- Jethro Jeremiah
Jethro Jeremiah (born in Mendocino, California) is a singer-songwriter based in San Francisco. He is usually supported by his band The Jethro Jeremiah Band which plays predominantly in a reggae style. Part of his childhood was spent on The Farm, a commune in Tennessee. In 2002 Jethro's song "Hotchkiss Street" won the online MakeaStar.com contest. - Andrea Jeremiah
Andrea Jeremiah (known professionally as Andrea) is an Indian actress, singer and a model who has acted in Tamil movies. She has sung popular Tamil songs like Kannum kannum Nokia (Movie: "Anniyan") and Karka Karka (Movie: "Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu"). She was a part of a Jackson Five-style troupe called "Young Stars" at a young age of 10 which kick started her music career. - David Jeremiah
David P. Jeremiah (born February 13, 1941 in Toledo, Ohio) is an American conservative evangelist and is currently the senior pastor of Shadow Mountain Community Church. Shadow Mountain Community Church is located in El Cajon, California, east of San Diego. Jeremiah succeeded former pastor Tim LaHaye in 1981. Jeremiah graduated from the Dallas Theological Seminary with a doctorate in ministry (DMin). - Kevin Jeremiah
Kevin Jeremiah is guitarist with British band The Feeling. - David E. Jeremiah
Admiral David Elmer Jeremiah, USN (Retired), (born February 25, 1934) is a former United States Navy officer, who served as Vice Chairman and also Acting Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Since his retirement from the Navy in February 1994, he has worked in the field of investment banking. He serves as partner and president of Technology Strategies & Alliances Corporation, a strategic advisory and investment banking firm engaged primarily in the aerospace, defense, … - Ciaran Jeremiah
Ciaran Jeremiah is keyboardist with British band The Feeling. He also plays guitar in the encore of the band's current UK tour, contributing to the cover of Queen's "Fat Bottomed Girls". Jeremiah says he admires Garth Hudson (keyboardist in The Band) and Tom Waits. - Jeremiah
Jeremiah (Lordwill raise"}}), one of the 'greater prophets' of the Old Testament. He was the son of Hilkiah, a priest of Anathoth. His writings are collected in the book of Jeremiah and, according to tradition, the Book of Lamentations. Jeremiah is also famous as "the broken-hearted prophet" (who wrote or dictated a "broken book", which has been difficult for scholars to put into chronological order), whose heart-rending life, … - David Jeremiah
- Jeremiah Palecek
Jeremiah Palecek (born January 24 1978) is a blogger, painter and sound artist. He grew up in Bismarck, North Dakota. He attended the Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts, The Glasgow School of Art and received his BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He currently resides in Prague, Czech Republic. Jeremiah's work as a painter is primarily known on the internet as his work tends to focus on painting the digital world. - Jeremiah Burroughs
Jeremiah Burroughs (sometimes Burroughes; ca. 1600 - London, November 13, 1646) was an English Congregationalist and a well-known Puritan preacher. - Jeremiah McDade
Jeremiah McDade (born in Edmonton, Alberta in July 1977) is a Canadian musician. Jeremiah is a talented multi-instrumentalist and composer, playing Irish whistle, saxophone, fiddle and flute. His career began with The McDade Family Band at the age of five, and he has subsequently performed with a wide variety of groups both live and in the recording studio. He is featured on numerous soundtracks such as the 2001 World Athletics Championships, … - Jeremiah S. Black
Jeremiah Sullivan Black (January 10, 1810 - August 19, 1883) was an American statesman and lawyer. He was the father of writer Chauncey Black. He was largely self-educated, and before he was of age was admitted to the Pennsylvania bar. He gradually became one of the leading American lawyers, and from 1851 to 1857 was a member of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, serving as Chief Justice from 1851 to 1854. - Jeremiah Trotter
Jeremiah Trotter (born January 20, 1977 in Hooks, Texas) is an American football linebacker in the NFL. - Jeremiah Clemens
Jeremiah Clemens (December 28, 1814 - May 21, 1865) was a U.S. senator and novelist from the state of Alabama. He was elected to fill the vacancy left by the death of Dixon Hall Lewis, and served from November 30, 1849 to March 3, 1853. Clemens was the author of "Tobias Wilson", one of the first American Civil War novels, and he was also one of the earliest writers of Western novels. - Jeremiah Denton
Jeremiah Andrew Denton Jr. (born July 15 1924 in Mobile, Alabama) is a retired U.S. Navy admiral and a former U.S. senator of the Republican party. He spent almost eight years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam and later wrote a book about his experiences. - Jeremiah van Rensselaer
