Hayley Noelle LeBlanc (born September 2, 2008) is an American YouTuber, actress, and former gymnast.
She was born in Katy, Texas while her father was stationed at Naval Recruiting District Houston. She had two older siblings, Caleb LeBlanc and Annie LeBlanc. Caleb died on October 1, 2015 due to Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy at the age of 13.
The "Bratayley" YouTube channel was originally created for Hayley but was later turned into a family vlog channel after it gained popularity and the family decided she was too young. Her family started vlogging when Hayley was only 2 years old. Her most viewed video is called I'm never going to the park again (WK 61).
Hayley started her own YouTube channel on December 14, 2014. Her youtube channel has 1.2 million subscribers and 71 million views (April 2019)
In 2018, Hayley starred in the multicamera sitcom Hotel Du Loone on Brat. In March 2019 it was announced that Nickelodeon had signed Hayley and her sister Annie and that they will produce a digital mini-series starring Annie and Hayley LeBlanc called Annie vs. Hayley: LeBake Off!
She was born in Katy, Texas while her father was stationed at Naval Recruiting District Houston. She had two older siblings, Caleb LeBlanc and Annie LeBlanc. Caleb died on October 1, 2015 due to Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy at the age of 13.
The "Bratayley" YouTube channel was originally created for Hayley but was later turned into a family vlog channel after it gained popularity and the family decided she was too young. Her family started vlogging when Hayley was only 2 years old. Her most viewed video is called I'm never going to the park again (WK 61).
Hayley started her own YouTube channel on December 14, 2014. Her youtube channel has 1.2 million subscribers and 71 million views (April 2019)
In 2018, Hayley starred in the multicamera sitcom Hotel Du Loone on Brat. In March 2019 it was announced that Nickelodeon had signed Hayley and her sister Annie and that they will produce a digital mini-series starring Annie and Hayley LeBlanc called Annie vs. Hayley: LeBake Off!
Marius Cornelis van Houten (10 November 1879 - 8 February 1953) was a Dutch army officer and museum director.
Life
Early life
Born in Gorinchem, he studied HBS there and later in Arnhem before joining the Cadettenschool in Alkmaar in 1896 and the Koninklijke Militaire Academie in Breda in 1899. He graduated from the latter as a 'land artillery' (artillerie hier te lande) commander in July 1902 and at the end of that month was made a second lieutenant in the 3rd Garrison Artillery Regiment. In July 1906 he was promoted to First Lieutenant.
Royal Marechaussee
In May 1913 he transferred to the Koninklijke Marechaussee, the country's gendarmerie, within which he was promoted to Captain in December 1916. On 10 December 1919, whilst a district-commander in Eindhoven, Van Houten sent a personal invite to the leaders of various foreign police forces to come to a conference intended to set up an international policing organisation, possibly to be overseen by the League of Nations. The organisation was intended to encourage international cooperation between forces to fight non-political international crime. With the First World War barely over, the initiative proved unsuccessful, though Van Houten was later in touch with Basil Thomson, of the Metropolitan Police and on 16 September 1921 with Robert Heindl, a leading criminologist in Dresden, Germany.
In 1920 he was put in charge of the Marechaussee detachment guarding Wilhelm II, German Emperor in exile in Doorn after his escape to the neutral Netherlands. The former Kaiser had initially been housed in Kasteel Amerongen but in 1920 was transferred to the Huis Doorn estate. Van Houten held this position in Doorn until his retirement in September 1936, during which time he was promoted to Major (July 1927), Lieutenant-Colonel (October 1931) and Colonel (just before his retirement). He also remained active as an intermediary between the Dutch authorities and Wilhelm's court-in-exile.
Interpol
In 1923 Vienna's chief of police Johann Schober organised a five-day congress in his city based on Van Houten's original 1919 idea. The Netherlands was represented by Van Houten himself as well as K.H. Broekhoff (head of the Nederlandse Centrale inzake falsificaten) and A.H. Sirks (chief police commissioner in Rotterdam). The three men were the usual Dutch representatives at future congresses until Sirks' retirement in 1933, on which he was replaced in the trio by Hendrik Johan Versteeg junior, chief police commissioner of Amsterdam.
The 1923 congress founded the Internationale Kriminalpolizeiliche Kommission (IKK), now known as Interpol. Van Houten became its honorary vice-president in 1934. The 1935 Police Congress in Copenhagen decided to set up an international centre to deal with gypsies and Van Houten personally committed the Netherlands to set up a central registration office for gypsies and a national branch of the centre - the latter was established in 1937. The IKK and its activities were temporarily suspended by the outbreak of World War Two.
Wilhelm II
Museums
In October 1936, just after his retirement, Van Houten opened his private collection on the Marechaussee's history to the public as the Royal Marechaussee Historical Museum.
