- watermint (plant)
mint: Major species: Water mint (M. aquatica) commonly grows in ditches and has rounded flower spikes and stalked hairy leaves. Wild mint (M. arvensis), native in North America and Eurasia, reaches about 1 metre (about 3.3 feet) in height.
- waterpipe (smoking pipe)
hookah, apparatus used to heat and vaporize tobacco for inhalation. The word hookah is derived from the Hindustani huqqa and the Arabic huqqah, meaning “vase” or “vessel.” The practice of smoking tobacco from a hookah likely originated in India or the Middle East. Today it is used worldwide and is
- Waterpocket Fold (fold, Utah, United States)
Capitol Reef National Park: Natural history: …the nearly 100-mile- (160-km-) long Waterpocket Fold. That formation constitutes a monocline, a sharp fold of Earth’s crust that was formed when thick layers of horizontal sedimentary rocks (mainly sandstones but also shales, mudstones, and limestones) that had been deposited over a period of more than 200 million years were…
- waterpower
waterpower, power produced by a stream of water as it turns a wheel or similar device. The waterwheel was probably invented in the 1st century bce, and it was widely used throughout the Middle Ages and into modern times for grinding grain, operating bellows for furnaces, and other purposes. The
- waterproof cement (cement)
cement: Types of portland cement: Waterproof cement is the name given to a portland cement to which a water-repellent agent has been added. Hydrophobic cement is obtained by grinding portland cement clinker with a film-forming substance such as oleic acid in order to reduce the rate of deterioration when the…
- waterproofing (industry)
art conservation and restoration: Techniques of building conservation: Techniques of waterproofing wet walls include the insertion of high-capillary tubes, designed to draw the moisture to themselves and to expel it, and also the injection of silicone or latex and similar water-repellent solutions into the heart of the walling. Simple methods are best. The traditional ditch,…
- Waters of Babylon (work by Arden)
John Arden: Waters of Babylon (1957), a play with a roguish but unjudged central character, revealed a moral ambiguity that troubled critics and audiences. His next play, Live Like Pigs (1958), was set on a housing estate. This was followed by his best-known work, Serjeant Musgrave’s Dance…
- Waters, Alice (American restaurateur, chef, and activist)
Alice Waters is an American restaurateur, chef, and food activist who was a leading proponent of the “slow food” movement, which billed itself as the healthy antithesis to fast food. Waters studied French culture at the University of California, Berkeley, receiving a bachelor’s degree in 1967. She
- Waters, David Mark Rylance (British actor and director)
Mark Rylance is a British theatre actor and director recognized not only for his period-specific enactments of both male and female roles in the works of William Shakespeare but also for his poignant portrayals of contemporary characters. Rylance, habitually consumed by his roles, often kept in
- Waters, Ethel (American singer and actress)
Ethel Waters was an American blues and jazz singer and dramatic actress whose singing, based in the blues tradition, featured her full-bodied voice, wide range, and slow vibrato. Waters grew up in extreme poverty and was married for the first time at the age of 12, while she was still attending
- Waters, George Roger (British musician)
Roger Waters is a British musician and songwriter, best known as the former songwriter and bassist of the rock band Pink Floyd. Waters was one of the founding members of Pink Floyd and set the conceptual direction for the band from 1968 to 1985, when he departed to embark on a solo career. Waters’s
- Waters, John (American director and author)
Johnny Depp: 21 Jump Street, Tim Burton films, and Hunter S. Thompson: …the series and appeared in John Waters’s Cry-Baby and Tim Burton’s Edward Scissorhands, two films by maverick directors that showcased Depp’s range. Scissorhands began a long association between the actor and director that led to Depp’s appearance in several other Burton films, including Ed Wood (1994), Sleepy Hollow (1999), and…
- Waters, Muddy (American musician)
Muddy Waters was a dynamic American blues guitarist and singer who played a major role in creating the post-World War II electric blues. Waters, whose nickname came from his proclivity for playing in a creek as a boy, grew up in the cotton country of the Mississippi Delta, where he was raised
- Waters, Ralph Milton (American physician)
history of medicine: Anesthesia and thoracic surgery: …the general anesthetic cyclopropane by Ralph Waters of Madison, Wisconsin, in 1933. Soon afterward, intravenous anesthesia was introduced. John Lundy of the Mayo Clinic brought to a climax a long series of trials by many workers when he used Pentothal (thiopental sodium, a barbiturate) to put a patient peacefully to…
- Waters, Roger (British musician)
