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         Clay Henry:     more books (43)
  1. Life of Henry Clay by Nathan Sargent 1794-1875. [from old catalog] Clay Henry 1777-1852. [from old catalog], 1844-12-31
  2. OBITUARY ADDRESSES On The OCCASION Of The DEATH Of The HON. HENRY CLAY, A Senator of the United States from the State of Kentucky, Delivered in the Senate and in the House of Representatives of the United States, June 30, 1852, and the Funeral Sermon of the Rev. C. M. Butler, Chaplain of the Senate, Preached in the Senate, July 1, 1852. by Henry.1777 - 1852].[Cooper, James.1810 - 1863]. [Clay, 1852
  3. Noted speeches of Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun by Lilian Marie Briggs Webster Daniel 1782-1852 Clay Henry 1777-1852 Calhoun John C. (John Caldwell) 1782-1850, 1912-12-31
  4. The South in danger : read before you vote : address of the Democratic Association of Washington, D.C by D.C.) Democratic Association (Washington Towles James Sengstack C. P Green Willis Clay Henry 1777-1852, 1844-12-31
  5. Speech of Henry Clay by Henry Clay 1777-1852, 1847-12-31
  6. The beauties of the Hon. Henry Clay by Henry Clay 1777-1852, 1839-12-31
  7. Speech of Mr. Clay, of Kentucky, on the measures of compromise. Delivered in the Senate of the United States, July 22, 1850 by Henry Clay 1777-1852, 1850-12-31
  8. Speech of Mr. Clay, of Kentucky, delivered June 27, 1840, on the occasion of a public dinner, given in compliment to him, at Taylorsville, in his native county of Hanover, in the state of Virginia by Henry Clay 1777-1852, 1840-12-31
  9. Speech of Mr. Clay of Kentucky, in support of his propositions to compromise on the slavery question by Henry Clay 1777-1852, 1850-12-31
  10. The private correspondence of Henry Clay. Ed. by Calvin Colton. by Clay. Henry. 1777-1852., 1856-01-01
  11. The private correspondence of Henry Clay Edited by Calvin Colton by Clay. Henry. 1777-1852., 1855-01-01
  12. The life and speeches of the Hon. Henry Clay by Clay Henry 1777-1852, 1857-01-01
  13. The life and speeches of the Hon. Henry Clay by Clay Henry 1777-1852, 1855-01-01
  14. The life and speeches of the Hon. Henry Clay .. by Clay Henry 1777-1852, 1844-01-01

81. Dictionary: Clay
politician known as the Great Compromiser; responsible for the Missouri Compromisebetween free and slave states (17771852) syn {Clay}, {Henry Clay} 5 the
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entries found From Webster ... kl [=a]), n AS cl [=ae]g; akin to LG klei ... cl [=a]m clay L glus gluten ... clay

82. CITIZEN-TIMES.com: Clay County Community News Community News
It was named for Henry Clay (17771852). Clay County has an area of 219 squaremiles. The county seat is Hayesville. Web sites main.nc.us/Clay/.
http://cgi.citizen-times.com/cgi-bin/index/clay
Asheville, NC March 31, 2003 HOME CLASSIFIEDS CARS JOBS ... AREA NEWCOMERS GUIDE SITE SEARCH HOME NEWS SPORTS OBITUARIES ... LIVING Total Population:
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OTHER COUNTIES: SELECT Avery Buncombe Cherokee Clay Graham Haywood Henderson Jackson Macon Madison Mcdowell Mitchell Polk Rutherford Swain Transylvania Watauga Yancey GO! CLAY COUNTY
Jan. 15, 2002 1:54 p.m. History: Clay County was formed in 1861 from part of Cherokee County. It is bounded by Georgia to the south; Cherokee County to the west and Macon County to the east. It was named for Henry Clay (1777-1852). Clay County has an area of 219 square miles. The county seat is Hayesville. Web sites: main.nc.us/clay/ Demographics: Total Population: 8,775 Percent Change since 1990: +23% Percent Under 18: 19% Percent Multiracial: 1% Percent Minority: 2% Government Contacts: Board of Elections: 389-6812 County Commissioner's office: 389-0089 County tax office: 389-1266 Hayesville Fire Department: 389-6354 County Sheriff's office: 389-6354 County Register of Deeds: 389-0087 County Emergency Management: 389-9640 Town of Hayesville: 389-6354 Human Services Organizations: County Social Services: 389-6301 Division of Veterans Affairs: 389-3355 Library: 389-8401 County Health Department: 389-8052 Family Planning: 389-8807 Historical and Arts Council: 389-6814 Recreation Authority: 389-3742 Schools: Clay County Schools: 389-8513 Hayesville High School: 389-6532 Hayesville Middle School: 389-9924 Hayesville Elementary School: 389-6415

