mccormick

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American inventor and manufacturer who developed a mechanical harvester (1831). American diver. She was the first to win consecutive Olympic gold medals in both springboard and platform diving and was the first woman inducted into the International Diving Hall of Fame. McCormick Cyrus Hall McCormick Robert Rutherford Colonel McCormick
United States inventor and manufacturer of a mechanical harvester (1809-1884)
United States operatic tenor (born in Ireland) (1884-1945) United States inventor and manufacturer of a mechanical harvester (1809-1884)
United States operatic tenor (born in Ireland) (1884-1945)
Cyrus Hall McCormick
born Feb. 15, 1809, Rockbridge county, Va., U.S. died May 13, 1884, Chicago, Ill. U.S. industrialist and inventor. He is generally credited with the development (from 1831) of the mechanical reaper, which revolutionized the harvesting of grain. By 1850 the McCormick reaper was known throughout the U.S.; its prizes and honours, including the Grand Medal of Honour at the 1855 Paris exposition, made it famous around the world. In 1902 the McCormick Harvesting Co. joined with other companies to form International Harvester Co., with McCormick's son Cyrus, Jr., as its first president
Robert R McCormick
known as Colonel McCormick born July 30, 1880, Chicago, Ill., U.S. died April 1, 1955, Wheaton, Ill. U.S. newspaper editor and publisher. He was a grandnephew of Cyrus H. McCormick and grandson of Joseph Medill, editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune. He was president of the Chicago Tribune Co. from 1911 and sole editor and publisher of the Tribune from 1925. Under his direction the paper achieved the largest circulation among U.S. standard-sized newspapers and led the world in newspaper advertising revenue. His idiosyncratic editorials made him the personification of reactionary journalism in the U.S
Robert Rutherford McCormick
known as Colonel McCormick born July 30, 1880, Chicago, Ill., U.S. died April 1, 1955, Wheaton, Ill. U.S. newspaper editor and publisher. He was a grandnephew of Cyrus H. McCormick and grandson of Joseph Medill, editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune. He was president of the Chicago Tribune Co. from 1911 and sole editor and publisher of the Tribune from 1925. Under his direction the paper achieved the largest circulation among U.S. standard-sized newspapers and led the world in newspaper advertising revenue. His idiosyncratic editorials made him the personification of reactionary journalism in the U.S
mccormick