Roger Waters is a British musician and songwriter, best known as the former songwriter and bassist of the rock band Pink Floyd. Waters was one of the founding members of Pink Floyd and set the conceptual direction for the band from 1968 to 1985, when he departed to embark on a solo career. Waters’s
- waters, territorial (international law)
territorial waters, in international law, that area of the sea immediately adjacent to the shores of a state and subject to the territorial jurisdiction of that state. Territorial waters are thus to be distinguished on the one hand from the high seas, which are common to all countries, and on the
- Waterseller of Seville (painting by Velázquez)
Diego Velázquez: Sevilla (Seville): …20 when he painted the Waterseller of Seville (c. 1620), in which the control of the composition, colour, and light, the naturalness of the figures and their poses, and realistic still life already reveal his keen eye and prodigious facility with the brush. The strong modeling and sharp contrasts of…
- watershed (geology)
drainage basin, area from which all precipitation flows to a single stream or set of streams. For example, the total area drained by the Mississippi River constitutes its drainage basin, whereas that part of the Mississippi River drained by the Ohio River is the Ohio’s drainage basin. The boundary
- Watership Down (novel by Adams)
Richard Adams: …with the beloved children’s book Watership Down (1972; film 1978), a novel that presents a naturalistic tale of the travails of a group of wild European rabbits seeking a new home.
- waterskiing (sport)
waterskiing, planing over the surface of the water on broad skilike runners while being towed by a motorboat moving at least 24 km/hr (15 mph). The skier holds onto a handle on a rope attached to the rear of the boat and leans slightly backward. Water skis are made of wood, aluminum, fibreglass, or
- waterspout (meteorology)
waterspout, a small-diameter column of rapidly swirling air in contact with a water surface. Waterspouts are almost always produced by a swiftly growing cumulus cloud. They may assume many shapes and often occur in a series, called a waterspout family, produced by the same upward-moving air
- Waterston, John James (civil engineer)
atom: Kinetic theory of gases: Waterston’s efforts met with a similar fate. Waterston was a Scottish civil engineer and amateur physicist who could not even get his work published by the scientific community, which had become increasingly professional throughout the 19th century. Nevertheless, Waterston made the first statement of the…
- Waterston, Sam (American actor)
Frank Perry: …cattle rustlers (Jeff Bridges and Sam Waterston) who set their sights on a wealthy rancher (Clifton James). Perry, who occasionally worked in television, then made Dummy (1979), an acclaimed TV drama that dealt with the true case of a handicapped young black man (LeVar Burton) who is defended on a…
- Waterton Lakes National Park (national park, Alberta, Canada)
Waterton Lakes National Park, park in southwestern Alberta, Canada, on the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains, immediately north of the U.S. border and Glacier National Park in Montana. It has an area of 203 square miles (525 square km). Established in 1895, it became a part of the
- Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park (park, North America)
Glacier National Park: The two parks together comprise Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park, dedicated in 1932. Glacier National Park straddles the Continental Divide, the great ridge of the Rocky Mountains marking the boundary between westward (to the Pacific Ocean) and eastward (to Hudson Bay and the Mississippi River) drainage systems. It was classified as…
- Watertown (South Dakota, United States)
Watertown, city, seat (1878) of Codington county, eastern South Dakota, U.S. It lies on the Big Sioux River, between Lakes Kampeska and Pelican, about 95 miles (155 km) north of Sioux Falls. It was laid out in 1878 following the extension of the Winona and St. Peter Railroad (now part of the Union
- Watertown (Connecticut, United States)
Watertown, town (township), Litchfield county, west-central Connecticut, U.S., on the Naugatuck River immediately northwest of the city of Waterbury. The site was settled in 1701, and in 1738 the community was organized as Westbury, an ecclesiastical society of Waterbury. It was separated and
- Watertown (New York, United States)
Watertown, city, seat (1805) of Jefferson county, northern New York, U.S. It lies at the falls (112 feet [34 metres]) of the Black River, 10 miles (16 km) east of Lake Ontario and 72 miles (116 km) north of Syracuse. The area was first organized as the township of Watertown in 1801. Lumber, paper,
- Watertown (Massachusetts, United States)
Watertown, city, Middlesex county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S., on the Charles River, just west of Boston. One of the four earliest Massachusetts Bay settlements, it was founded by a group led by Sir Richard Saltonstall and was incorporated as a town in 1630; it was the first inland farming town.
