"The King Charles Troupe, created by Jerry King, hails from The Bronx, New York. A unicycle buff all his life, Mr. King taught his young son, Charles, to ride a one-wheeler. Neighborhood kids soon demanded lessons and the unique basketball-unicycle act was born. The name of the troupe is a play on words of the son's name, Charles King. Word spread about the Bronx unicyclers and, in 1968, the guys auditioned for Irvin Feld on a sidewalk near Madison Square Garden. The producer was delighted with the act and welcomed them into Ringling Bros.
From the KLVX Steamboats on the Colorado Photograph Collection (PH-00156). Written on photo sleeve: "Buildings at Fort Mojave, Arizona Territory, 1871. Photo by T. H. O'Sullivan." Handwritten on verso: "Officer's quarters - right section"; "credit Smithsonian #106 WB71"; "Ft. Mojave at Wheeler Survey 1871 T.H. O'Sullivan photo." Stamp on verso: "Mohave Museum of History and Arts. Classification: Military, Negative No.: 122, Negative:, Contact: ."
mining engineer; later member of Nevada Mining Association; "...president of three Nevada mining companies and is secretary and engineer of Mines Exploration Incorporated..." p. 120, The Nevada Desert, by Sessions S. Wheeler, The Caxton Printers, 1989. https://books.google.com/books?isbn=087004205X
Testimony of Roy A. Hardy consulting engineer, Getchell Mine Inc. Reno, Nevada and president, Nevada Mining Association, Reno, Nevada before the
37 x 49 cm. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights. "Atlas sheet no. 69(B)." "Issued Jan'y 8th 1878." "Expeditions of 1874-1875 & 1877 under the command of 1st. Lieut. Geo. M. Wheeler, Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army." Prime meridians: Greenwich and Washington, D.C. "Weyss, Lang & Herman, del." "By order of the honorable the Secretary of War." "Under the direction of Brig. General A. A. Hunphreys, Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army." Original publisher: U.S. Geographical Surveys West of the 100th Meridian, Scale: 1 inch to 4 miles or 1: 253440.