Crossword clues for douglass
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 733
Land area (2000): 0.824684 sq. miles (2.135922 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.824684 sq. miles (2.135922 sq. km)
FIPS code: 18400
Located within: Kansas (KS), FIPS 20
Location: 37.516802 N, 97.011705 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 67039
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Douglass
Wikipedia
Douglass is a lunar crater on the far side of the Moon. It lies to the southwest of the crater Frost and south-southwest of the large walled plain Landau.
The western rim has been shaped by several interior impacts, most notably the remnant of a crater that cuts an outward notch in the northwestern rim. The southeastern rim of this interior crater is now little more than a low rise across the floor of Douglass. Another impact along the southern side has produced a smaller outward bulge and a portion of the rim forms a ridge prodruding into the interior floor. Smaller craters lie along the northeastern rim. The remainder of the rim is worn and rounded, and the interior floor is otherwise level and featureless.
Douglass may refer to:
Douglass is a residential neighborhood in Southeast Washington, D.C., on the eastern side of St. Elizabeths Hospital, on the border of the Congress Heights Metro Station. It is bounded by Suitland Parkway to the north and east, Alabama Avenue to the south, and the St. Elizabeths campus to the west.
The Douglass neighborhood sits atop a hilly ridge that is the highest point in Southeast Washington, The area was once almost entirely dominated by two public housing complexes Douglass Dwellings and Stanton Dwellings. It is now one of the up-and-coming areas of Washington, DC and experiencing a fair amount of retail investment and gentrification. The areas is close to THEARC (Town Hall Education Arts and Recreation Center), with institutions such as Trinity Washington University (formerly Trinity College), the School of the Washington Ballet and the Levine School of Music. The area has several new homes developments with houses priced in the $200–400,000 range.
The area contains several historic Jewish cemeteries, including the Adas Israel and Elesavetgrad cemeteries and a relatively new Bet Mishpachah Cemetery.
The neighborhood is named for the famed American abolitionist Frederick Douglass, whose homestead sits approximately one mile north of his namesake community.
Washington, D.C. Category:Neighborhoods in Washington, D.C.
Douglass Crater is a crater in the Thaumasia quadrangle of Mars, located at 51.8°S latitude and 70.6°W longitude. It is 94.0 km in diameter and was named after Andrew E. Douglass, and the name was approved in 1973.
- Abel Douglass (before 1849 – c. 1907), American whaler
- A. E. Douglass (1867–1962), American astronomer
- Astyanax Douglass (1897–1975), Major League Baseball catcher for the Cincinnati Reds
- Bill Douglass (1923–1994), American jazz drummer
- Bobby Douglass (born 1947), former American football quarterback for the Chicago Bears
- Charles Douglass (1910–2003), American sound engineer, credited as the inventor of the laugh track
- Dale Douglass (born 1936), American professional golfer
- David Douglass, American physicist
- David John Douglass, aka Dave or Danny the Red, Tyneside and Yorkshire political activist and writer
- Dorothea Douglass Lambert Chambers (1878–1960), English tennis player
- Frank Douglass (1875–1972), South African rugby union player
- Frederick Douglass (1818–1895), American abolitionist and writer
- Gregory Douglass (born 1980), American singer-songwriter
- Gordon K. (Sandy) Douglass (1904–1992) racer, designer, and builder of sailing dinghies
- Harry Douglass, Baron Douglass of Cleveland (1902–1978) was a British trade unionist.
- Herbert E. Douglass (1927-2014), Seventh-day Adventist theologian
- Jack Douglass, American internet personality, musician and comedian on YouTube
- James W. Douglass, American author, activist, and Christian theologian
- James Nicholas Douglass (1826–1898), English civil engineer, lighthouse builder and designer
- Jimmy Douglass, American recording engineer and record producer
- Joe Douglass,(born 1974) American football player for the Las Vegas Gladiators
- John J. Douglass (1873–1939), member of the United States House of Representatives from Massachusetts
- John Thomas Douglass (1847–1886), American violinist, composer of "Virginia's Ball"
- Brigadier General John W. Douglass (born 1941), former United States Air Force officer
- Joseph Henry Douglas (1871–1935) African-American concert violinist
- Kingman Douglass (1896–1971), American investment banker, member of the United States intelligence community
- Klondike Douglass (1872–1953), American Major League Baseball player born in Boston
- Leon Douglass (1869–1940), American inventor
- Linda Douglass, director of communications for the White House Office of Health Reform in the Obama Administration
- Mabel Smith Douglass
- Maurice Douglass
- Mike Douglass (urban planner)
- Mike Douglass (American football)
- Pat Douglass
- Paul Douglass
- Ralph Waddell Douglass (1895—1971), commercial artist and university professor
- Ramona Douglass
- Richard Douglass (1746–1828). Militia officer and a cooper.
- Robyn Douglass
- Samuel T. Douglass (1814–1898), American justice
- Sara Douglass, Australian author (pen name of Sara Warneke)
- Sean Douglass
- Stephen Douglass, American actor
- Susan L. Douglass
- Suzzanne Douglass
- William Boone Douglass (b1864), American lawyer, engineer, surveyor, genealogist and anthropologist.
- William Douglass (engineer), Chief Engineer for the Commissioners of Irish Lights
- William Douglass (physician), physician and pamphleteer in 18th century Boston
Usage examples of "douglass".
Second, he is an imposter, for he has always sailed under assumed names, first calling himself Bailey, then Stanley, then Johnson and next Douglass.
In like manner, and to the fullest extent, has Frederick Douglass passed through every gradation of rank comprised in our national make-up, and bears upon his person and upon his soul every thing that is American.
When Douglass finished his speech, Garrison rose, turned to the stunned audience, and challenged them with a shouted question: `Have we been listening to a thing, a chattel personal, or a man?
When Douglass finished his speech, Garrison rose, turned to the stunned audience, and challenged them with a shouted question: 'Have we been listening to a thing, a chattel personal, or a man?
An improvised path had evolved without conscious direction: “There’s a doctor in Doylestown, and then you go to Scranton, and beyond New York the safe spot is the home of Frederick Douglass in Rochester.
He would permit Miller, as author of the top-priority measure, to read out to his assembled colleagues and the gallery, “Resolved, that Douglass Dilman, President of the United States, be impeached of high crimes and misdemeanors in office.
Cynthia Chenowith and Douglass stayed at the house, where they taped brown kraft paper over the side windows of Baker's station wagon.
But when the rally was over, and Reverend Douglass had counted the dimes and quarters on which his church must exist for the coming season, and when the pots were cleared and the ropes taken down, it was Jeb Cater who summed up the evening: Quakers like Woolman Paxmore, the finest man in town, they loves black people in big doses--like all the blacks in Alabama or Georgia--but Father Caveny, he loves us one by one .
Lowly as he was, Technica considered Douglass the best qualified "engineer.