- watertube boiler (engineering)
boiler: In the watertube boiler, the water is inside tubes with the hot furnace gases circulating outside the tubes. When the steam turbogenerator was developed early in the 20th century, modern watertube boilers were developed in response to the demand for large quantities of steam at pressures and…
- Waterville (Maine, United States)
Waterville, city, Kennebec county, south-central Maine, U.S., on the Kennebec River 54 miles (87 km) southwest of Bangor and 21 miles (34 km) northeast of Augusta, the state capital. Settled around Fort Halifax (1754) at Ticonic Falls, the community mainly consisted of English and French Canadians.
- Waterville College (college, Waterville, Maine, United States)
Colby College, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Waterville, Maine, U.S. Colby is an undergraduate college with a curriculum based in the liberal arts and sciences. It offers study-abroad programs in France, Spain, Ireland, Mexico, England, and Russia. Campus facilities
- Watervliet (New York, United States)
Watervliet, city, Albany county, eastern New York, U.S., on the west bank of the Hudson River (bridged), opposite Troy. Originally part of a land tract bought by Kiliaen van Rensselaer, a diamond merchant of Amsterdam, from the Mohawk Indians in 1630, it was incorporated (1836) as the Village of
- waterway (transportation)
canals and inland waterways: Modern waterway engineering: Waterways are subject to definite geographic and physical restrictions that influence the engineering problems of construction, maintenance, and operation.
- waterweed (plant genus)
Elodea, genus of five or six species of submerged aquatic plants in the frog’s-bit family (Hydrocharitaceae), useful in aquariums and in laboratory demonstrations of cellular activities. Elodea plants are native to the New World, though a number of species have established themselves as invasive
- waterwheel (engineering)
waterwheel, mechanical device for tapping the energy of running or falling water by means of a set of paddles mounted around a wheel. The force of the moving water is exerted against the paddles, and the consequent rotation of the wheel is transmitted to machinery via the shaft of the wheel. The
- waterwheel plant (botany)
carnivorous plant: Major families: … contains only one species, the waterwheel plant (A. vesiculosa), which is sometimes grown in aquaria as a curiosity. Similarly, the genus Dionaea consists of only the Venus flytrap (D. muscipula), well known for its quick-acting snap trap and commonly sold as a novelty. Once classified within Droseraceae, the Portuguese sundew…
- waterwithe treebine (plant)
Cissus: sicyoides, known as waterwithe treebine or princess vine, is native from southern Florida to tropical America and is especially noted for its abundance of long, slender aerial roots.
- Waterworld (film by Reynolds [1995])
Kevin Costner: …Perfect World (1993); the postapocalyptic Waterworld (1995) and The Postman (1997), the latter of which he also directed; and the sports-themed Tin Cup (1996) and For Love of the Game (1999).
- waterwort (plant)
Elatinaceae: Waterwort (Elatine hexandra) and two similar species, E. hydropiper and E. macropoda, sometimes are grown in aquariums. These Eurasian plants tend to mat together as they grow. One species, E. americana, is widespread in northern North America. Species growing on bog edges or stream banks…
- Watford (England, United Kingdom)
Watford, town and borough (district), administrative and historic county of Hertfordshire, England. It is situated on the northwest periphery of London and on the Rivers Colne and Gade and the Grand Union Canal. Watford is primarily a residential town for London commuters and a shopping and
- Watford (district, England, United Kingdom)
Watford: Watford, town and borough (district), administrative and historic county of Hertfordshire, England. It is situated on the northwest periphery of London and on the Rivers Colne and Gade and the Grand Union Canal.
