Tom Sullivan (athlete)
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Tom Sullivan (athlete)
Thomas, Tom, or Tommy Sullivan may refer to: Entertainment * Thomas Russell Sullivan (1849–1916), American writer * Thomas Sullivan (author), American author of short stories and novels * Thomas E. Sullivan, an actor known for ''Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.'' * Thomas M. Sullivan (born c. 1949), American radio talk show host and television show host * Thomas Michael Sullivan, actor, producer, and founding member of Stage 13 * Tom Sullivan (radio and television personality), Atlanta radio and television personality * Tom Sullivan (singer) (born 1947), blind singer, actor, author * Tommy Sullivan, singer and saxophonist for Johnny Maestro & the Brooklyn Bridge * Tom Sullivan (special effects artist), American effects artist, makeup artist, and actor Politics * Thomas A. Sullivan (1855–1946), American politician * Thomas L. Sullivan (1846–1936), mayor of Indianapolis, Indiana * Thomas J. Sullivan (1845–1908), director of the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing * Tom ...
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Thomas Russell Sullivan
Thomas Russell Sullivan (November 21, 1849 – June 28, 1916) was an American writer. He is best known for ''Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1887 play), Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde'', an 1887 stage adaptation of ''Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde'' by Robert Louis Stevenson. He also wrote novels and short stories, often with Gothic fiction, Gothic motifs. His posthumously published journals have been used as a historical source about the literary culture of Boston in the late 19th and early 20th century. Early life Sullivan was born on November 21, 1849, in a log cabin house on Charles Street (Boston), Charles Street in Boston, Massachusetts. He was the son of Thomas Russell Sullivan, a schoolmaster and former Unitarianism, Unitarian minister, and Charlotte Caldwell Sullivan (née Blake). His paternal great-grandfather was Massachusetts Governor James Sullivan (governor), James Sullivan. Sullivan attended the Boston Latin School and expected to go to Harvard University as his father did, ...
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Tom Sullivan (1880s Pitcher)
Thomas Sullivan (March 1, 1860 – April 12, 1947) was a Major League Baseball pitcher who played for the Columbus Buckeyes, Louisville Colonels and Kansas City Cowboys in the American Association American Association may refer to: Baseball * American Association (1882–1891), a major league active from 1882 to 1891 * American Association (1902–1997), a minor league active from 1902 to 1962 and 1969 to 1997 * American Association of Profe ... from 1884 to 1889. External links *Career statistics and bio aBaseball-Reference 1860 births 1947 deaths Columbus Buckeyes players Louisville Colonels players Kansas City Cowboys players 19th-century baseball players Atlanta Atlantas players Charleston Seagulls players Topeka Capitals players Topeka Golden Giants players Birmingham Barons players Birmingham Maroons players Baseball players from New York (state) {{US-baseball-pitcher-1860s-stub ...
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Thomas Sullivan (Medal Of Honor, 1890)
Thomas Sullivan (April 4, 1859 – January 10, 1940) was a United States Army soldier and a recipient of America's highest military decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in the Battle of Wounded Knee,According to thUS Army two Thomas Sullivans received Medals of Honor during the Indian War period. This article is about the Irish born Sullivan who received the award for serving with the 7th Cavalry at Wounded Knee. See Thomas Sullivan (Medal of Honor, 1869) for the Kentucky born PVT Sullivan who received the award for serving with the 1ST Cavalry in the Chiricahua Mountains. but now called the Wounded Knee Massacre. Biography Thomas Sullivan was born in County Meath, Ireland, most likely to either Patrick Sullivan and Bridget Conolly, or Richard Sullivan and Mary McCann, based on available baptism records.Sources provide differing dates for his birth, making it difficult to match his birth to baptismal records with a high degree of certainty. At age 28 he immigrated t ...
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Thomas Sullivan (Medal Of Honor, 1869)
Thomas Sullivan was a United States Army soldier who was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Chiricahua Mountains. Biography Sullivan was born in 1846 or 1847 in Covington, Kentucky."United States Registers of Enlistments in the U.S. Army, 1798-1914," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QJDR-M6FX : 24 May 2014), Thomas Sullivan, 20 Jun 1868; citing p. 267, volume 068, Cincinnati, , Ohio, United States, NARA microfilm publication M233 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 35; FHL microfilm 350,341. He enlisted in the 1st Cavalry Regiment of the U.S. Army on June 20, 1868, in Cincinnati, Ohio; his U.S. Army enlistment record reflects an age of 21 (birth year ) On October 20, 1869, while serving with Company G, 1st Cavalry Regiment, Sullivan distinguished himself through gallantry in action against Indians concealed in a ravine on in action at Chiricahua Mountains, Arizona Territory. Sulli ...
