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  1. The Reverend George Junkin (November 1, 1790 – May 20, 1868) was an American educator and Presbyterian minister who served as the first and third president of Lafayette College and later as president of Miami University and Washington College (now Washington and Lee University).

  2. George McJunkin (c. 1856–1922) was an African American cowboy, amateur archaeologist and historian. McJunkin discovered the Folsom site in New Mexico in 1908.

  3. George McJunkin (1851-1922) fue un vaquero afroamericano de Nuevo México que descubrió el yacimiento arqueológico de Folsom en 1908. Nacido de padres esclavos en Midway ( Texas ), McJunkin tenía unos 14 años cuando terminó la Guerra de Secesión .

  4. 21 de feb. de 2022 · George McJunkin was a remarkable man: champion cowboy, an outstanding ranch manager, a self-taught reader and naturalist. But what exactly did George McJunkin discover?

  5. 4 de nov. de 2019 · In 1867 he became a contributor to The Christian Statesman, a journal dedicated to the philosophy that government was ordained by God to carry out Christian principles. Junkin’s essay “Civil Government: A Divine Ordinance” appeared in an early issue of the Statesman and proclaimed, “every man who enjoys the franchise at the polls, is an ...

  6. 23 de feb. de 2015 · George McJunkin died in January 1922, never able to solve the mystery of the giant bones. Just a short seven months after his death, however, Carl Schwacheim (one of the people in Raton whom George had told of his discovery), a banker named Fred Howarth, and a group including a Roman Catholic priest and a taxidermist finally did pay a visit to the now-famous Wild Horse Arroyo.

  7. George Garnett Junkin (November 19, 1839 – February 22, 1895) was a teacher, member of the Confederate Army, lawyer, county superintendent of schools, judge of the County Court, and Commonswealth's attorney.