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Robert S. Woods

 
US Military Dictionary: Charles Robert Woods

Woods, Charles Robert (1827-1885) Born in Newark, Ohio, Charles Robert Woods graduated from West Point in 1852. In January 1861 he commanded two hundred soldiers on the Star of the West sent to relieve Fort Sumter. When enemy ships came out in Charleston harbor to attack them Woods ordered the Star of the West to escape. In October he raised the Seventy-Sixth Ohio Volunteer Infantry and was elected its colonel. He led it at Fort Donelson and Shiloh (both 1862). Later he commanded a brigade in operations around Corinth (1862) and along the Mississippi River. After the Vicksburg campaign Woods was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers. He continued to lead his brigade through the battle of Lookout Mountain (1863) and William T. Sherman's march through Georgia and the Carolinas. Woods earned a brevet promotion to major general for meritorious service at Bentonville. After the war he rejoined the regular army as a lieutenant colonel and finished his career fighting Indians in Kansas. He retired in 1874 as a colonel.

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Biography: Robert Archey Woods
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Robert Archey Woods (1865-1925), American social worker, founded South End House, the first settlement house in Boston. His pioneer surveys of ethnic communities taught method to settlement workers and helped create social-work institutions.

Robert A. Woods was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., on Dec. 9, 1865. After attending Amherst College, he entered Andover Theological Seminary in 1886. Affected by the "Christian Socialist" ideas of the time, he considered how to dedicate himself to useful works. In 1890 he graduated from Andover, served briefly as a chaplain at the Concord, Mass., Reformatory, then became a resident student at Toynbee Hall, a settlement house in London, England.

When Woods returned to America, he was determined to emulate the work of the settlement. He offered a series of lectures at Andover, published as English Social Movements (1891), and opened Andover House in Boston in 1891 to minister to the immigrant poor. He directed the settlement house until his death. In 1896 its name was changed to South End House. He also began a career as a civic figure, seeking improved public facilities such as baths, gymnasiums, and industrial schools.

Inspired by Charles Booth's study of the London poor, Life and Labour of the People (1904), Woods determined to apply a similar method of survey to Boston. Essentially, his goal was to utilize the neighborhood as a means for enriching the city. The result, the first such American survey, conducted under his direction, was The City Wilderness: A Study of the South End (1898) and Americans in Process: A Study of the North and West Ends (1902). These and later surveys have been criticized for seeking to teach middle-class Anglo-Saxon values, rather than attempting to understand the nature of the separate groups; nevertheless, they broke the ground for later investigators.

Woods helped organize the National Federation of settlements in 1911. He and Albert J. Kennedy, a younger associate, edited Handbook of Settlements (1911) and Young Working Girls (1913). They also prepared The Settlement Horizon: A National Estimate (1922). Woods was particularly troubled by the debilitating influence of hard liquor and was a leading prohibitionist. His continuing faith in rural values and neighborhood virtues was shown in his study The Preparation of Calvin Coolidge: An Interpretation (1924). He died on Feb. 18, 1925, in Boston.

Further Reading

The book by Woods and Albert J. Kennedy, The Zone of Emergence, abridged and edited with an introduction by Sam B. Warner, Jr. (1962), was a pioneering examination of ethnic groups that had transcended their original environments. A biography of Woods by his wife, Eleanor H. Woods, is Robert A. Woods: Champion of Democracy (1929). Extensive material on Woods and his career is in Allen F. Davis, Spearheads for Reform: The Social Settlements and the Progressive Movement, 1890-1914 (1967). Woods figures prominently in Albert Boer, The Development of USES: A Chronology of the United South End Settlements, 1891-1966 (1966).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Robert Archey Woods
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Woods, Robert Archey, 1865-1925, American social worker, b. Pittsburgh, grad. Amherst, 1886. After six months at Toynbee Hall, London, he helped found (1891) the South End House, Boston, which he headed until his death. He lectured on social ethics at the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, Mass. (1896-1914), was president of the Boston School Union (1908-25), and aided the development of the National Federation of Social Settlements, of which he was secretary from 1911 to 1923 and president for the two succeeding years. Woods wrote English Social Movements (1891) and The Neighborhood in Nation Building (1923).

Bibliography

See biography by E. H. Woods (1929).

Quotes By: General Robert E. Woods
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Quotes:

"Business is like war in one respect. If its grand strategy is correct, any number of tactical errors can be made and yet the enterprise proves successful."

Wikipedia: Robert S. Woods
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Robert S. Woods
Born Robert Sosebee Woods
March 13, 1948 (1948-03-13) (age 61)
Maywood, California, U.S.
Occupation Actor
Years active 1976–present
Spouse(s) Loyita Chapel (1985-present)

Robert Sosebee Woods (born March 13, 1948) is an American actor best known for playing Bo Buchanan on the ABC soap One Life to Live,[1][2] a role for which he won a 1983 Daytime Emmy Award for Lead Actor.[3]

Contents

Early life

In 1966 Woods graduated from Lakewood High School in Lakewood, California, where he served as senior class president. He later joined the U.S. Armed Forces and fought in the Vietnam War. Woods ultimately graduated from California State University, Long Beach where he was a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.

Career

Woods began portraying Bo Buchanan — a Vietnam War veteran — on the ABC soap One Life to Live in 1979,[1][2] winning a Daytime Emmy Award for Lead Actor in 1983.[3] He left the series in 1986 and returned 1988, and continues in the role today.[1][2] Woods also earned Daytime Emmy nominations in 1986,[4] 1993,[5] 1994,[6] 1999,[7] and 2000,[8] multiple Soap Opera Digest Award nominations, and four MVP trophies from Soap Opera Update.[1]

Woods has also appeared on television series such as Roseanne, and the NBC soap opera, Days of our Lives. He appeared in eight episodes of The Waltons, four credited as "Robert Merritt Woods" and four as "Christopher Woods."

Personal life

Woods is married to actress Loyita Chapel and lives in New York. The couple have a son, Tanner Woods, who played a young Bo on One Life to Live in an August 26, 2008 flashback to 1968.[9]

Woods was good friends with on-screen dad Phil Carey.[10]

External links

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

US Military Dictionary. The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military. Copyright © 2001, 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Robert S. Woods" Read more