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20TH
CENTURY KEITHS
(listed chronologically)
WILLIAM
KEITH (1838-1911), Painter and Conservationist
William
Keith was the leading artist in San Francisco and perhaps California's
most highly regarded painter at the end of the nineteenth century.
A longtime friend of fellow Scot and California naturalist John
Muir, the pair were instrumental in the foundation of the U.S. National
Parks System and the Sierra Club.
Born
Old Meldrum, Aberdeenshire, he came to New
York City in 1851, where he learned wood engraving and did illustrations
for Harper's Weekly. He moved to San Francisco in 1860 and later
turned to painting, studying in Düsseldorf in 1870 and in Munich
in the 1880s. His Western landscapes evolved from early mountain
epics to later intimate natural scenes. The Keith Memorial Gallery
of the Oakland Art Museum is devoted entirely to his work, and another
extensive collection is owned by Saint Mary's College of California.
Sources:
Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2005
Painted Essays: William Keith's Landscapes of the West,
Saint Mary's
College of California
MINOR
COOPER KEITH (1848-1929),
American magnate and founder of the United Fruit Company
Born
in Brooklyn, NY, Minor Cooper Keith arrived in Costa Rica in 1873,
joining his three brothers who had a contract with the government
to build a railroad between Puerto Limon and San José. The
103 mile railroad would cut through the swampy lowlands of the Caribbean
coast and over the central plateau.
What did not
at first seem to be a difficult project took 19 years to build and
only succeeded because of Keith's perseverance. Four thousand workers,
including Keith's brothers, died constructing just 25 miles of tracks.
Disease, heavy rains and a lack of labor slowed down the process.
Costa Rica defaulted
on the promised loans, and granted Keith ownership of the tracks
and 80,000 acres of adjacent land for the renegotiation of loans
with British bankers.
Keith turned
to cultivating bananas on the land given to him by the Costa Rica
and gave the fruit an important place in Costa Rican history. He
established the first steamship service to bring these bananas to
the United States. He gained control of other plantations in Panama
and Colombia and dominated the banana trade. In 1899 he combined
his plantation interests with those of the Boston Fruit Company
in the West Indies to form the United Fruit Company. The company
controlled 75 percent of banana sales in the United States.
110 thousand
bunches of bananas were exported in 1883. Seven years later, exports
reached 1.035 million. 1900 saw the number rise to 3.4 million,
and 1907 more than ten million.
He returned
to railroad building, organized (1912) the International Railways
of Central America, and completed an 800-mile railway system, but
died before realizing his dream of a line from Guatemala to the
Panama Canal. His work profoundly altered the economic life of Central
American countries.
Sources: The
Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed, 2005 http://www.facesofcostarica.com/history/keith.htm
Keith
and Costa Rica by W. Stewart, 1964
THOMAS
RILEY MARSHALL (1854-1925), U.S. Vice President (1913-21)
Born
North Manchester, Ind. A lawyer in Columbia City, Ind., he was Democratic
governor of the state (1909-13) and sponsored much labor and social
legislation before being elected Vice President on the ticket with
Woodrow Wilson. His was the expression “What this country
needs is a really good five-cent cigar.”
Source: Columbia
Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2005.
SIR ARTHUR
KEITH (1866-1955), British anatomist
Born in Aberdeen,
Scotland, educated at the Univ. of Aberdeen, University College,
London, and the Univ. of Leipzig. He became conservator of the museum
and professor at the Royal College of Surgeons (1908), then professor
of physiology at the Royal Institution, London (1917-23). From 1933
he carried out research on tuberculosis as master of the Buckston
Browne Research Farm at Downe, Kent. He also applied his knowledge
of anatomy to an influential study of human origins, reconstructing
prehistoric man based on fossil remains from Europe and N Africa.
His writings include Human Embryology and Morphology (1902, 6th
ed. 1949), The Antiquity of Man (1915, 2d ed. 1925), and A New Theory
of Human Evolution (1948).
Source: Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2005.
