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Gilman Test
Gilman may refer to: Places United States *Gilman Ranch, California *Gilman, Colorado *Gilman, Illinois *Gilman, Iowa *Gilman, Minnesota *Gilman, Montana *Gilman, Vermont *Gilman, Washington, former name of Issaquah *Gilman, Pierce County, Wisconsin *Gilman, Taylor County, Wisconsin *Gilman Lake, a lake in South Dakota *Gilmanton, New Hampshire *Gilmanton, Buffalo County, Wisconsin *Gilmanton Township, Benton County, Minnesota Other *Gilman, Federated States of Micronesia, an administrative division of the Federated States of Micronesia *Gilman Street, a street in Central, Hong Kong Other uses *Gilman (name) *Gilman reagent, any of a group of reagents discovered by Henry Gilman *Gilman Paper Company, former paper producer **Gilman Paper Company collection, photo archive in the Metropolitan Museum of Art *Gilman School, a private boys school in Baltimore, Maryland *924 Gilman Street, a collectively run music venue in Berkeley, California See also

*Gillman (disambiguation ...
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Gilman Ranch
The Gilman Ranch is a historic ranch and stagecoach station on the Bradshaw Trail, in Riverside County, California, United States. The ranch is best known for its association with the manhunt of Willie Boy, a Southern Paiute people, Paiute Indian who killed the father of Carlota, the woman he was forbidden to marry because they were cousins. They eloped and he shot her father after they returned. The story was popularized by the book, written by Harry Lawton, and subsequent movie, starring Robert Redford and Robert Blake (actor), Robert Blake, named "Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here". The ranch buildings are now protected as the Gilman Historic Ranch and Wagon Museum within the Gilman Ranch Historic Park, located in Banning, California, Banning. Displays include authentic wagons, including an Overland Trail, Overland stagecoach, a “Covered wagon, prairie schooner” and a chuck wagon, a saddle collection and Western ranching tools and artifacts. The museum and park are operated by ...
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Gilmanton, Buffalo County, Wisconsin
Gilmanton ( ) is a town in Buffalo County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 426 at the 2010 census. The unincorporated community of Gilmanton is located in the town. History Gilmanton was first settled by Samuel Gilman in 1855. He and his four sons started to live upon the land, building cabins and cutting hay for their animal stock. The same year the first child, a girl, was born in Gilman Valley. The first religious meeting was held in a house of one of the settlers, overseen by Rev. B.F. Morse. In 1858 the first post office was established, with William Loumis as the first postmaster. Gilmanton Township was initially called the "Loomis Settlement." The name was changed to Gilmanton May 25, 1858. Geography According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and , or 1.20%, is water. Demographics As of the census of 2000, there were 470 people, 173 households, and 126 families residing in the town. The population dens ...
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Gilman School
Gilman School is an all-boys independent school, independent, day school, day, college preparatory school located in the Roland Park neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland, United States. There are three school divisions: Lower School, grades pre-kindergarten through five; Middle School, grades six through eight; and Upper School, grades nine through twelve. Founded in 1897 as the Country School for Boys, it was the first country day school in the US. It is named for Daniel Coit Gilman, the first president of Johns Hopkins University and an early supporter of efforts by Anne Galbraith Carey to form an all-boys day school. Gilman enrolls approximately 1,400 students, ranging from pre-kindergarten to 12th grade, under the instruction of 146 faculty members. It is a member of the Association of Independent Maryland and DC Schools, Association of Independent Maryland Schools and the Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association. History Gilman was founded as the Country School for ...
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Gilman Paper Company Collection
The Gilman Paper Company collection is an archive of original photographic prints and negatives, and it was donated to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The collection was formed over the course of two decades (roughly 1977–1997) by Howard Gilman (1924–1998), chairman of the Gilman Paper Company. Collection The collection before it was donated to the Metropolitan Museum of Art included a series of photographs of Virginia Oldoini, Countess of Castiglione Virginia Oldoini Rapallini, Countess of Castiglione (23 March 1837 – 28 November 1899), better known as La Castiglione, was an Italian aristocrat who achieved notoriety as a mistress of Emperor Napoleon III of France. She was also a significan ... taken in the 1890s. Virginia Elisabetta Luisa Antonietta Teresa Maria Oldoini received the title Contessa of Castiglione after her marriage to Count Francesco Verasis Asinari of Castigliole d’Asti and Castiglione Tinella. The Contessa of Castiglione commissioned photographer, Pi ...
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Gilman Paper Company
The Gilman Paper Company was an American paper producer founded by Isaac Gilman in the 1880s in the village of Fitzdale, Vermont, which would later be renamed Gilman, Vermont. History Gilman Paper Company's founder, Isaac Gilman, emigrated from Ukraine and began working in the Paper mill, paper manufacturing business in 1881. In 1921, Gilman Paper Company purchased the Fitzdale Paper Company. From 1921 to 1924, a period of major renovations and construction occurred. The steam plant, built in 1901, was demolished and replaced with four Stirling boilers and a 225-foot-high chimney. Two buildings were erected to house the paper machines and the grocery bag department. During this period, most of the employee residences in the nearby village were built and provided with fire, sewer, and water systems. Over the next decade, Gilman Paper Company expanded manufacturing in the paper converting field, opening a Kraft bag department, a gummed tape department, and a department that produced tw ...
