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  1. Warren Delano Jr. (July 13, 1809 – January 17, 1898) was an American merchant and drug smuggler who made a large fortune smuggling illegal opium into China. He was the maternal grandfather of U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt .

  2. Delano, Pennsylvania, and Delano Township, Pennsylvania, named for Warren Delano Jr. Delano Hall, the main dining facility for midshipmen at the United States Merchant Marine Academy is named in honor of the Delano family for its support of the American Merchant Marine in general, and President F.D. Roosevelt's support for the Academy in ...

  3. En Estados Unidos, la familia Delano incluye a personas conocidas como los presidentes de Estados Unidos Franklin Delano Roosevelt y Calvin Coolidge, el presidente de EE. UU. y general del Ejército de la Unión Ulysses S. Grant, la escritora Laura Ingalls Wilder, y el astronauta Alan B. Shepard. Su progenitor fue Felipe de Lannoy (1602-1681).

  4. Warren Delano contributed to the Union war effort by shipping opium to the Medical Bureau of the U.S. War Department. While this contribution has been hailed as a humanitarian effort to ease the pain of the wounded and dying, the fact remains that Warren Delano was able to recoup his wealth from the trade in opium.

  5. Warren Delano III was only four or five years old when he pasted these prints into his father’s account books and colored them in while in China in the 1860s. Franklin Delano Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum, Delano Family Papers Detail of Warren Delano III’s scrapbook.

  6. 13 de dic. de 2021 · Catherine and Warren Delano continued to live in the Algonac until they died in the late 1890s. After their deaths the house passed to Warren’s daughter Annie and Fred Hitch, who had snuffed out the flames in 1884. Another tragedy would befall Algonac when it caught fire on Sunday, March 5, 1916 in the early afternoon.

  7. Fields. Bioinformatics, Cheminformatics. Warren Lyford DeLano (June 21, 1972 – November 3, 2009) was a bioinformatician and an advocate for the increased adoption of open source practices in the sciences, and especially drug discovery, where advances which save time and resources can also potentially save lives.