross, who worked in marketing. He has four siblings. Cross grew up in Pelham, New York, and attended Pelham Middle School and Pelham Memorial High School. For his undergraduate studies, Cross transferred from Hartford's Trinity College t ...
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Joseph Cross (cartographer)
Joseph Cross (27 October 1821 – 1865) was an English cartographer based in Holborn Holborn ( or ) is a district in central London, which covers the south-eastern part of the London Borough of Camden and a part ( St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars) of the Ward of Farringdon Without in the City of London. The area has its roots ... in the middle of the nineteenth century. He produced various maps of such locations as London and Australia. Joseph was the son of Joseph Cross senior, who established a map publishing business at least since 1823 when he published ''A new map of the county of Monmouth''. Maps on line * 1839 Chart of part of New South Wales' References {{DEFAULTSORT:Cross, Joseph English cartographers 1821 births 1865 deaths ...
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Joseph Cross (cricketer)
Joseph John Cross (23 February 1849 – 2 November 1918) was an English cricketer. He was a right-handed batsman who played for Gloucestershire. He was born in Merriott, Somerset and died in Lambridge, Bath, Somerset. Cross made his first-class debut in July 1870 against Surrey Surrey () is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county in South East England, bordering Greater London to the south west. Surrey has a large rural area, and several significant urban areas which form part of the Greater London Built-up Area. .... From the lower order, he scored a duck in the only innings in which he batted, as Gloucestershire won the match by an innings margin, restricting Surrey to what was, at the time, their lowest first-class score against a county side. Cross' second and final first-class appearance came the following week against the MCC, against whom he scored his only runs in first-class cricket in the first innings of the match. Gloucestershire again won this match by an i ...
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Joseph Cross (judge)
Joseph Cross (December 29, 1843 – October 29, 1913) was a New Jersey politician and United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. Education and career Born near Morristown, New Jersey, Cross attended the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), receiving an Artium Baccalaureus degree in 1865 and an Artium Magister degree in 1868. He attended Columbia Law School, but read law to enter the profession. He had a private practice in Elizabeth, New Jersey from 1869 to 1905. During that period, he was also a Judge of the state District Court of Elizabeth from 1888 to 1891, and a member of the New Jersey General Assembly from 1893 to 1895, serving as its Speaker in 1895, and as a member of the New Jersey Senate from 1899 to 1905, serving as President of the Senate in 1905. Federal judicial service On March 13, 1905, Cross was nominated by President Theodore Roosevelt to a new seat on the United States District Court for ...
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Joseph Cross (trade Unionist)
Joseph Cross (1859–1925) was a British trade unionist. Cross worked as a weaver, based in Darwen in Lancashire. He began to take an interest in trade union matters and joined the Blackburn and District Weavers' Association. He was elected vice-president of the Society and later president and trustee. During the time he served on the committee he was instrumental in promoting a system of mill representatives. It was around this time that Cross and a few more enthusiasts succeeded in forming the Blackburn and District Trades and Labour Council, which he chaired for seven years.''Report of the 1925 Annual Trades Union Congress'', p.346 In 1892, he was appointed secretary of the Darwen Weavers' Association, and two years later became secretary of the Blackburn Weavers' Association. In 1902, Cross was also elected as secretary of the United Textile Factory Workers' Association, a federation of most cotton workers' unions which focused on political matters; he held the post until ...
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Joe Cross (baseball)
Joseph A. Cross (January 6, 1858 – April 2, 1933, born ''Joseph Kriz'') was a Major League Baseball right fielder who played in one game for the Louisville Colonels in 1888. His brothers Frank Cross, Lave Cross, and Amos Cross also played in the major leagues. Unusually, Joe Cross was not listed in baseball reference books for over a century. It was not until 2012, 124 years after his lone major league appearance, that research showed that Joe Cross made an appearance in one game for the Colonels on September 5, 1888. The game had long been credited to Lave Cross in the record books, but a contemporaneous report in The Cleveland Plain Dealer noted for the September 5 match that after a seventh inning injury to a player: ''"Cross of the Graphics, a brother of Lave, a Louisville catcher, took (Toad Ramsey Thomas H. "Toad" Ramsey (August 8, 1864 – March 27, 1906) was an American Major League Baseball player who pitched in the majors from to . Ramsey spent his entire ...
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Joe Cross (filmmaker)
Joe Cross (born 30 May 1966) is an Australian entrepreneur, author, filmmaker, and plant-based diet advocate who promotes juicing. He is most known for his documentary ''Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead'' in which he tells the story of his 60-day juice fast. He is the founder and CEO of Reboot with Joe, a health and lifestyle brand. Following the release of his documentary, Cross has published six books about juicing. In February 2014, Cross released his book titled ''The Reboot with Joe Juice Diet: Lose Weight, Get Healthy and Feel Amazing'' that became a New York Times best-seller. Juice fast In 2005, Cross weighed 140 kilograms (310 pounds) and suffered from an autoimmune condition, chronic urticaria, for which he had been taking medications such as the steroid prednisone for years. He spent his 30s trying traditional and non-traditional medicine to solve his illness. and unsuccessfully tried various diets in fits and starts. His daily diet mainly consisted of processed foods. C ...
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Joseph Cross (tower)
The Joseph Cross (German: ''Josephskreuz'') is an observation tower in form of a double cross on the 580-metre-high Großer Auerberg near Stolberg (Harz), Germany. The Joseph Cross is a steel framework construction with a height of 38 metres and a weight of 125 tons, which was built between 20 April 1896 and 9 August 1896. The Joseph Cross was closed for visitors from 1987 to 1990, before being refurbished and reopened. History In the 17th century there was a timber-framed observation tower on the Auerberg that was demolished in 1768 due to disrepair and weather damage. In 1832, Count Joseph of Stolberg-Stolberg commissioned the Berlin architect, Karl Friedrich Schinkel, to design a new tower, which a carpenter from Stolberg carried out. The topping out ceremony of Schinkel's wooden tower, built in the form of a double cross, was celebrated on 24 September 1833. On 21 June 1834, the tower was officially opened and named the "Joseph Cross" after its client.The "s" in the German ...
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