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  1. Ned Delano was just twenty-two when he joined his brother Warren in China late in 1840. Ned had come to help Warren trade in tea—and in opium. Just one thing intruded on the idyll of the brothers’ boat trip to Canton: shrill voices from the shore crying, “Fan kuei! Fan kuei” —“Foreign devil.”.

  2. During the resettlement of Dartmouth following the war, Lt. Jonathan Delano married Mercy Warren on February 28, 1677/78. She was a granddaughter of Richard and Elizabeth Warren and a niece of John Cooke’s wife. All of Lt. Jonathan and Mercy Delano’s 13 children were born in what’s now Fairhaven between November 1679 and May 1704.

  3. It was later the Fairhaven home of Warren Delano II, grandfather of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. F.D.R.’s first visit to Fairhaven was during the summer following his birth in 1882. Notably, it was here in 1903, following Thanksgiving dinner, that Franklin announced to his mother that he had become engaged to (Anna) Eleanor Roosevelt.

  4. Summarize this article for a 10 year old. 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.

  5. 26 de ago. de 2022 · This fellowship is named in honor of the original author of PyMOL, Warren DeLano, who sadly passed away in November of 2009. Fellows perform their proposed tasks and submit written progress summaries every quarter. Schrödinger reviews the fellow's progress and, upon a positive review, the fellow is given a stipend of $3000 USD.

  6. Warren Delano II, President Roosevelt's grandfather, born July 13, 1809 in Fairhaven, also embarked upon a maritime career. In 1833, he sailed to China as supercargo on board the Commerce bound for Canton where he became associated with the shipping firm, Russell Sturgis and Company.

  7. 23 de ene. de 2024 · In 1857, Warren Delano Jr. lost much of his wealth in a financial panic—so, like many other American speculators before him, he returned to the opium trade and quickly rebuilt his fortune.