Jeremiah Van Rensselaer (August 27 1738 - February 19 1810) was a Representative from New York to the United States Congress. He was the father of Solomon Van Vechten Van Rensselaer and cousin of Killian Van Rensselaer, who were also Representatives. Jeremiah Van Rensselaer was born in New York, the son of John Van Rensselaer (1708-1793) and Engeltie Livingston Van Rensselaer who died before Jeremiah was 10. He was tutored at their manor house "Rensselaerswyck", … - Jeremiah Duggan
Jeremiah 'Jerry' Duggan (November 10, 1980 - March 27, 2003), a British student at the University of Paris, died in disputed circumstances near Wiesbaden, Germany. His death became controversial because it occurred while he was attending a youth cadre school organized by the Schiller Institute and the LaRouche Youth Movement, part of an international organization led by perennial American presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche and his wife Helga Zepp-LaRouche. - Jeremiah Curtin
Jeremiah Curtin (September 6, 1835 - December 14, 1906, Vermont) was an American translator and folklorist. - Jeremiah Birnbaum
Jeremiah Birnbaum is a singer/songwriter; his music has been described as a combination of rock, folk, blues, country, and compared to such artists as Van Morrison,Jeff Buckley, Johnny Cash, Sheryl Crow, John Mayer, and Mark Kozelek. Birnbaum currently resides in New York and is often seen touring solo, with his band, The Ramblers, or with a collection of fellow songwriters, known collectively as MercyDriver. These include Illinois' Kara Kulpa and Shelley Miller, … - Jeremiah McLain Rusk
Jeremiah McLain Rusk (June 17, 1830 - November 21, 1893) was the 15th Governor of the U.S. state of Wisconsin from 1882 to 1889. Rusk was born in Malta, Ohio. He was a member of the Republican Party. He began as a planter, then turned to innkeeping and finally to banking before the Civil War. During the war, he received a brevet appointment as a general and saw action at Antietam with the 26th Wisconsin Volunteers, which was almost wiped out. - Jeremiah Jenks
Jeremiah Whipple Jenks, Ph.D., LL.D. (1856-1929) was an American economist and educator, born at St. Clair, Mich. He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1878, studied for several years in Germany, taking his doctorate from the University of Halle in 1885, and after his return to the United States, studied law and was admitted to the bar. He held professorships at both Cornell University (1891-1912) and New York University (1912 onward). - Jeremiah Clarke
Jeremiah Clarke (c. 1674 - December 1 1707) was an English baroque composer. Thought to have been born in London in 1674, Clarke was a pupil of John Blow at St Paul's Cathedral. He later became organist at the Chapel Royal. "A violent and hopeless passion for a very beautiful lady of a rank superior to his own" caused him to commit suicide by shooting himself. He was succeeded in his post by William Croft. - Jeremiah Haralson
Jeremiah Haralson (April 1, 1846 - 1916), was a Representative from Alabama. - Jeremiah Evarts
Jeremiah F. Evarts was a Christian missionary, reformer, and activist for the rights of American Indians in the United States, and a leading opponent of the Indian Removal policy of the United States government. - Jeremiah Mason
Jeremiah Mason (April 27, 1768 - October 14, 1848) was a United States Senator from New Hampshire. Born in Lebanon, Connecticut, he graduated from Yale College in 1788, studied law, moved to Vermont, and was admitted to the bar in 1791. He moved to New Hampshire, practiced law, and was attorney general of New Hampshire from 1802 to 1805. Mason was elected as a Federalist to the U.S. Senate to fill the vacancy in the term beginning March 4, 1813, and served from June 10, … - Jeremiah D. M. Ford
Jeremiah Denis Mathias Ford, Ph.D. From 1910 to 1911, he was vice president of the Modern Language Association. Ford also served as president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1931-1933). He edited Goldoni's "Curioso Accidente" (1899), Moratín's "Se de las niñas" (1899), Alarcón's "Capitán Veneno" (1900), "A Spanish Anthology" (1901), "The Romance of Chivalry in Italian Verse" (1904; second edition, 1906), … - Jeremiah Morrow
Jeremiah Morrow (October 6, 1771 - March 22, 1852) was a Democratic-Republican politician from Ohio. He served as the 9th Governor of Ohio, and the last Democratic-Republican to do so. Morrow was born near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, to the descendants of Scotch-Irish immigrants. He moved to the Northwest Territory in 1795. After serving in the Territorial House of Representatives and Territorial Senate, as well as a delegate to the 1802 Constitutional Convention, … - Jeremiah O'Brien
Captain Jeremiah O’Brien was in command of "Unity" when she captured HMS "Margaretta" in the first naval battle of the American Revolutionary War. O'Brien and his five brothers, Gideon, John, William, Dennis and Joseph, were crewmembers of the sloop "Unity" when she captured "Margaretta" on 12 June 1775, at the entrance to the harbor at Machias (a town then in Massachusetts, later in Maine). - Jeremiah Wadsworth