83. West Virginia, Clay County History - SHG Resources
March 29, 1858. It was created from parts of Braxton, Kanawha andNicholas counties and named in honor of Henry Clay (17771852).
http://www.statehousegirls.net/wv/counties/clay/
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Clay County History
Court House: 207 Main St
County Courthouse
Clay, WV 25043-0190

84. Clay County History
Clay county was named in honor of Senator Henry Clay (17771852).He was born in Hanover County, Virginia on April 12, 1777. His
http://www.polsci.wvu.edu/wv/Clay/clahistory.html
Clay County History Clay County was created by an act of the Virginia General Assembly on March 29, 1858. It was created from parts of Braxton and Nicholas counties.
The First Settlers The first native settlers in central West Virginia were the Mound Builders, also known as the Adena people. Remnants of the Mound Builder's civilization have been found throughout West Virginia, with a high concentration of artifacts located at Moundsville, West Virginia, in Marshall County. The Grave Creek Indian Mound, located in the center of Moundsville, is one of West Virginia's most famous historic landmarks. More than 2,000 years old, it stands 69 feet high and 295 feet in diameter. According to missionary reports, several thousand Hurons occupied present-day West Virginia during the late 1500s and early 1600s. They were driven out of the state during the 1600s by members of the powerful Iroquois Confederacy (consisting of the Mohawk, Onondaga, Cayuga, Oneida and Seneca tribes, and joined later by the Tuscaroras tribe). The Iroquois Confederacy was headquartered in New York and was not interested in occupying present-day West Virginia. Instead, they used it as a hunting ground during the spring and summer months. During the early 1700s, central West Virginia, including present-day Clay County, was used as a hunting ground by the Mingo, who lived in both the Tygart Valley and along the Ohio River in West Virginia's northern panhandle region, the Delaware, who lived in present-day eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware, but had several autonomous settlements as far south as present-day Braxton County, and by other members of the Iroquois Confederacy, especially the Seneca, one of the largest and most powerful members of the Iroquois Confederacy.

85. Henry Clay
Henry Clay (17771852).
http://www.indiantrailacademy.com/ap_classes/aphistory/clay_henry.html

86. Clay, Henry
Network. encyclopediaEncyclopedia Clay, Henry. Clay, Henry, 1777–1852,American statesman, b. Hanover co., Va. Sections in this article
http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/A0812477

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Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Encyclopedia Clay, Henry Clay, Henry, , American statesman, b. Hanover co., Va. Sections in this article: Clay, Clement Claiborne Clay, Lucius DuBignon Search Infoplease Info search tips Search Biographies Bio search tips About Us Contact Us Link to Infoplease ... Privacy

87. Henry Clay
Henry Clay Henry Clay was born (1777) in Virginia and lived in Kentucky.He State. Henry Clay is buried in Lexington, Kentucky.
http://www.louisville.edu/library/ekstrom/govpubs/states/kentucky/kyhistory/hcla
Henry Clay Henry Clay was born (1777) in Virginia and lived in Kentucky. He served in the U.S. House of Representatives, Senate , and as Secretary of State. Henry Clay is buried in Lexington, Kentucky