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Thomas Crook Sullivan
Thomas Crook Sullivan (November 14, 1833 – March 11, 1908) was a brigadier general in the United States Army. Sullivan was born at Montgomery County, Ohio, the son of Samuel Sullivan, the proprietor of Sullivan's Tavern, the brother of Ohio 2nd Dist Appellate Judge Theodore Sullivan, and the nephew of future Major General George Crook via older sister Maria Crook Sullivan. He graduated from West Point in 1856, ranking twelfth in a class of forty-nine. His first assignment was as a second lieutenant in the 1st U.S. Artillery Regiment serving on the Texas frontier and during this period was with the expedition against Juan Cortina's Mexican marauders, seeing combat near Fort Brown, Texas. He was later ordered to Washington (D.C.), arriving in the Winter of 1861, and selected as a guard for president-elect Abraham Lincoln during his first inauguration. He served throughout the American Civil War and was brevetted major and lieutenant colonel on March 13, 1865, for "faithf ...
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Tommy Sullivan (curler)
Thomas Sullivan (born November 23, 1977) is a Canadian curler from Halifax, Nova Scotia. Sullivan was originally from New Brunswick. As a junior curler, he skipped the New Brunswick team at the 1997 Canadian Junior Curling Championships. At the juniors, he led his team to a 7–5 round robin record, which was good enough to be in a five-way tie for third place. In order to make the playoffs, they would have to win two tiebreaker matches. They won their first game against the Yukon's Wyatt Redlin, but lost their second match against Ontario, skipped by future Olympic gold medalist John Morris. The next year, Sullivan won his one and only provincial championship, playing third for the Terry Odishaw rink. The team represented New Brunswick at the 1998 Labatt Brier, finishing the event with a 4–7 record. Sullivan later moved to Nova Scotia, and joined the Mark Dacey rink in 2009 at third. Sullivan won one World Curling Tour event with Dacey, the 2012 Challenge Chateau Cartier ...
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Tom Sullivan (rower)
Thomas Sullivan (18 September 1868 – 1949) was a New Zealand amateur rowing and sculling champion who later turned professional and challenged for the World Sculling Championship title. He later became a rowing coach. Rowing Sullivan was born in Auckland and won his first rowing race at age 13. He was a member of a widely known Wellington Rowing Club four-oared crew (W. Bridson, E. J. Rose, T. Sullivan, and T. McKay) that won all four championship titles under the auspices of the New Zealand Amateur Rowing Association during 1889–90. He also won the amateur sculling championship of the country in 1890 in Wanganui. New Zealand Champion Later he became a professional. The normal build-up races of a professional were raced with various others in Sydney. On 11 May 1891 Sullivan raced Charles Stephenson for the usual professional stake of £100 a side; they also had a side-bet of £100. The race was a title challenge for the championship of New Zealand. Stephenson started stron ...
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Tom Sullivan (boxer)
Thomas Sullivan, also known as "Tommy", and "Irish Tommy" (July 9, 1919 – December 22, 1957 in South Boston) was an American professional light heavyweight boxer whose murder remains unsolved. Early life and background Mary Sullivan was a doting mother who supported her only son Tommy throughout his professional boxing career. In Joseph Barboza's autobiography ''Barboza'', Sullivan is wrongly identified as "Rocky", not "Tommy". Thomas was known in the neighborhood as a "tough puncher" who later went to work as a longshoreman in Boston, Massachusetts and lived with his mother on East Fifth Street. Even after his boxing career finished he remained physically fit from working as a longshoreman on the Boston waterfront and sparred at a gym to stay in shape. After his murder not far from the front steps of his house on East Fifth Street, Mary was overcome with emotional distress and shock and confined herself to her bed. She died soon afterward, at eighty-three. A newspaper quoted ...
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Tom Sullivan (basketball)
Thomas Sullivan (born April 18, 1950) is an American former professional basketball player and college coach. Playing career Sullivan grew up in the Bronx, New York City. He played collegiately at Fordham University and was a four-year letterwinner from 1968 to 1969 through 1971–72, playing the center position. As a senior, Sullivan was the Rams' co-captain and named the team MVP. He guided Fordham to a berth in the National Invitation Tournament where they would lose in the first round to Jacksonville. At the end of that season, Sullivan was presented with the Haggerty Award, given annually since 1935–36 to the top male collegiate basketball player in the greater New York City area. He was the co-recipient with Manhattan's Richie Garner, becoming the first duo to share the award in its history up to that point. Following his career at Fordham, Sullivan was chosen in the 1972 NBA Draft by the New York Knicks. He was taken in the ninth round (139th overall). Although he was dr ...
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Thomas Sullivan (American Football)
Thomas Talbot Sullivan (September 14, 1892 – November 30, 1958) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at George Washington University in 1916, Bates College from 1919 to 1920, and St. Lawrence University from 1925 to 1937. Sullivan played college football as an end at Colgate University. He also coached baseball at St. Lawrence. Sullivan returned to his alma mater, Colgate, in 1921 as an assistant football coach under head coach Ellery Huntington Jr. He died on November 30, 1958, at Massena Memorial Hospital in Massena, New York Massena is a town in St. Lawrence County, New York, United States. Massena is along the county's northern border, just south of the St. Lawrence River and the Three Nations Crossing of the Canada–United States border. The population was 12,8 ..., after suffering a heart attack. Head coaching record Football References External links * {{DEFAULTSORT:Sullivan, Thomas 1 ...
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