GEORGE
CATLETT MARSHALL (1880-1959),
American general and cabinet member
Born Uniontown,
Pa. A career army officer, Marshall graduated from the Virginia
Military Institute. He first distinguished himself as a staff officer
in World War I and later (1919-24) was aide to General Pershing
. After varied tasks, including service in China (1924-27), he headed
(1939-45) the army as Chief of Staff, becoming General of the Army
(five-star general) in Dec., 1944. In this capacity, he reorganized
and mobilized the military during World War II by coordinating training,
planning for rearmament, supplying Great Britain with important
material, and finally directing the war. Marshall influenced Congress
to change the rules of promotion so that promising officers, regardless
of seniority, could be promoted. Among his protégés
were Dwight D. Eisenhower, H. H. Arnold, Omar Bradley, Mark Clark,
and Joseph Stilwell. During World War II he developed and executed
U.S. strategy. Marshall advocated the conquest of Germany through
France, and his plan was finally adopted. Many of his wartime tasks
were diplomatic. When he resigned as Chief of Staff, he was promptly
appointed (Nov., 1945) special ambassador to China by President
Truman and was later recalled (Jan., 1947) to be made Secretary
of State. After engineering (Feb., 1947) immediate aid to Greece
and Turkey, he fostered the European Recovery Program (called the
Marshall Plan ) to promote postwar economic recovery in Europe.
This plan was a great success and it laid the groundwork for a revitalized
Europe and the formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
. He resigned because of ill health in Jan., 1949. In Sept., 1950,
he was called out of retirement to become Secretary of Defense,
but he resigned from this post in Sept., 1951. For the Marshall
Plan he received the 1953 Nobel Peace Prize.
Source: Columbia
Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2005
General and
chief of staff of the U. S. Army at the time of Pearl Harbor. He
directed the organization and training of American land and air
forces during WWII. After the war he became secretary of state and
created the Marshall Plan, which aided Europe in its recovery. His
term saw the recognition of Israel and the beginnings of NATO. Like
Thomas Jefferson and Chief Justice John Marshall, George Marshall
was a descendant of Scotland through the Randolphs of Virginia.
His mother came from the Stuarts of Pittsburgh.14
SAMUEL LYMAN ATWOOD MARSHALL (1900-1977), American
author and military analyst
Born Catskill,
N.Y. Having served in World War I, he embarked upon a career in
journalism, working as an editorial writer and military critic for
the Detroit News. In World War II he was chief combat historian
in the Central Pacific (1943) and chief historian for the European
Theater of Operations (1945) and during the Korean War was an infantry
operations analyst for the U.S. army, with the rank of brigadier
general. Marshall developed several systems to analyze infantry
performance in battle. His conclusions about the performance of
riflemen in combat have been discredited; this has cast a shadow
on the validity of his work in general. Among his many works are
Blitzkrieg (1940); Armies on Wheels (1941); Men against Fire (1947);
The River and the Gauntlet (1953); Pork Chop Hill (1956); Sinai
Victory (1958); Night Drop (1962); and Crimsoned Prairie (1972).
Source: Columbia
Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2005.
BRIAN
KEITH (1921- 1997). Television & Film Actor
Born
Robert Keith Richey, Jr., he preformed under the
name Brian Keith (which reportedly was the surname of a grandparent).
The gruff actor landed his first film role at age 3 and is best
remembered for his role as Uncle Bill on television's Family
Affair (1966-71). He also starred in Hardcastle and McCormick
(1983-86) . His films include The Violent Men
(1955) , Mister Roberts (1948) and
The Parent Trap (1961), Young Guns (1988).
During World
War II he served in the Marines, winning a Navy Air Medal.
DAVID
KEITH (1954 - )
David
Keith was born in Knoxville, TN where he currently resides and owns
a cattle ranch. A graduate of the University of Tennessee, his enduring
movie career began in 1979 with a small role in The Rose.
Keith quickly became a specialist in portraying all-American boy
roles who were cursed with a fatal character flaw or two, as witnessed
in An Officer and a Gentleman (1982). Keith's performance
as a suicidal officer-in-training earned him two Golden Globe nominations.
Retaining his military buzz-cut from Officer, Keith had his first
above-the-title starring role in 1983's The Lords of Discipline.
Other films include The Great Santini (1979), Red Dawn
and Firestarter (1984), Major League II (1994),
The Indian in the Cupboard (1995), Behind Enemy Lines
(2001), Barbershop (2002), and Daredevil (2003).
Toby Keith (1961
- ), Country singer
Born Toby Keith
Covel. As far as our research shows, Toby has no
genealogical ties to the Keith family.
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