88. I1664 Henry Clay (12 APR 1777 - 1852)
Henry Clay. Birth 12 APR 1777, Hanover Co.,VA; Death 1852. Father JohnClay Mother Elizabeth Hudson Family 1 Lucretia Hart
http://www.worldwidecommerce.com/carter/files/html/D0021/G0000036.html

89. MATHEW BRADY GALLERY, NY - Henry Clay
Henry Clay 1777 1852, This portrait of Henry Clay by Henry F. Darby hung in MathewBrady's New York studio in 1860 along with paintings of Daniel Webster and
http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/brady/gallery/28gal.html
Henry Clay
This portrait of Henry Clay by Henry F. Darby hung in Mathew Brady's New York studio in 1860 along with paintings of Daniel Webster and John C. Calhoun . Brady sold all three to the United States government in 1881 for $4,000, and today they can be found hanging outside the Senate chamber. Throughout the 1850s Darby frequently collaborated with Brady to create large, majestic paintings based on photographs and daguerreotypes, for which Brady received most of the credit. Contemporary journals advertise elaborate photographs enlarged on canvas and enhanced with color, and it appears that the public accepted such work as a new form of portraiture. But three decades later, when Brady made his sale, he suggested that Darby worked from original sittings, using a long-lost method, saying only, "The material no longer exists to produce these portraits with such life-like fidelity and accuracy as to facts." See Daniel Webster , and John C. Calhoun Henry F. Darby (1829 - 1897)
Oil on canvas, circa 1858
129 x 102.2 cm (50 x 3/4 x 40 1/4 in.);

90. Clay, Henry
Funbrain, encyclopediaEncyclopedia Clay, Henry. Clay, Henry, 1777–1852,American statesman, b. Hanover co., Va. Sections in this article
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91. Clay, Henry
html. encyclopediaEncyclopedia Clay, Henry. Clay, Henry, 1777–1852,American statesman, b. Hanover co., Va. Sections in this article
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Clay, Henry Clay, Henry, , American statesman, b. Hanover co., Va. Sections in this article:
Clay, Clement Claiborne
Clay, Lucius DuBignon

92. Henry Clay
TO PRINT USE CTRL 'P'. Henry Clay (1777­1852) By John Neagle, 1843 Courtesyof the Architect of the Capital. Not to be used without permission.
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Henry Clay
By John Neagle, 1843
Courtesy of the Architect of the Capital. Not to be used without permission.

93. Treasures Of Congress
Records of the US Senate. Henry Clay (1777­1852) By John Neagle, 1843Courtesy of the Architect of the Capitol. Old Senate Chamber The
http://www.archives.gov/exhibit_hall/treasures_of_congress/checklist/checklist_1
Struggle over Slavery: The Compromise of 1850 Senator Henry Clay¹s handwritten resolutions proposing the Compromise of 1850 with a printed version of the resolutions, January 29, 1850 (Section One)
National Archives and Records Administration, Records of the U.S. Senate Senator Henry Clay¹s handwritten resolutions proposing the Compromise of 1850 with a printed version of the resolutions, January 29, 1850 (Section Two)
National Archives and Records Administration, Records of the U.S. Senate Henry Clay (1777­1852) By John Neagle, 1843