- Wāthiq, al- (ʿAbbāsid caliph)
miḥnah: The caliph al-Wāthiq (reigned 842–847) also vigorously enforced the miḥnah, in one case trying himself to execute a man he considered a heretic. The inquisition continued until about 848, when al-Mutawakkil (reigned 847–861) made the profession of the Muʿtazilite view of a created Qurʾān punishable by death.…
- Watie, Stand (Cherokee chief)
Stand Watie was a Cherokee chief who signed the treaty forcing tribal removal of the Cherokees from Georgia and who later served as brigadier general in the Confederate Army during the U.S. Civil War. Watie learned to speak English when, at the age of 12, he was sent to a mission school. He later
- Watin, Jean-Felix (French writer)
lacquerwork: Europe: …du peintre, doreur, vernisseur of Jean-Félix Watin (1772), the most precise account of lacquerwork that appeared in the 18th century. In this book Watin examined the recipes of his predecessors and recommended the best formulas for lacquering objects to be used indoors, such as furniture, and outdoors, such as carriages.…
- Watkin, Wendy Margaret (British actress)
Dame Wendy Hiller was an English stage and film actress known for her direct and unsentimental portrayals of intelligent and spirited women. Hiller was educated at Winceby House School and at age 18 joined the Manchester Repertory Company, for which she acted and stage-managed for several years.
- Watkins Glen (New York, United States)
Watkins Glen, village, seat (1854) of Schuyler county, central New York, U.S. It lies at the south end of Seneca Lake, in the heart of the Finger Lakes region, 20 miles (32 km) north of Elmira. Settled in 1791, it was incorporated (1842) as Jefferson and was renamed Watkins (1852) to honour Dr.
- Watkins, Carleton E. (American photographer)
Carleton E. Watkins was an American photographer best known for his artistic documentation of the landscape of the American West. He also produced images of industrial sites in that region. (For further information regarding his name, see the Researcher’s Note.) In 1851, at age 22, Watkins left his
- Watkins, Emma (Australian entertainer)
the Wiggles: …replaced by fellow Australian entertainers Emma Watkins—the first female member of the group—as the yellow Wiggle, Simon Pryce as the red, and Lachlan (“Lachy”) Gillespie -in purple, while Anthony Field in blue remained with the group.
- Watkins, Frances Ellen (American author and social reformer)
Frances E.W. Harper was an American author, orator, and social reformer who was notable for her poetry, speeches, and essays on abolitionism, temperance, and woman suffrage. Frances Watkins was the daughter of free black parents. She grew up in the home of an uncle whose school for black children
- Watkins, Gloria Jean (American scholar)
bell hooks was an American scholar and activist whose work examined the connections between race, gender, and class. She often explored the varied perceptions of Black women and Black women writers and the development of feminist identities. Watkins grew up in a segregated community of the American
- Watkins, Jessica (American astronaut)
Jessica Watkins is an American astronaut who spent six months aboard the International Space Station (ISS) in 2022 and has been chosen for the Artemis program, which will return Americans to the Moon in the mid-2020s. She was the first Black woman to spend a long-duration stay on the ISS. In 2008
- Watkins, Jessica Andrea (American astronaut)
Jessica Watkins is an American astronaut who spent six months aboard the International Space Station (ISS) in 2022 and has been chosen for the Artemis program, which will return Americans to the Moon in the mid-2020s. She was the first Black woman to spend a long-duration stay on the ISS. In 2008
- Watkins, Ron (American conspiracy theorist)
QAnon: Who was Q?: …Paul Furber and 8chan/8kun administrator Ron Watkins. Neither had any kind of special access to intelligence or classified information, but both were extremely well versed in the language and culture of conspiracy-themed message boards.
