User:Clariosophic/sandbox6

My sandboxes

 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox1 - Episcopal, etc
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox2 - Various
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox3 - Florida, etc.
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox4 - California, etc
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox5 - Maryland
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox6 - Episcopal dioceses
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox7 - Biography
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox8 - South Carolina, etc
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox9 - Courthouses, etc.
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox10 - Lodges, etc
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox11 - open
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox12 - Texas
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox13 - Courthouses, Florida, etc
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox14 - Octagon
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox15 - Carpenter Gothic churches & Canadian heritage sites
 * User:Clariosophic/sandbox16 - CS churches

Articles created

 * User:Clariosophic/New pages created
 * User:Clariosophic/New pages created2 by state
 * User:Clariosophic/New pages created3 for places on the National Register of Historic Places

Helps

 * Help:Merging and moving pages



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 * Rules on linking categories, etc:

See

 * List of U.S. National Historic Landmarks by state
 * List of National Register of Historic Places entries
 * [http://www2.elkman.net/nrhp/infobox.php
 * NPS search
 * X & Y Counties vs X & Y counties:
 * Goldstein, Norm, editor, Associated Press Stylebook and Briefing on Media Law, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Perseus Press (2000) p. 61, states: County Capitalize when an integral part of a proper name: Dade County, Nassau County, Suffolk County ... Lowercase plural combinations: Westchester and Rockland counties.
 * An online reference: http://home.comcast.net/~garbl/stylemanual/c.htm Topics capitalization and county both say: Lowercase common noun elements of names in all plural uses: etc.



DONE
Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota


 * Episcopal Diocese of Montana


 * Episcopal Diocese of Wyoming


 * Episcopal Diocese of South Dakota


 * Episcopal Diocese of Alaska


 * Episcopal Diocese of Idaho


 * Episcopal Diocese of Lexington
 * Episcopal Diocese of Mississippi
 * Episcopal Diocese of Northern California
 * Episcopal Diocese of San Diego
 * Episcopal Diocese of Kansas
 * Episcopal Diocese of Salina
 * Episcopal Diocese of Western Kansas
 * Episcopal Diocese of West Missouri
 * Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio
 * Episcopal Diocese of Western New York
 * Episcopal Diocese of Rochester


 * Episcopal Diocese of Long Island Done by another


 * Navajoland Area Mission Done by another

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Bishops
The Rt. Rev. Mark L. MacDonald, is the seventh

Lead 2 Joseph Cruickshank Talbot
moved from Lead 69, sandbox 15
 * NY Times September 16, 1883: Bishop Joseph C. Talbot[t: obituary]
 * Institute of Historical Survey Foundation: Bishops serving [what is now the Diocese of the Rio Grande]

Joseph Cruickshank Talbot, (1816–1883), was a pioneer bishop of the [[Episcopal Church (United States) in

religious leader who served as the second missionary bishop of the Episcopal Church to the Northwest, which in his time included most of the old North West Territory plus any other U.S. territory west of the Mississippi River

the third Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis,

Family
was born September 5, 1916 in Alexandria, Virginia, the son of Elisa Talbot and Sarah (Saunders) Talbot, who were Quakers.

Death and burial
He died January 15, 1883, in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Lead 3 James Milton Richardson

 * Jogan, John A., Jr., ''Richardson, James Milton," Handbook of Texas Online, published by the Texas State Historical Association accessed May 03, 2012

James Milton Richardson, (1913 - 1980), was the fifth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas from 1965 until his death. He also was the national president of Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity from 1952 - 1956.

religious leader who served as the second missionary bishop of the Episcopal Church to the Northwest, which in his time included most of the old North West Territory plus any other U.S. territory west of the Mississippi River

the third Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis,

Family
was born September 5, 1916 in Alexandria, Virginia, the son of Elisa Talbot and Sarah (Saunders) Talbot, who were Quakers.

Death and burial
He died January 15, 1883, in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Lead 4 Cameron Mann (bishop)

 * [http://www.ihsf.org/Genealogy/DioBishops.htm#CameronMann