94. CLAY, HENRY
Clay, Henry (1777—1852), American statesman and orator, was born in Hanover county,Virginia, on the 12th of April 1777, and died in Washington on the 29th
http://56.1911encyclopedia.org/C/CL/CLAY_HENRY.htm
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CLAY, HENRY
CLAVIJO Y FAJARDO, JOSE (1730—1806), Spanish publicist, was born at Lanzarote (Canary islands) in 1730. He settled in Madrid, became editor of El Pensador, and by his campaign against the public performance of autos sacramentales secured their ‘prohibition in 1765. In 1770 he was appointed director of the royal theatres, a post ‘which he resigned in order to take up the editorship of the Mercur-io histOrico y polItico de Madrid: at the time of his death in 1806 he was secretary to the Cabinet of Natural History. He had in abundance the courage, perseverance and gift of pungent expression. which form the equipment of the aggressive journalist, but his work would long since have been forgotten were it not that it put an end to a peculiarly national form of dramatic exposition, and that his love affair with one of Beaumarchais’ sisters suggested the theme of Goethe’s first publication, Ciavigo. See his autobiography, TheLife, Memoirs. Writings, and Speeches of Cassius Marcellus Clay (Cincinnati, 1896); and The Writings of Cassius Marcellus Clay (edite~1 with a “Memoir” by Horace Greeley. New York, 1848). CLAY, CHARLES (1801—1893), English surgeon, was born at Bredbury, near Stockport, on the 27th of December 1801. He began his medical education as a pupil of Kinder Wood in Manchester (where he used to attend John Dalton’s lectures on chemistry), and in 1821 went to Edinburgh to continue his studies there. Qualifying in 1823, he began a general practice in Ashton-under-Lyne, but in 1839 removed to Manchester to practise as an operative and consulting surgeon. It was there that, in 1842, he first performed the operation of ovariotomy with which his name is associated. On this occasion it was

95. Clay, Henry
Center, encyclopediaEncyclopedia Clay, Henry. Clay, Henry, 1777–1852,American statesman, b. Hanover co., Va. Sections in this article
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Clay, Henry Clay, Henry, , American statesman, b. Hanover co., Va. Sections in this article:
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96. GIGA Quote Author Page For Henry Clay
GIGA QUOTES BY AUTHOR Henry Clay American statesman and orator (1777 1852),
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American statesman and orator (1777 - 1852)
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HENRY CLAY
Government is a trust, and the officers of the government are trustees; and both the trust and the trustees are created for the benefit of the people.
- in a speech at Lexington [ Public Trust
I have heard something said about allegiance to the South: I know no South, no North, no East, no West, to which I owe any allegiance.
In the U.S. Senate Patriotism
The gentleman [Josiah Quincy] cannot have forgotten his own sentiment, uttered even on the floor of this House, "Peaceably if we can, forcibly if we must."
SpeechOn the New Army Bill Peace Sir, I would rather be right than be President. SpeechReferring to the Compromise Measure Right WWW.GIGA-USA.COM Back to Top of Page SUPPORT GIGA: Honor System Amazon Office Depot Target ... Field's The GIGA name and the GIGA logo are trademarks registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office by John C. Shepard.

97. KY State Library Services: Kentuckians Elected To The U.S. House Of Representati
Representative, KY. 1808, 1878. Clay, Henry, Representative, KY. Senator, KY.Speaker of the House, US. 1777, 1852. Clay, James Brown, Representative, KY. 1817,1864.
http://www.kdla.ky.gov/statelib/KY_HR.htm
Kentuckians Elected to the U.S. House of Representatives: A-E A B C D ... E Names notated with hyperlinks will provide brief biographies prepared by the online Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Member Name Position(s) Year of Birth Year of Death ADAIR, John Representative, KY Senator, KY ADAMS, George Madison Representative, KY ADAMS, Green Representative, KY ADAMS, Silas Representative, KY ALLAN, Chilton Representative, KY ALLEN, Henry Dixon Representative, KY ANDERSON, Lucien Representative, KY ANDERSON, Richard Clough, Jr. Representative, KY ANDERSON, Simeon H. Representative, KY ANDERSON, William Clayton Representative, KY ANDREWS, Landaff Watson Representative, KY ARTHUR, William Evans Representative, KY BAESLER, Henry Scott (Scotty)