- Watkins, Vernon Phillips (English poet)
Vernon Phillips Watkins was an English-language Welsh poet who drew from Welsh material and legend. Watkins steeped himself in the study of French and German and developed a deep understanding of the poetry of both those countries while he was a student at Cambridge University. After graduation he
- Watland’s Ferry (North Carolina, United States)
Jacksonville, city, seat (1755) of Onslow county, southeastern North Carolina, U.S. It lies along the New River at the head of its estuary, about 50 miles (80 km) northeast of Wilmington. Originally settled as Wantland’s Ferry (c. 1757), its name was changed to Onslow Courthouse and then
- Watling Street (Roman road, United Kingdom)
Watling Street, Roman road in England that ran from Dover west-northwest to London and thence northwest via St. Albans (Verulamium) to Wroxeter (Ouirokónion, or Viroconium). It was one of Britain’s greatest arterial roads of the Roman and post-Roman periods. The name came from a group of
- Watling Street, Battle of (British history [61 ce])
Battle of Watling Street, battle fought between Britons and Romans in 61 CE about 25 miles west of modern metropolitan Birmingham. In this final decisive battle of Boudicca’s revolt against Roman rule in Britain, a large British force was routed by the heavily outnumbered Romans under the command
- Watlings Island (island, The Bahamas)
San Salvador Island, one of the islands of The Bahamas, in the West Indies. San Salvador is believed by many scholars to be the island of Guanahani, where Christopher Columbus made his first landing in the New World on October 12, 1492. Some scholars assert, however, that the island of Guanahani is
- Watson (film by Chilcott [2019])
Paul Watson: The documentary Watson (2019) chronicles his life.
- Watson and the Shark (painting by John Singleton Copley)
Watson and the Shark, oil painting first created in 1778 by American artist John Singleton Copley. It was exhibited in 1778 at London’s Royal Academy of Arts and was instrumental in Copley’s being appointed to the academy. Copley painted a second version of the work later in 1778, and he created
- Watson Lake (village, Yukon, Canada)
Watson Lake, community, southern Yukon, Canada. It lies along a small lake on the border with British Columbia. It originated as a 19th-century trading post and was named after Frank Watson, a pioneer trapper-miner. It is now a key communications and distribution point for the southern part of the
- Watson, Albert (Scottish photographer)
David Carson: Photographer Albert Watson, for example, declared, “He uses type the way a painter uses paint, to create emotion, to express ideas.” Others felt that the fractured presentation obscured the message it carried.
- Watson, Alberta (Canadian actress)
Alberta Watson was a Canadian film and television actress whose career spanned four decades. Renowned for her consistency and reliability, Watson was perhaps best known for the TV series La Femme Nikita (1997–2001) and 24 (2004–05), but she also gave memorable performances in David O. Russell’s
- Watson, Arthel Lane (American musician)
Doc Watson was an American musician and singer who introduced a flat-picking style that elevated the acoustic guitar from a rhythmically strummed background instrument to a leading role in bluegrass, country, folk, and rock music, notably during the folk music revival of the 1960s. Watson was blind
- Watson, Bubba (American golfer)
Bubba Watson is an American professional golfer noted for his two Major championships and powerful drives. He won the Masters Tournament in 2012 and 2014 and reached 2nd place in the world rankings of golf in 2015. He is one of the few left-handed golfers on the PGA Tour and one of a relative
- Watson, Charles (American criminal)
Tate murders: …8, Manson ordered his follower Charles “Tex” Watson to go to 10050 Cielo Drive with several other cult members and kill everyone there “as gruesome[ly] as you can.” Manson was familiar with the house because its previous tenant, music producer Terry Melcher, had earlier considered and then decided against giving…
- Watson, Charles (British admiral)
Kolkata: Growth of the city: …and by the British admiral Charles Watson. The nawab was defeated shortly afterward at Plassey (June 1757), after which British rule in Bengal was assured. Gobindapore was cleared of its forests, and the new Fort William was built on its present site, overlooking the Hugli at Calcutta, where it became…
- Watson, Cherelle (American teacher)
Brittney Griner: Personal life: Three years later Griner wed Cherelle Watson, a teacher. Following Brittney Griner’s detainment in Russia, Cherelle Griner publicly fought for her release.