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Gilman Reagent
A Gilman reagent is a diorganocopper compound with the formula Li uR2 where R is an alkyl or aryl. They are colorless solids. Use in organic chemistry These reagents are useful because, unlike related Grignard reagents and organolithium reagents, they react with organic halides to replace the halide group with an R group (the Corey–House reaction). Such displacement reactions allow for the synthesis of complex products from simple building blocks. Lewis acids can be used to modify the reagent. History These reagents were discovered by Henry Gilman and coworkers. Lithium dimethylcopper (CH3)2CuLi can be prepared by adding copper(I) iodide to methyllithium in tetrahydrofuran at −78 °C. In the reaction depicted below, the Gilman reagent is a methylating reagent reacting with an alkyne in a conjugate addition, and the ester group forms a cyclic enone. : Structure Lithium dimethylcuprate exists as a dimer in diethyl ether Diethyl ether, or simply ...
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Gilman (name)
Gilman is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include: Surname *Alfred G. Gilman (1941–2015), Nobel Prize–winning scientist * Alfred Gilman Sr. (1908–1984), American pharmacologist, co-author of ''The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics'' * Alohi Gilman (born 1997), American football player * Anne Gilman (born 1953), American artist * Arthur Gilman (1821–1882), Boston architect * Arthur Gilman (educator) (1837-1909), worked mostly in Massachusetts * Benjamin Gilman (1922–2016), United States representative from New York * Benjamin Ives Gilman (1852-1933), Boston Museum curator * Benjamin Ives Gilman (1766) (1766-1833), shipbuilder and politician from Ohio * Billy Gilman (born 1988), country singer * Caroline Howard Gilman, United States author *Charlotte Perkins Gilman, turn-of-the-century feminist author * Charles Gilman (other), several persons * Daniel Coit Gilman, American educator * Daniel Hunt Gilman, American railroad builder * Do ...
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Gilman Street
Gilman Street () is a street in Central, Hong Kong, Central, Hong Kong. The street starts north at Connaught Road Central, crosses Des Voeux Road Central and continued as a Cul-de-sac, dead-end pathway leading to several shops at The Center, the Centre. The street used to end at Queen's Road Central. The section between Des Voeux Road and Queen's Road used to allow vehicular traffic like the northern portion, and was once much wider. Nonetheless, as a result of large scale property developments like the Center, much of this section was demolished. A tram stop is located at its junction with Des Voeux Road Central. Name The street, like Gilman's Bazaar, a famous food street one block east was named after Gilman, Bowman and Co., one of the major British firms in Hong Kong in the mid-19th century which occupied the area. See also * List of streets and roads in Hong Kong References

{{Reflist Central, Hong Kong Roads on Hong Kong Island ...
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Gilman, Federated States Of Micronesia
Gilman () is a village and municipality in the state of Yap, Federated States of Micronesia The Federated States of Micronesia (, abbreviated FSM), or simply Micronesia, is an island country in Micronesia, a region of Oceania. The federation encompasses the majority of the Caroline Islands (excluding Palau) and consists of four Admin .... It lies on the south side of the Yap island. Six villages or hamlets are integrated there : Anoth, Gachlaw, Guror, Magchagil, Thabeth and Towoway. The population was 252 in 2010. References External linksStatoids.com retrieved 12 February 2015 Municipalities of Yap {{Micronesia-geo-stub ...
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Gilmanton Township, Benton County, Minnesota
Gilmanton Township is a township in Benton County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 841 as of the 2010 census. History Gilmanton Township was organized in 1866. It was named for Charles Andrew Gilman, a land office official and afterward state legislator. Geography According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of , all land. The city of Foley (the county seat) is located in the southeast part of the township; the south half of the city of Gilman is also within the township. Both are separate entities from the township. Major highways * Minnesota State Highway 23 * Minnesota State Highway 25 Adjacent townships * Alberta Township (north) * Granite Ledge Township (northeast) * Maywood Township (east) * Glendorado Township (southeast) * St. George Township (south) * Minden Township (southwest) * Mayhew Lake Township (west) * Graham Township (northwest) Cemeteries The township contains Saint Johns Cemetery. Demographics ...
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Gilmanton, New Hampshire
Gilmanton is a town in Belknap County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 3,945 at the 2020 census. Gilmanton includes the villages of Gilmanton Corners and Gilmanton Ironworks. The town became well known in the 1950s after it was rumored that the popular novel ''Peyton Place'', written by resident Grace Metalious, was based on the town. History Gilmanton was incorporated in 1727. First known as "Gilmantown", the town was home to the Gilman family, originally settled at Exeter. Twenty-four members of the Gilman family received land grants in the new town of Gilmanton. (Other families related to the Gilmans also received grants in the new town, including the Dudleys, the Leavitts, the Folsoms and the Coffins.) At one time it was the second-largest town in the state, following Portsmouth. The original town was larger than it is now, with villages and parishes including Belmont, Gunstock Parish ( Gilford), Hurricane, Tioga, Factory Village and Lakeport. A parish fir ...
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Gilman, Colorado
Gilman is an ghost town, abandoned Mining community, mining town in southeastern Eagle County, Colorado, Eagle County, Colorado, United States. The Gilman post office operated from November 3, 1886, until April 22, 1986. The United States Postal Service, U.S. Post Office at Minturn, Colorado, Minturn (ZIP Code 81645) now serves Gilman postal addresses. Founded in 1886 during the Colorado Silver Boom, the town later became a center of lead and zinc mining in Colorado, centered on the now-flooded Eagle Mine (Colorado), Eagle Mine. It was abandoned in 1984 by order of the United States Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Protection Agency because of toxic pollutants, including contamination of the ground water, as well as unprofitability of the mines. It is currently a ghost town on private property and is strictly off limits to the public. At the time of the abandonment, the mining operations were owned by Gulf and Western Industries. In 2007, The Ginn Company had plans ...
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