In 1939 Van Houten became the director of the Nederlandsch Legermuseum in Kasteel Doorwerth, following the previous director F.A. Hoefer's death the previous year and replacing J.W. Wijn, who had been acting director in the interim. It was decided to move that museum to Leiden due to problems with the existing building, but the actual move was delayed by World War Two and much of the collection was lost in the Battle of Arnhem, during which the Kasteel Doorwerth found itself on the front line.
In 1946 Van Houten became chairman of the Genootschap voor Militaire Traditie en Uniformkunde, a military history society and in summer 1949 the Legermuseum finally reopened in the Pesthuis in Leiden. About a week after the North Sea flood of 1953, Van Houten died in Leiden aged 73. He was replaced as director by C.A. Hartmans, previously deputy director.
Bibliography
* Henk Pors, Marius Cornelis van Houten : marechaussee par excellence ( Museumbrochure nummer 4 ), Stichting Vrienden van het Marechausseemuseum, Buren, 1994
Life
Early life
Born in Gorinchem, he studied HBS there and later in Arnhem before joining the Cadettenschool in Alkmaar in 1896 and the Koninklijke Militaire Academie in Breda in 1899. He graduated from the latter as a 'land artillery' (artillerie hier te lande) commander in July 1902 and at the end of that month was made a second lieutenant in the 3rd Garrison Artillery Regiment. In July 1906 he was promoted to First Lieutenant.
Royal Marechaussee
In May 1913 he transferred to the Koninklijke Marechaussee, the country's gendarmerie, within which he was promoted to Captain in December 1916. On 10 December 1919, whilst a district-commander in Eindhoven, Van Houten sent a personal invite to the leaders of various foreign police forces to come to a conference intended to set up an international policing organisation, possibly to be overseen by the League of Nations. The organisation was intended to encourage international cooperation between forces to fight non-political international crime. With the First World War barely over, the initiative proved unsuccessful, though Van Houten was later in touch with Basil Thomson, of the Metropolitan Police and on 16 September 1921 with Robert Heindl, a leading criminologist in Dresden, Germany.
In 1920 he was put in charge of the Marechaussee detachment guarding Wilhelm II, German Emperor in exile in Doorn after his escape to the neutral Netherlands. The former Kaiser had initially been housed in Kasteel Amerongen but in 1920 was transferred to the Huis Doorn estate. Van Houten held this position in Doorn until his retirement in September 1936, during which time he was promoted to Major (July 1927), Lieutenant-Colonel (October 1931) and Colonel (just before his retirement). He also remained active as an intermediary between the Dutch authorities and Wilhelm's court-in-exile.
Interpol
In 1923 Vienna's chief of police Johann Schober organised a five-day congress in his city based on Van Houten's original 1919 idea. The Netherlands was represented by Van Houten himself as well as K.H. Broekhoff (head of the Nederlandse Centrale inzake falsificaten) and A.H. Sirks (chief police commissioner in Rotterdam). The three men were the usual Dutch representatives at future congresses until Sirks' retirement in 1933, on which he was replaced in the trio by Hendrik Johan Versteeg junior, chief police commissioner of Amsterdam.
The 1923 congress founded the Internationale Kriminalpolizeiliche Kommission (IKK), now known as Interpol. Van Houten became its honorary vice-president in 1934. The 1935 Police Congress in Copenhagen decided to set up an international centre to deal with gypsies and Van Houten personally committed the Netherlands to set up a central registration office for gypsies and a national branch of the centre - the latter was established in 1937. The IKK and its activities were temporarily suspended by the outbreak of World War Two.
Wilhelm II
Museums
In October 1936, just after his retirement, Van Houten opened his private collection on the Marechaussee's history to the public as the Royal Marechaussee Historical Museum.
In 1939 Van Houten became the director of the Nederlandsch Legermuseum in Kasteel Doorwerth, following the previous director F.A. Hoefer's death the previous year and replacing J.W. Wijn, who had been acting director in the interim. It was decided to move that museum to Leiden due to problems with the existing building, but the actual move was delayed by World War Two and much of the collection was lost in the Battle of Arnhem, during which the Kasteel Doorwerth found itself on the front line.
In 1946 Van Houten became chairman of the Genootschap voor Militaire Traditie en Uniformkunde, a military history society and in summer 1949 the Legermuseum finally reopened in the Pesthuis in Leiden. About a week after the North Sea flood of 1953, Van Houten died in Leiden aged 73. He was replaced as director by C.A. Hartmans, previously deputy director.