- Watson, Deshaun (American football player)
Houston Texans: …play of standout rookie quarterback Deshaun Watson, but his mid-season knee injury derailed the team’s momentum, and Houston finished the year with a 4–12 record. Watson and Watt remained healthy during the 2018 season, and the Texans rallied from an 0–3 start to win 11 games and a division title.…
- Watson, Doc (American musician)
Doc Watson was an American musician and singer who introduced a flat-picking style that elevated the acoustic guitar from a rhythmically strummed background instrument to a leading role in bluegrass, country, folk, and rock music, notably during the folk music revival of the 1960s. Watson was blind
- Watson, Dr (fictional character)
Dr. Watson, fictional English physician who is Sherlock Holmes’s devoted friend, associate, and chronicler in a series of detective stories and novels by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The first collection of their escapades was published as The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes in 1892. Watson, born in 1852,
- Watson, Dr. John H. (fictional character)
Dr. Watson, fictional English physician who is Sherlock Holmes’s devoted friend, associate, and chronicler in a series of detective stories and novels by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The first collection of their escapades was published as The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes in 1892. Watson, born in 1852,
- Watson, Emma (British actress)
Emma Watson is a British actress and activist who was perhaps best known for playing the young wizard Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter films. She also garnered attention as a spokesperson for women’s equality. Watson was born in Paris to British parents who divorced when she was young. She and
- Watson, Emma Charlotte Duerre (British actress)
Emma Watson is a British actress and activist who was perhaps best known for playing the young wizard Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter films. She also garnered attention as a spokesperson for women’s equality. Watson was born in Paris to British parents who divorced when she was young. She and
- Watson, Faith Susan Alberta (Canadian actress)
Alberta Watson was a Canadian film and television actress whose career spanned four decades. Renowned for her consistency and reliability, Watson was perhaps best known for the TV series La Femme Nikita (1997–2001) and 24 (2004–05), but she also gave memorable performances in David O. Russell’s
- Watson, Gerry Lester, Jr. (American golfer)
Bubba Watson is an American professional golfer noted for his two Major championships and powerful drives. He won the Masters Tournament in 2012 and 2014 and reached 2nd place in the world rankings of golf in 2015. He is one of the few left-handed golfers on the PGA Tour and one of a relative
- Watson, Homer (Canadian painter)
Canada: Visual arts: Homer Watson continued the exploration of landscapes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, reflecting the influence of the American Hudson River school in his work.
- Watson, James (American geneticist and biophysicist)
James Watson is an American geneticist and biophysicist who played a crucial role in the discovery of the molecular structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the substance that is the basis of heredity. For this accomplishment he was awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with
- Watson, James Dewey (American geneticist and biophysicist)
James Watson is an American geneticist and biophysicist who played a crucial role in the discovery of the molecular structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the substance that is the basis of heredity. For this accomplishment he was awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with
- Watson, John (Scottish author)
Kailyard school: …A Window in Thrums (1889), Ian Maclaren (pseudonym of John Watson), and S.R. Crockett were widely read throughout Scotland, England, and the United States and inspired many imitators. The natural and unsophisticated style and parochial viewpoint quickly degenerated into mawkish sentimentality, which provoked a hostile reaction among contemporary Scottish realists…
- Watson, John B. (American psychologist)
John B. Watson was an American psychologist who codified and publicized behaviourism, an approach to psychology that, in his view, was restricted to the objective, experimental study of the relations between environmental events and human behaviour. Watsonian behaviourism became the dominant
- Watson, John Broadus (American psychologist)
John B. Watson was an American psychologist who codified and publicized behaviourism, an approach to psychology that, in his view, was restricted to the objective, experimental study of the relations between environmental events and human behaviour. Watsonian behaviourism became the dominant
- Watson, John Christian (prime minister of Australia)
John Christian Watson was a politician and the first Labour prime minister of Australia (1904). Educated in New Zealand, Watson moved to Sydney to work as a typographer. He became involved in the labour movement and was elected president of the Sydney Trades and Labour Council and president of the
- Watson, Maureen (Australian poet and storyteller)
Australian literature: Aboriginal narrative: the oral tradition: …century, the poet and storyteller Maureen Watson helped to maintain the oral tradition by reading on radio and television and by performing at schools.
- Watson, Merle (American musician)
Doc Watson: …many years with his son, Merle, on rhythm guitar. After his son’s death in a tractor accident in 1985, Watson continued to tour and record, sometimes with Merle’s son, Richard; in 1988 he founded the annual acoustic Merle Watson Memorial Festival (MerleFest) in Wilkesboro, North Carolina.
