Steuart pittman biography of william

  • Steuart Pittman, a Washington lawyer who was appointed by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 to create enough fallout shelters to protect every American in the.
  • Sarah told me William was the 42nd Thoroughbred horse she has transitioned/re-purposed in the last five years.
  • Steuart L. Pittman, recorded interview by William W. Moss, September 18, 1970, (page number), John F. Kennedy Library Oral History Program.
  • Archives

    About Oral History

    Digital Identifier

    JFKOH-SLP-01

    Interviewee(s)

    Pittman, Steuart (Steuart Lansing), 1919-2013

    Biographical Note

    (1919 - ) Assistant Secretary of Defense for Civil Defense (1961-1964)

    Interviewer(s)

    Access Restriction Status

    Use Restriction Status

    Tape Open for Background Use Only

    Description

    Pittman discusses ledning support for civil defense programs and the construction of federally funded community fallout shelters, among other issues.

    Date(s) of Materials

    Copyright Status

    Donated to the United States

    Series

    Series 1. John F. Kennedy Oral History Interviews, 1964-2012.

    Preferred Citation

    Steuart L. Pittman, recorded interview bygd William W. Moss, September 18, 1970, (page number), John F. Kennedy Library Oral History Program.

    Use Restriction Note

    Some of the archival materials in this collection may be subject to copyright or other intellectual property restrictions. Users of these materials ar

  • steuart pittman biography of william
  • William Pittman Lett

    Journalist, bureaucrat, and poet

    William Pittman Lett

    Age 51, April 1870, Ottawa (Topley Studio / Library And Archives Canada)

    Born

    1819, Duncannon, Ireland, Wesleyan Methodist

    Died

    1892, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

    Burial placeBeechwood Cemetery, Ottawa, section 34, lot 28 NW
    NationalityIrish Canadian
    Occupation(s)Journalist, bureaucrat
    Employer(s)First city clerk and a founding father of the City of Ottawa, 1855–1891
    Known for19th-century commentator and poet, theatre pioneer, naturalist and sportsman
    Political partyTory
    MovementOrangeman, Master Mason, Freemason, Militia captain (Fourth Battalion, Richmond Volunteer Military Company)
    SpouseMaria Hinton (1828–1881 accidental death)
    ChildrenAndrews John (1854), Joseph Benjamin Havelock (1857), William Pittman (1859–1933), Frederick Piercy Austin (1863–1898), Norman Harold Hinton (1865–1940), Robert Chamberlain Westover (1870–1957), Rebecc

    STEWART, WILLIAM, businessman, militia officer, politician, and farmer; baptized 24 July 1803 in Carbost, near Loch Harport, Isle of Skye, Scotland, son of Ranald Stewart and Isabella McLeod; m. 16 April 1838 Catherine Stewart of Cuidrach, Isle of Skye, and they had four sons and five daughters; d. 21 March 1856 in Toronto.

    William Stewart was 13 when he arrived at Quebec in 1816 with his nine brothers and sisters, his widowed mother, his maternal grandmother, and his uncle. The family proceeded to Upper Canada and settled in Lancaster Township, Glengarry County, where William’s education was rounded out under the tutelage of army doctor Roderick Macleod. Stewart’s first employment was with a Montreal merchant, whom he represented at the sale of timber rafts at Quebec in 1825. He spent the next two years at Longueuil before moving in March 1827 to Bytown (Ottawa), then a construction camp. There, in partnership with John G. Mc