Bibliography
* Henk Pors, Marius Cornelis van Houten : marechaussee par excellence ( Museumbrochure nummer 4 ), Stichting Vrienden van het Marechausseemuseum, Buren, 1994
Pattie Warren Van Hook (1927 - December 8, 1992) was a professor of family medicine at the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in Shreveport, Louisiana, and the first woman president of the Louisiana State Medical Society, concluding her term shortly before her sudden death in Nashville, Tennessee.
Van Hook was born in Shreveport, graduated from C.E. Byrd High School in 1945 and was admitted to the Byrd Hall of Fame. At the time of her death, she was associate professor of family medicine, assistant dean for student affairs and director of the occupational health clinic at the LSU Medical School in Shreveort. She was locally known for her earlier work at the Caddo/Shreveport Health Department. She was a former associate medical director for American Telephone and Telegraph in Shreveport. Her expertise reached into some half-dozen areas: medical education, public health, minority-group health care, drug abuse intervention, occupational medicine, and awareness of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
Dr. Van Hook was ecumenical in her faith. Though a member of the Noel Memorial United Methodist Church in Shreveport, she taught a Sunday school class at the First Baptist Church, once pastored by the legendary Monroe E. Dodd. In 1989, she received the "Brotherhood and Humanity Award" from the National Conference of Christians and Jews. Her memorial services at the Noel Methodist Church were conducted by clergy from Protestant, Catholic and Jewish faiths.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Robert Eugene Van Hook, D.D.S. (1929-1986). Survivors included her daughter and son-in-law, the physicians Susan V. Williams (born 1953) and R. Bruce Williams of Shreveport; her son and daughter-in-law, physicians James W. Van Hook (born 1957) and Catherine L. Van Hook of Harrisburg, Illinois, and three grandchildren. She is interred in the section "Daughters of the Cross" at Forest Park Cemetery in Shreveport.
Dr. Van Hook's papers were deposited in the archives of Louisiana State University in Shreveport.
Van Hook was born in Shreveport, graduated from C.E. Byrd High School in 1945 and was admitted to the Byrd Hall of Fame. At the time of her death, she was associate professor of family medicine, assistant dean for student affairs and director of the occupational health clinic at the LSU Medical School in Shreveort. She was locally known for her earlier work at the Caddo/Shreveport Health Department. She was a former associate medical director for American Telephone and Telegraph in Shreveport. Her expertise reached into some half-dozen areas: medical education, public health, minority-group health care, drug abuse intervention, occupational medicine, and awareness of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
Dr. Van Hook was ecumenical in her faith. Though a member of the Noel Memorial United Methodist Church in Shreveport, she taught a Sunday school class at the First Baptist Church, once pastored by the legendary Monroe E. Dodd. In 1989, she received the "Brotherhood and Humanity Award" from the National Conference of Christians and Jews. Her memorial services at the Noel Methodist Church were conducted by clergy from Protestant, Catholic and Jewish faiths.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Robert Eugene Van Hook, D.D.S. (1929-1986). Survivors included her daughter and son-in-law, the physicians Susan V. Williams (born 1953) and R. Bruce Williams of Shreveport; her son and daughter-in-law, physicians James W. Van Hook (born 1957) and Catherine L. Van Hook of Harrisburg, Illinois, and three grandchildren. She is interred in the section "Daughters of the Cross" at Forest Park Cemetery in Shreveport.
Dr. Van Hook's papers were deposited in the archives of Louisiana State University in Shreveport.
John J. Murphy (born 1959) is an American Republican Party politician from New Jersey.
Currently, he serves as a commissioner on the New Jersey Board of Elections. The staff of the Board of Elections oversees elections and hires/trains poll workers.
Political career
He served five three year terms on the Morris County Board of Chosen Freeholders from 1998 to 2012. He served two terms as Freeholder Director and over his tenure was the board's liaison to the Department of Administration and Finance, Department of Economic Development, Department of Law and Public Safety, and Department of Human Services.
In January 2005, Murphy announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for the 2005 race for Governor of New Jersey, with plans to advocate for an elected attorney general and an elected auditor general. He planned to decrease waste and fraud in state government. Murphy's campaign touched on bringing three basic ideas back to state government—accountability, accessibility, and honesty. Murphy finished third in balloting for the Republican nomination, with 14% of the vote, behind Doug Forrester who won the Republican nomination with a plurality of 36%, and Bret Schundler, who received 31%. Murphy won Morris County and was competitive in other counties.
Awards and recognition
In July 2017, John was selected as the Grand Marshal of the Morris County St. Patrick's Day parade, the largest family oriented St. Patrick's Day Parade in all of New Jersey. The parade will be held in Morristown on March 10, 2018.
He was honored in 2015 by the Boys Scouts of America at their 20th Annual Morris Lifetime Achievement Awards Dinner. He was recognized for outstanding community service and leadership within the Morris County community.