- Watson, Paul (Canadian environmental activist)
Paul Watson is a Canadian American environmental activist who founded (1977) the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, an organization that sought to protect marine wildlife. Watson exhibited an early affinity for protecting wildlife. At age nine he would seek out and destroy leghold traps that were
- Watson, Peter (American journalist)
art criticism: The irony of the avant-garde: …Modern Art Market (1992), journalist Peter Watson points out that art criticism, however high-minded, serves the art market, which is part of the prevailing consumer society (a reality especially prevalent after the art boom of the 1980s). Watson suggests that, in a capitalist society, art is above all a luxury…
- Watson, Renée (American author and actress)
Renée Watson is an American author and actress who has written picture books for young children and novels for young adults. Her young adult novel Piecing Me Together (2017) won the 2018 Coretta Scott King Book Award. That same year, it was also named a Newbery Honor Book and was recognized with
- Watson, Sir John William (English author)
Sir William Watson was an English author of lyrical and political verse, best-known for his occasional poems. His first volume, The Prince’s Quest (1880), was in the Pre-Raphaelite manner. Thereafter he became a poet of statement, concerned with current affairs. Watson’s Wordsworth’s Grave (1890),
- Watson, Sir William (English author)
Sir William Watson was an English author of lyrical and political verse, best-known for his occasional poems. His first volume, The Prince’s Quest (1880), was in the Pre-Raphaelite manner. Thereafter he became a poet of statement, concerned with current affairs. Watson’s Wordsworth’s Grave (1890),
- Watson, Tex (American criminal)
Tate murders: …8, Manson ordered his follower Charles “Tex” Watson to go to 10050 Cielo Drive with several other cult members and kill everyone there “as gruesome[ly] as you can.” Manson was familiar with the house because its previous tenant, music producer Terry Melcher, had earlier considered and then decided against giving…
- Watson, Thomas Augustus (American industrialist)
Thomas Augustus Watson was an American telephone pioneer and shipbuilder, one of the original organizers of the Bell Telephone Company, who later turned to shipbuilding and constructed a number of vessels for the United States government. After leaving school at the age of 14, Watson began work in
- Watson, Thomas E. (United States politician)
Rebecca Ann Felton: …by the death of Senator Thomas E. Watson, whose antagonism to former President Woodrow Wilson and all of his policies she heartily shared. She served only 24 hours, November 21–22, 1922, before being succeeded by Walter F. George, the duly elected senator. Her writings include My Memoirs of Georgia Politics…
- Watson, Thomas J., Jr. (American business executive)
Thomas J. Watson, Jr. was an American business executive who inherited the leadership of International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) from his father, Thomas J. Watson, Sr., and propelled the company into the computer age. After graduating in 1937 from Brown University, Providence, Rhode
- Watson, Thomas J., Sr. (American industrialist)
Thomas J. Watson, Sr. was an American industrialist who built the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) into the largest manufacturer of electric typewriters and data-processing equipment in the world. The son of a lumber dealer, Watson studied at the Elmira (New York) School of
- Watson, Thomas John, Jr. (American business executive)
Thomas J. Watson, Jr. was an American business executive who inherited the leadership of International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) from his father, Thomas J. Watson, Sr., and propelled the company into the computer age. After graduating in 1937 from Brown University, Providence, Rhode
- Watson, Thomas John, Sr. (American industrialist)
Thomas J. Watson, Sr. was an American industrialist who built the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) into the largest manufacturer of electric typewriters and data-processing equipment in the world. The son of a lumber dealer, Watson studied at the Elmira (New York) School of
- Watson, Thomas Sturges (American golfer)
Tom Watson is an American golfer who was one of the sport’s dominant figures in the 1970s and early ’80s. Watson studied psychology at Stanford University, where he competed on the school’s golf team. After graduating in 1971, he joined the Professional Golfers’ Association of America (PGA).
- Watson, Tom (American golfer)
Tom Watson is an American golfer who was one of the sport’s dominant figures in the 1970s and early ’80s. Watson studied psychology at Stanford University, where he competed on the school’s golf team. After graduating in 1971, he joined the Professional Golfers’ Association of America (PGA).