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  1. In the 1969-1970 school year, students at Alexander Ramsey High School in Roseville, MN produced a newspaper cited as one of six noteworthy high school publications in the country. This website contains all 15 issues of Ramsey Blueprint, the student newspaper published at Ramsey during that school year. They are presented here partly for the ...

  2. JonBenét Ramsey photographed by Randy Simons on June 18, 1996. / 33.95501; -84.55637. JonBenét Patricia Ramsey (August 6, 1990 – December 25, 1996) [1] was an American child beauty queen who was killed at the age of six in her family's home at 755 15th Street [2] [a] in Boulder, Colorado. A long handwritten ransom note was found in the home.

  3. Ramsey is a member of the National Arts Club, New York, Sons of The American Revolution, and a former Trustee at the Bronx Museum of Art, New York. Born in Baltimore, Maryland. Lives and works in New York and Sarasota, Florida. Education.

  4. Lady Ida Louise Bennet (mother) Admiral Sir Alexander Robert Maule Ramsay (29 May 1881 – 8 October 1972) was a Royal Navy officer. He was the husband of Princess Patricia of Connaught, the youngest child of Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, third son of Queen Victoria. He served with distinction during the First World War.

  5. Alexander Ramsey was Minnesota’s first territorial governor (1849–1853), second state governor (1860–1863), and a US senator (1864–1875). Although he directly contributed to the founding and the growth of Minnesota, he also played a major role in removing the area's Indigenous people—the Dakota and Ojibwe—from their homelands.

  6. 29 de ene. de 2010 · AR-370 - Alexander Ramsey; GPS Coordinates 34°10′31.2″N, ... Wikipedia Webcams . Local Emergency/Medical Information; EMS Local Number: VHF frequency:

  7. Governor Alexander Ramsey Congressional delegate Henry Hastings Sibley. In the fall of 1849, Governor Alexander Ramsey had tried and failed to purchase land from the Dakota. Ramsey had initially offered less than three cents per acre – an offer that failed to gain much interest among Dakota leaders – and was largely ignored.