He has been the recipient of numerous leadership awards including the first annual Alex DeCroce Leadership Award in 2012.
MCEDC (Morris County Economic Development Corporation) honored John Murphy for his contribution to economic development in Morris County with the 2011 Economic Development Leadership Award.
Additionally, he was the recipient of Morris County of Chamber of Commerce's Leadership Morris Award in 2006.
As a Freeholder, he spearheaded the county acquisition of 300 acres of surplus Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital property from the State of New Jersey. The Greystone acquisition gave the Interfaith Food Pantry of Morris County the space and ability to build a larger facility that includes 3,200 square feet of warehouse space, refrigerators, freezers, counseling, and interview rooms. Freeholder Murphy stated that, "This project is a great example of how government and private charities like the Interfaith Food Pantry can work together to help meet the very basic needs of our constituents.".
Community Hope honored John Murphy in 2006 for his leadership and commitment to serving disabled residents. Their Residential and Day Treatment Program on the Greystone property expanded from serving ten individuals to serving twenty five people who are recovering from mental illnesses and transitioning out of psychiatric hospitals.
He was also the recipient of the Morris Tomorrow Schaeberle Leadership Award. This award recognizes outstanding leadership by individuals and organizations for having a valuable and positive impact on the long-term quality of life in Morris County.
He was presented with a plaque from the Mental Health Association of Morris County (MHAMC) as a thank you for his many years as a supporter of the MHAMC and human services in Morris County.
Work
Murphy is currently a partner with the Private Advisor Group, a financial planning and investment firm. They are headquartered in Morristown, NJ.
Personal life and charity work
He and his wife Jennifer have four children. They live in Morris Township.
Currently, he serves as a commissioner on the New Jersey Board of Elections. The staff of the Board of Elections oversees elections and hires/trains poll workers.
Political career
He served five three year terms on the Morris County Board of Chosen Freeholders from 1998 to 2012. He served two terms as Freeholder Director and over his tenure was the board's liaison to the Department of Administration and Finance, Department of Economic Development, Department of Law and Public Safety, and Department of Human Services.
In January 2005, Murphy announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for the 2005 race for Governor of New Jersey, with plans to advocate for an elected attorney general and an elected auditor general. He planned to decrease waste and fraud in state government. Murphy's campaign touched on bringing three basic ideas back to state government—accountability, accessibility, and honesty. Murphy finished third in balloting for the Republican nomination, with 14% of the vote, behind Doug Forrester who won the Republican nomination with a plurality of 36%, and Bret Schundler, who received 31%. Murphy won Morris County and was competitive in other counties.
Awards and recognition
In July 2017, John was selected as the Grand Marshal of the Morris County St. Patrick's Day parade, the largest family oriented St. Patrick's Day Parade in all of New Jersey. The parade will be held in Morristown on March 10, 2018.
He was honored in 2015 by the Boys Scouts of America at their 20th Annual Morris Lifetime Achievement Awards Dinner. He was recognized for outstanding community service and leadership within the Morris County community.
He has been the recipient of numerous leadership awards including the first annual Alex DeCroce Leadership Award in 2012.
MCEDC (Morris County Economic Development Corporation) honored John Murphy for his contribution to economic development in Morris County with the 2011 Economic Development Leadership Award.
Additionally, he was the recipient of Morris County of Chamber of Commerce's Leadership Morris Award in 2006.
As a Freeholder, he spearheaded the county acquisition of 300 acres of surplus Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital property from the State of New Jersey. The Greystone acquisition gave the Interfaith Food Pantry of Morris County the space and ability to build a larger facility that includes 3,200 square feet of warehouse space, refrigerators, freezers, counseling, and interview rooms. Freeholder Murphy stated that, "This project is a great example of how government and private charities like the Interfaith Food Pantry can work together to help meet the very basic needs of our constituents.".
Community Hope honored John Murphy in 2006 for his leadership and commitment to serving disabled residents. Their Residential and Day Treatment Program on the Greystone property expanded from serving ten individuals to serving twenty five people who are recovering from mental illnesses and transitioning out of psychiatric hospitals.
He was also the recipient of the Morris Tomorrow Schaeberle Leadership Award. This award recognizes outstanding leadership by individuals and organizations for having a valuable and positive impact on the long-term quality of life in Morris County.
He was presented with a plaque from the Mental Health Association of Morris County (MHAMC) as a thank you for his many years as a supporter of the MHAMC and human services in Morris County.
Work
Murphy is currently a partner with the Private Advisor Group, a financial planning and investment firm. They are headquartered in Morristown, NJ.
Personal life and charity work
He and his wife Jennifer have four children. They live in Morris Township.