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Molter Károly
Molter is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Dorothy Molter, the "Root Beer Lady" of Knife Lake in Minnesota * Isabel Richardson Molter (born 1880s), American soprano * Johann Melchior Molter (1696–1765), German Baroque composer and violinist * Károly Molter (1890–1981), Hungarian writer * William Molter William Molter (June 2, 1910 – April 2, 1960) was an American National Champion and Hall of Fame horse trainer in the sport of Thoroughbred racing. A native of Fredericksburg, Texas, Molter began his career in horse racing as a jockey at racetr ...
(1910–1961), American horse trainer {{surname ...
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Dorothy Molter
Dorothy Louise Molter (May 6, 1907, in Arnold, PennsylvaniaDecember 18, 1986), lived for 56 years on Knife Lake in the Boundary Waters area of northern Minnesota. She was known as "Knife Lake Dorothy" or as the "Root Beer Lady", as she made root beer and sold it to thousands of passing canoeists in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW), near Ely, Minnesota. Various factors combined to give her national prominence, extensive coverage in media, books and documentaries, and tens of thousands of visits by Boundary Waters Canoe Area canoeists, often with 6,000–7,000 visitors per year. She first visited her future home (''The Isle of Pines Resort'') on Knife Lake in 1930. It became her home starting in 1934. Molter's life, and her place in the public eye was significantly influenced by the evolution of the area where she lived into the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Changes related to this transition affecting her life occurred from 1948 through 1984. She died ...
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Isabel Richardson Molter
Isabel Richardson Molter (born about 1885, died after 1930) was an American soprano singer from Chicago, heard in oratorio, concert, and recital settings in the 1920s. Early life and education Richardson was born in Cincinnati and raised in the Chicago area, the daughter of George Parker Richardson and Isabel Lorena Adams Richardson. Her father was a businessman from New Hampshire. She lived in St. Joseph, Michigan, as a young woman. She trained as a singer with Franz Prochowsky in Germany. Career Molter was a dramatic soprano. She began her career in Chicago in the 1910s, and toured in the United States in the 1920s. She was associated with the David Bispham's Society of American Singers. ''The New York Times'' commented that her voice "when unforced, has good quality in its middle register, and her phrasing and enunciation of the texts of her songs revealed true musicianship." ''The Boston Globe'' found that Molter "showed keen dramatic instinct, and a high degree of musical int ...
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Johann Melchior Molter
Johann Melchior Molter (10 February 1696 – 12 January 1765) was a German composer and violinist of the late Baroque period. He was born at Tiefenort, near Eisenach, and was educated at the Gymnasium in Eisenach. By autumn 1717 he had left Eisenach and was working as a violinist in Karlsruhe. Here he married Maria Salome Rollwagen, with whom he had eight children. From 1719 to 1721 he studied composition in Italy. From 1722 to 1733 he was court Kapellmeister at Karlsruhe. In 1734 he became Kapellmeister at the court of Duke Wilhelm Heinrich of Saxe-Eisenach. Maria died in 1737; by 1742 Molter had married Maria Christina Wagner. In that year he returned to Karlsruhe and began teaching at the gymnasium there. From 1747 to his death Molter was employed by Margrave Carl Friedrich of Baden-Durlach, the son of his first employer. He died at Karlsruhe. Molter's surviving works include an oratorio; several cantatas; over 140 symphonies, overtures, and other works for orchest ...
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Károly Molter
Károly Molter (; 2 December 1890 – 30 November 1981) was a Hungarian novelist, dramatist, literary critic, journalist and academic. He spent most of his life in the region of Transylvania, being successively a national of Austria-Hungary and Romania. Biography Born in Óverbász (Vrbas), Vojvodina region, Molter was from an ethnic German (Danube Swabian) family, but adopted Hungarian as his language. Lucian Nastasă, Levente Salat (eds.)''Maghiarii din România şi etica minoritară (1920-1940)'' p.236, at thEthnocultural Diversity Resource Center. Open Society Foundation Romania retrieved September 2, 2007 He studied at the College of Kecskemét, and then at the University of Budapest Faculty of Philosophy in Letter (the Hungarian-German section). In 1913, he moved to Transylvania, settling down in Marosvásárhely (Târgu Mureş). Between 1913 and 1945, he was a teacher in the Bolyai Gymnasium, a Reformed Church college in the city. In the interwar period, after the ...
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