98. PH@School: Biographies
Early Years Henry Clay (1777–1852) was also called Gallant Harry of the West, although he didn't move to Kentucky from Virginia until he became a lawyer in
http://www.phschool.com/atschool/biographies/clay.html
Henry Clay
Courtesy Library of Congress "I have heard something said about allegiance to the South. I know no South, no North, no East, no West, to which I owe any allegiance. . . . The Union, sir, is my country."
Known as the Great Compromiser, Henry Clay successfully balanced sectional interests in a series of national crises, and, some say, delayed the Civil War by at least a decade. Early Years Entering Politics Beginning in 1803, Clay was elected to seven terms in the Kentucky legislature as a Jeffersonian Republican. He was also appointed twice to the U.S. Senate to fill out unexpired terms. In 1810, Clay was elected to the U.S. House, where he served on and off as Speaker over a period of almost 15 years. A promoter of the War of 1812, Clay left the House briefly to help negotiate the treaty that ended that war. In the House, he promoted the American System, favoring internal improvements, a national bank, and protective tariffs. The National Stage As Speaker of the House, Clay promoted the Missouri Compromise of 1820 to maintain the balance between slave and free states. In 1824, he ran unsuccessfully for president. When the close election ended up in the House, he supported John Quincy Adams, who made Clay secretary of state. In 1831, Clay entered the Senate, and opposed President Jackson's policies at every turn. He was then defeated by Jackson in another run for the presidency. Clay resigned from the Senate in 1842, again ran for president, and finally re-entered the Senate in time to throw his considerable political skill and oratory behind the Compromise of 1850, which again prevented extremists on both sides from tearing the Union apart over slavery.

99. Henry Clay
Henry Clay. 1777 1852. Henry Clay was secretary of state under John Quincy Adamsand an unsuccessful candidate for the presidency in 1824, 1832, and 1844.
http://www.knowsouthernhistory.net/Biographies/henry_clay.htm
Henry Clay Henry Clay was secretary of state under John Quincy Adams and an unsuccessful candidate for the presidency in 1824, 1832, and 1844. He was one of the most popular and influential political leaders in American history. His genius in the art of compromise three times resolved bitter political conflicts that threatened to tear the nation apart, winning him the title The Great Pacificator. Clay was born on April 12, 1777, in Hanover County, Virginia, to a middle-class family. After studying for the bar with the eminent George Wythe, Clay, at the age of 20, moved to Lexington, Kentucky, where he developed a thriving practice. He was blessed with a quick mind, a flair for oratory, and an ability to charm both sexes with his easy, attractive manner. That he loved to drink and gamble was no drawback in an age that admired both vices. Clay, ambitious for worldly success, married into a wealthy and socially prominent family and soon gained entry into Kentucky's most influential circles. While still in his 20s, he was elected to the state legislature, in which he served for six years, until 1809. Clay established his great reputation in the United States House of Representatives, where he served intermittently from 1811 to 1825. In his first term, he became one of the leading "War Hawks"—the young men whose clamor for hostilities with England helped bring about the War of 1812. Clay was selected as one of the commissioners who in 1814 negotiated the Treaty of Ghent, ending that war.

100. Some Descendants Of John Clay Of Virginia
New Orleans 1. Sally Clay d. in infancy 1. Molly Clay d. in infancy 1. Henry Clay17771852; the Statesman Orator resided on farm outside Lexington, KY.
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Plains/6025/clay.htm
Some Descendants of John Clay of Virginia
Part I by June Shaputis Clay family Part II
included here has not been proven nor should any inference that all of the information shown here for them is true or credible.
The early sources listed here only remain a possibility and are not complete by any means. Some are more credible than others.
Any one wishing to add sources, additions, or corrections are welcome to contact me. All my known sources have been included for any researchers wishing to follow-up on them. Perhaps some day Clay family
researchers will be able to prove the parentage of our John Claye. Until then, many questions and mysteries will remain. If there
are known discrepancies with my information or additions that I did not have, it will be noted in red text along with who provided
the additional information. John Claye
, Esq. m. Mary Carlton , b. England, d. England, (dau of William Carlton died 1538 Eng.) John died 16 May 1632, England. William Carlton was said to be a servant to Henry VIII.

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