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Gazetteer
Stoddard, WI -- U.S. village in Wisconsin
Population (2000): 815
Housing Units (2000): 375
Land area (2000): 0.599055 sq. miles (1.551546 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.088476 sq. miles (0.229151 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.687531 sq. miles (1.780697 sq. km)
FIPS code: 77550
Located within: Wisconsin (WI), FIPS 55
Location: 43.662889 N, 91.219745 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 54658
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Stoddard, WI
Stoddard
Stoddard -- U.S. County in Missouri
Population (2000): 29705
Housing Units (2000): 13221
Land area (2000): 827.123463 sq. miles (2142.239844 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 1.817886 sq. miles (4.708302 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 828.941349 sq. miles (2146.948146 sq. km)
Located within: Missouri (MO), FIPS 29
Location: 36.847028 N, 89.958709 W
Headwords:
Stoddard
Stoddard, MO
Stoddard County
Stoddard County, MO
Wikipedia
Stoddard

Stoddard may refer to:

Stoddard (surname)

Stoddard is English Occupational surname meaning Horse keeper. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Stoddard (baseball), baseball player
  • Bob Stoddard (Robert Lyle, b. 1957), major league baseball pitcher from San Jose
  • Charles Warren Stoddard (1843–1909), American author and traveler of the Pacific
  • Elizabeth Drew Stoddard née Barstow (1823–1902), American poet and novelist, wife of Richard Henry
  • Harry Galpin Stoddard (1873–1969), businessman who became president of Wyman & Gordon
  • Howard J. Stoddard (1901–1971), American banker
  • James Stoddard (author), American fantasy author
  • James Stoddard (sailor) (born 1838, date of death unknown), American sailor and namesake of USS Stoddard (DD-566)
  • John Lawson Stoddard (1850–1931), American writer of hymns and travelogues.
  • John W. Stoddard (1837–1917), American manufacturer of cars and farm tools
  • Joshua C. Stoddard (1814–1902), American inventor of calliope
  • Lothrop Stoddard (1883–1950), American eugenicist
  • Malcolm Stoddard (b. 1948), British television actor
  • Mark Stoddard (b. 1962), American voice actor
  • Michael Stoddard, American geographer and namesake of the Stoddard unit of measurement
  • Richard Henry Stoddard (1825–1903), American author and poet
  • Robert Stoddard (musician) ( fl. 1980s), puck rock singer and guitarist
  • Robert Waring Stoddard (c. 1906–1984), former president of Wyman-Gordan and John Birch Society founder
  • Seneca Ray Stoddard (1844–1917), American landscape photographer
  • Solomon Stoddard (1643–1729), American Congregational preacher
  • Sophia D. Stoddard née Sarah D. Hazen (d. 1891), American educator, a principal of Mount Holyoke
  • Thomas Benton Stoddard (1800–1876), first mayor of La Crosse, Wisconsin; Wisconsin State Assembly and namesake of Stoddard, Wisconsin
  • Tim Stoddard (b. 1953), major league baseball pitcher from Chicago

Fictional characters:

  • Elizabeth Collins Stoddard, character in the television series Dark Shadows

Usage examples of "stoddard".

Had Martha Stoddard over at the Athenaeum screen out the crazies, and God but there are enough of those.

James Eckert pulled up in front of Stoddard Hall on the Riveroak College campus, where Grottwold Weinar Hansen had his lab.

It was for these loose stocks that the combine and Stoddard were fighting, with thousands of the public buying in, and as the price of some stock was jigged up and down it was the public that cast the die.

But all this buying and selling of stocks, the establishment of his credit and the trying out of his strength, it was all preliminary to that great contest to come when he would come out into the open against Stoddard.

Wilkerson-- Sarah Wilkerson--good cretur, she was--one of the likeliest heifers that was ever raised in old Stoddard, everybody said that knowed her.

Only belatedly had they realized that Aramus was no more secure than anywhere else, and so Stoddard and his men had been relegated to the task of defending it.

It would be a miracle if the chaos dragon had not yet attacked Aramus, but Stoddard nurtured hope.

Present at the meeting were six of the eight cardiac surgeons on staff, including Ballantine, Sherman, and Kingsley, as well as various other doctors and administrators, and a relatively new addition, Rodney Stoddard, philosopher.

Such guests as joined the parties liked to talk with him of Indians, and he expounded views which were more readily accepted by his French listeners than by Captain Stoddard and his aide.

Stoddard was at the small table that Hay himself used when Nico presided over the secretary’s desk.