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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Kellogg

surname, attested from late 13c., literally "kill hog," a name for a butcher. The U.S. cereal company began in Battle Creek, Michigan, in 1906, founded by W.K. Kellogg (business manager of the Battle Creek Sanatorium) as Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company.

Gazetteer
Kellogg, ID -- U.S. city in Idaho
Population (2000): 2395
Housing Units (2000): 1239
Land area (2000): 1.939042 sq. miles (5.022096 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.939042 sq. miles (5.022096 sq. km)
FIPS code: 42580
Located within: Idaho (ID), FIPS 16
Location: 47.538391 N, 116.125406 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 83837
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Kellogg, ID
Kellogg
Kellogg, IA -- U.S. city in Iowa
Population (2000): 606
Housing Units (2000): 282
Land area (2000): 0.364408 sq. miles (0.943813 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.364408 sq. miles (0.943813 sq. km)
FIPS code: 40440
Located within: Iowa (IA), FIPS 19
Location: 41.716641 N, 92.907563 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 50135
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Kellogg, IA
Kellogg
Kellogg, MN -- U.S. city in Minnesota
Population (2000): 439
Housing Units (2000): 177
Land area (2000): 0.290536 sq. miles (0.752486 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.008716 sq. miles (0.022575 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.299252 sq. miles (0.775061 sq. km)
FIPS code: 32642
Located within: Minnesota (MN), FIPS 27
Location: 44.307013 N, 91.998968 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Kellogg, MN
Kellogg
Wikipedia
Kellogg

Kellogg may refer to:

  • Kellogg Company, breakfast food maker
    • Will Keith Kellogg, founder of the company
    • John Harvey Kellogg, his brother, inventor of cornflakes and medical practitioner
  • Kellogg Brothers, 19th century lithographers of Hartford Connecticut
  • Kellogg (name), list of people with the surname
  • Kellogg, Idaho
  • Kellogg, Iowa
  • Kellogg, Kansas
  • Kellogg, Minnesota
  • Kellogg, Oregon
Kellogg (name)

Kellogg is a surname that applies to:

  • Albert Kellogg, American physician and botanist
  • Brainerd Kellogg, American educationalist and writer
  • Charles Kellogg (congressman) (1773-1842), U.S. Representative from New York
  • Charles Kellogg (state senator) (1839-1903), New York state legislator
  • Charles Kellogg (naturalist), vaudeville performer and campaigner for the protection of the giant sequoias
  • Clara Louise Kellogg, American singer
  • Clark Kellogg, sportscaster and former American basketball player
  • Daniel Kellogg (disambiguation), several people
  • David Kellogg, American director
  • Derek Kellogg, American basketball coach
  • Edward Kellogg (economist)
  • Edward Stanley Kellogg, 16th Governor of American Samoa
  • Edward W. Kellogg, inventor
  • Fay Kellogg, architect
  • Francis L. Kellogg, U.S. diplomat and prominent socialite
  • Francis William Kellogg, U.S. Representative from Michigan and Alabama
  • Frank B. Kellogg, United States Secretary of State from 1925–1929
  • Henry T. Kellogg (1869-1942), New York judge
  • Jeff Kellogg (born 1961), Major League Baseball umpire
  • J. A. Kellogg, (1871–1962), John Alonzo Kellogg, Washington politician
  • John Azor Kellogg, U.S. military leader and Wisconsin politician
  • John Harvey Kellogg, physician, brother of William Keith Kellogg
  • Kendrick Bangs Kellogg (born 1934), organic architect
  • Louise P. Kellogg, U.S. historian
  • Marjorie Kellogg, American author
  • Mark Kellogg (reporter), first Associated Press correspondent to die in the line of duty when he was killed at the Battle of the Little Bighorn
  • Mark Kellogg (musician), principal trombonist of the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra
  • Mike Kellogg (American football), American football player
  • Milo G. Kellogg, inventor, founder of Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Company
  • Nelson A. Kellogg (c. 1881–1945), American athlete, coach, and administrator
  • Orlando Kellogg, U.S. Representative from New York
  • Oliver Dimon Kellogg (1878-1932), American mathematician
  • Paul Kellogg (American journalist), American journalist
  • Peter Kellogg, Wall Street billionaire
  • Ray Kellogg, American film director and producer
  • Remington Kellogg, American naturalist and a director of the United States National Museum
  • Rowland C. Kellogg (1843–1911), New York politician
  • Samuel Kellogg (1673–1757), member of the Connecticut House of Representatives from Norwalk
  • Stephen Wright Kellogg, U.S. Representative from Connecticut
  • Stephen Kellogg of the band Stephen Kellogg and the Sixers
  • Steven Kellogg, American children's author and illustrator
  • Vernon Lyman Kellogg, American entomologist
  • Virginia Kellogg, film writer
  • Will Keith Kellogg, founder of the Kellogg Company, brother of John Harvey Kellogg
  • William Kellogg (Illinois), 19th century U.S. Representative from Illinois
  • William P. Kellogg, 19th century Governor of Louisiana
  • William Welch Kellogg, climatologist
  • Winthrop Kellogg (1898-1972), American comparative psychologist

Usage examples of "kellogg".

He started to speak, to defend Kellogg, but coughed spasmodically instead.

Chaos saw, with bitter disappointment, that it was the gigantic body of Kellogg, flapping ridiculously in the water, a giant cigar still clenched in his smiling mouth.

When Kellogg was so excited about something that he sent Edge out as a town crier.

When Kellogg went around renaming everything, nobody had tried to stop him.

The goods, mostly canned food and reusable objects, filtered through Little America, where Kellogg and his Food Rangers co-ordinated distribution.

He wondered if she understood that Kellogg was someone she could actually meet.

There was a famous banishment scene: Kellogg and his deputies walking Chaos to the edge of town.

It followed that it would be consumed by Kellogg, the last fat man anywhere, as far as Chaos knew.

By the time Chaos got to his feet and worked the grit out of his mouth, he and Kellogg were alone.

Chaos felt outraged that Kellogg, of all people, was poking holes in his reality.

He felt a wave of nausea pass through him afterwards and wondered briefly if this was all some bizarre trick and the food was poisoned or drugged and Kellogg would be driving out to drag them back as soon as they succumbed.

Kellogg lying with his head bleeding beside the reservoir, and wondered too what Kellogg had told them about it.

He remembered Kellogg saying that the dream effect was nothing, that Chaos could do it himself if he tried.

But that was just one of a million things Kellogg had said, contradicting himself at every turn.

In fact, he had some dim sense that Kellogg, whoever he was, was to blame for all of this.