Louis B. Mayer
(1885-1957)
Motion picture executive who was
one of the "moguls" who dictated the course of film industry in Hollywood during
its golden era. Born in Minsky, Russia on July 4th. When he was two years old, his family
moved to Canada and then to the United States. He bought a theater in Haverhill,
Massachusetts to show movies. He moved to Hollywood in 1918 and later became one of the
founders of MGM studio. Mayer was instrumental in establishing the star system, wherein a
motion picture was built around its leader actor or actress.
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S.S. McClure
(1857-1949)
Publisher and editor of McClure’s Magazine, which he founded
in 1893. The magazine was known for its "muckraking" articles which exposed
political and monopolistic corruption. Born in County Antrim, Ireland. Came to the U.S. as
a child. with his parents. His publishing house, McClure, Phillips and Company, was later
acquired by Doubleday, Page and Company.
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James McHenry
(1753-1816)
Signer of the federal Constitution. Born in
Ireland, emigrated to America in 1771. During the American Revolution he was a Continental
Army surgeon and later a secretary to George Washington. As a secretary of war from
1796-1800, McHenry favored war with France. Fort McHenry, in Baltimore harbor, is named
after him.
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John
William Mackay (1831-1902)
Born in Dublin, Ireland, and was brought to
U.S. in 1840. He went to California to prospect for gold in 1851 and moved to Nevada in
1859. In 1873 MacKay and his partners discovered the "Big Bonanza" mine of the
Comstock Lode. This mine yielded more than $100,000,000 in gold and silver.
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Donald McKay
(1810-1880)
A ship designer and builder. His Yankee
clippers were among the fastest ships ever built. His "Flying Cloud" clipper set
a record in 1851, making the New York-Cape Horn-San Francisco run in 89 days. The
"Lightning" made the longest day’s run in sailing history -- 436 nautical
miles. Born in Nova Scotia, Canada. Opened his own shipyard in Boston in 1845.
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William
Worrall Mayo (1819-1911)
Emigrated from England in 1845. Graduated
from the Medical School of the University of Missouri. He established practice in the
frontier country of Minnesota, making his home in Rochester. There in 1889 the Sisters of
St. Francis opened St. Mary’s Hospital, with Dr. Mayo and his sons, William and
Charles, as the medical and surgical staff. The father’s practice was gradually taken
over by his sons and became known as Mayo’s Clinic.
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Joseph Medill
(1823-1899)
One of the most influential journalists of
his time. He had leading part in founding the Republican Party, and was a friend and
supporter of Abraham Lincoln. Born in New Brunswick, Canada. He was editor of the Chicago
Tribune from 1855 until his death.
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Gian
Carlo Menotti (1911- )
A leading composer of modern opera. He was
awarded the Pulitzer Prize for music in 1950 for "The Consul," and in 1955 for
"The Saint of Bleecker Street." His opera, "Amahl and the Night
Visitor," is presented annually at Christmas on television. Born in Cadeglian, Italy.
Settled in the U.S. in 1933. Menotti founded the "Festival of Two Worlds" in
Spoleto, Italy.
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Ivan
Mestrovic (1883-1962)
A sculptor known especially for his
"Pieta" at the University of Notre Dame and the two bronze statues of Indians on
horseback in Grant Park, Chicago. Born in Croatia. After World War I, he helped in the
founding of Yugoslavia. When his country was under Communist rule after World War II,
Mestrovic voluntarily exiled himself. He came to U.S. in 1947, becoming a citizen in 1954.
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Adolph Meyer (1866-1950)
Adolf Meyer was one of the earliest and most influential American
psychiatrists. Born in Niederweningen, Switzerland, Meyer emigrated to the
United States in 1892 and held the chair of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins
University from 1910 to 1941.
Meyer rejected simple biological explanations of mental illness. He
argued, for example, that schizophrenia was a personality disorder. His
psychobiological studies showed that thoughts and feelings affect a person's
physiological state; he became the first American psychiatrist to compile
case histories of his patients.
Meyer can be credited with giving psychiatry its
pluralistic, pragmatic orientation; he also did significant medical research
as a neurologist.
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Albert
Abraham Michelson (1852-1931)
The first U.S. scientist to receive a Nobel
Prize. He was awarded the 1907 prize in physics for measurements of the speed of light and
for inventing optical instruments. An experiment made by Michelson and Edward Morley in
1887 profoundly affected physics. They attempted to determine the velocity of the earth as
it passed through the ether (a hypothetical substance which was believed to pervade all
space not occupied by matter). No velocity could be determined, and most physicists
abandoned the ether theory. The Michelson-Worley experiment was finally explained in 1905
by Einstein’s special theory of relativity.
Born in Strelno, Germany. Brought to the U.S. at the age of two.
He was professor of physics at what is now Case Western Reserve University, and also at
the University of Chicago.
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Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886-1969)
Architect who was one of the leaders of the
International style. He was known for his elegant but austere steel-and-glass buildings.
Classic simplicity mark such works as Crown Hall at Illinois Institute of Technology, the
Dirksen Building, part of the Federal Center in Chicago, and the National Gallery in
Berlin. Born in Aachen, Germany. He was director of the Bauhaus school before settling in
the U.S. in 1937. Became an American citizen in 1944. Buildings such as 860 Lake Shore
Drive in Chicago helped establish the steel skeleton glass-wall structure as a major
building type.
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Dimitri
Mitropoulos (1896-1960)
Conductor and pianist. Born in Greece. He
was musical director of the New York Philharmonic from 1950-1958. In 1954 he began
conducting the Metropolitan Opera. Came to U.S. in 1936, became citizen in 1946.
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Helena
Modjeska (1840-1909)
Actress known for playing tragic
Shakespearean roles, including Lady McBeth, Ophelia, and Juliet. She appeared as Nora in
Ibsen’s "A Doll’s House," marking the introduction of the Norwegian
dramatist in the U.S. She also starred in Dumas’ Camille. Her real name was Helena
Opid. Born in Cracow, Poland. She enjoyed popularity in the U.S. for three decades.
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Ferenc Molnar
(1878-1952)
Playwright who wrote sophisticated comedies. "Liliom,"
was probably his most popular of his 40 works. The musical version of the play was called
"Carousel." Born in Budapest, Hungary. Molnar came to the U.S. in 1940 to escape
the Nazis.
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Henry
Morganthau
(1856-1946)
Practiced law in New York City and made a fortune in real estate.
Born in Mannheim, Germany, and was brought to the U.S. at the age of nine. He was
embassador to Turkey, 1913-16. After World War I, he was active in raising money for Near
East relief. In 1923, Morganthau became chairman of the Greek Refugee Settlement
commission created by the League of Nations. In 1933, he was a technical expert at the
Monetary and Economic Conference in London.
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Henry
Siddons Mowbray
(1858-1928)
Painter known for his fine draftsmanship,
warmth of color, and delicacy of conception. Among his best paintings are "A Lady in
Black" and "Idle Hours." He also painted many murals, including
"Development of the Law," in the Appellate Court, New York City. Born in
Alexandria, Egypt, of English parents. Brought to the U.S. in 1859. |