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  1. Simon Cameron was born on March 8, 1799, in Maytown, Pennsylvania. He was the third of eight children born to Charles Cameron, a very poor tailor, and Martha Pfoutz. After a move to Lewisburg where the family lived in squalid conditions, his father died. Cameron, who was only nine, was forced to consider how best to earn a living. Due to limited formal schooling, Cameron's reading and writing ...

  2. Simon CAMERON, Vice-Chancellor's Fellow | Cited by 1,103 | of Queen's University Belfast, Belfast (QUB) | Read 67 publications | Contact Simon CAMERON

  3. Simon Cameron, Lincoln's Secretary of War before Stanton On July 21, the North and the South experienced their first major clash at Manassas Junction in Virginia, the First Battle of Bull Run . Northerners thought the battle would end the war, and defeat the Confederacy decisively; however, the bloody encounter ended with the Union Army retreating to Washington.

  4. Simon Cameron ( Maytown, Pennsylvania, 1799. március 8. – Maytown, Pennsylvania, 1889. június 26.) amerikai vállalkozó, újságíró, vasúti befektető, amerikai államférfi, hadügyminiszter, pétervári nagykövet és szenátor volt. Cameron vagyonát a vasúttal, a csatornákon és a bankszektorban szerezte. A Bank of Middletown ...

  5. Simon Cameron papers. Correspondence, diary, speeches, notebooks, account books, business and legal records, printed matter, and other papers primarily relating to Pennsylvania and national politics and to Cameron's business enterprises. Documents his term as U.S. secretary of war, the Civil War, his role as minister to Russia, and career in ...

  6. 9. Nov. 2009 · Stanton had been an early critic of Abraham Lincoln’s presidency, but he remained in Washington after the start of the Civil War and served as an adviser to Secretary of War Simon Cameron. In ...

  7. Simon Cameron (1799–1889) State of Residence: Pennsylvania. Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary (Russia) Appointed: January 17, 1862. Presentation of Credentials: June 25, 1862. Termination of Mission: Left post on or soon after September 18, 1862.