Jeremiah Wadsworth (July 12, 1743- April 30, 1804) was an American sea captain, merchant, and statesman from Hartford, Connecticut who profited from his position as a government official charged with supplying the Continental Army. He represented Connecticut in both the Continental Congress and the United States House of Representatives. - Jeremiah Chase
Jeremiah Townley Chase was an American lawyer and jurist from Annapolis, Maryland. He served as a delegate for Maryland in the Continental Congress of 1783 and 1784, and for many years was chief justice of the state’s court of appeals. - Jeremiah Day
Jeremiah Day (Aug. 3, 1773 - Aug. 22, 1867), educator, for twenty-nine years president of Yale College, was the son of Rev. Jeremiah and Abigail (Noble) Osborn Day, and a descendant of Robert Day who came from Ipswich, England, in 1634, settled in Newtown Cambridge, Massachusetts, and later became one of the original proprietors of Hartford, Connecticut. He was born in the parish of New Preston, Connecticut, then a part of New Milford, but since 1779, of Washington, … - Jeremiah Langhorne
Jeremiah Langhorne (d. 1742) was a prominent landowner and jurist in colonial Pennsylvania. He is the namesake of present-day Langhorne, Pennsylvania, which adopted his name in 1876, and neighboring Langhorne Manor. A Quaker, Langhorne settled with his family in Bucks County in 1684. Records show that he purchased 7200 acres there in 1724. He represented Bucks County in the Assembly, of which he served twice as Speaker. - Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa
Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa (September 10 1831-June 29 1915), an Irish Fenian leader, was born at Rosscarbery, County Cork. In 1858 Rossa established the Phoenix Society which would later evolve into the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB). He was jailed numerous times for connections with the Fenian movement, and was finally exiled in 1871, sailing to the United States on board the "Cuba" with his friend John Devoy and three other exiles. - Jeremiah Brandreth
Jeremiah Brandreth was an out of work stocking maker from Sutton-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire who was hanged for treason. He was known as "The Nottingham Captain". He (and two of his conspirators, Ludlam & Turner) were the last people to be beheaded with an axe in Britain. - Jeremiah Morton
Jeremiah Morton (September 3, 1799 - November 28, 1878) was a nineteenth century politician and lawyer from Virginia. He was the younger brother of Florida senator Jackson Morton. Born in Fredericksburg, Virginia, Morton attended a private school as a child and later went on to Washington College in 1814 and 1815 and graduated from the College of William and Mary in 1819. He studied law and was admitted to the bar, commencing practice in Raccoon Ford, Virginia. - Jeremiah Joyce
Jeremiah Joyce (1763-1816) Unitarian minister and writer. He was born 24 February 1763 at Mildred's Court London. He became a glazier, but on the death of his father he used his inheritance to study for the Unitarian ministry, where he became proficient in mathematics and Latin. Later he became tutor to the sons of Earl Stanhope. Joyce had radical political views, became a member of the Society for Constitutional Reform and of the London Corresponding Society. - Jeremiah James Harty
Jeremiah James Harty (1853-1927) was born in November 5, 1853 at St. Louis, Missouri. On April 28, 1878, at the age of 24, Harty was ordained to the priesthood. On June 6, 1903, Harty was appointed Archbishop of Manila in the Philippines, the first non-Spanish to be appointed such in 325 years. He succeeded the Dominican Bernardino Nozaleda, the last of the Spanish archbishops. After his term in Manila, later he was appointed as the Archbishop of Omaha, in Nebraska. - Jeremiah E. O'Connell
Jeremiah Edward O’Connell (July 8, 1883 - September 18, 1964) was a U.S. Representative from Rhode Island. Born in Wakefield, Massachusetts, O’Connell attended the public schools. He was graduated from Boston University in 1906 and from the law school of the same university in 1908. He was admitted to the bar in 1907 and commenced practice in Boston, Massachusetts. He moved to Providence, Rhode Island, in 1908 and continued the practice of law. - Jeremiah Manele
Jeremiah Manele is the Secretary for Foreign Affairs & Trade Relations for the Solomon Islands. - Jeremiah Brown
Jeremiah Brown (April 14, 1785-March 2, 1858) was a Whig member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. Jeremiah Brown was born in Little Britain Township, Pennsylvania. He engaged in milling and agricultural pursuits. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1826. He was a delegate to the convention to revise the State constitution in 1836. Brown was elected as a Whig to the Twenty-seventh and Twenty-eighth Congresses.
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