11-800: Porterfield may refer to: People [ edit ] Porterfield (surname) Places [ edit ] Porterfield, Wisconsin , a town, United States Porterfield (community), Wisconsin , an unincorporated community, United States Porterfield Lakes , Nova Scotia, Canada HM Prison Inverness , also known as Porterfield Prison Renfrew Porterfield railway station , Renfrew, Renfrewshire, Scotland Other uses [ edit ] Porterfield Aircraft Corporation , an American aircraft design and manufacturing company founded in 1934 USS Porterfield , an American naval destroyer in service 1943–69 See also [ edit ] All pages with titles containing Porterfield Topics referred to by
22-796: A Vocabulary of Christian Names . Albany, New York: J. Munsell. p. 86 . OCLC 1060940902 – via Internet Archive . [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with the surname Porterfield . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Porterfield_(surname)&oldid=1244257409 " Categories : Surnames Surnames of Scottish origin Surnames of British Isles origin Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description
33-1063: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Porterfield (surname) Porterfield is a surname of Scottish origin. It was first used by descendants of John de Porter in 1262. Notable people with the surname include: Alfred Porterfield (1869 – after 1894), Scottish football goalkeeper Bob Porterfield (1923–80), American Major League Baseball pitcher Christopher Porterfield (born before 2006), American songwriter, guitarist and singer Daniel R. Porterfield (born 1961), American academic administrator, 15th president of Franklin & Marshall College Eric Porterfield (born 1974), American politician in West Virginia Eugene Porterfield (born 1946), American politician in Pennsylvania Garry Porterfield (born 1943), former American football player for
44-500: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Gordon Porterfield Gordon Porterfield is an American playwright, novelist, poet and teacher, whose work has been produced for the stage in Baltimore, New York and London. Gordon Porterfield was the key playwright in residence at Baltimore's Corner Theatre ETC , which was founded in 1968 by Ellen Stewart and Leslie Irons as an experimental theatre whose principal goal
55-819: The Dallas Cowboys . George A. Porterfield (1822–1919), American and Confederate army officer Gordon Porterfield (born before 1968), American playwright, novelist, poet and teacher Harry Porterfield (1928-2023), American news anchor. Ian Porterfield (1946–2007), Scottish football player and coach John Porterfield ( fl. 1571 ), Scottish prelate Katherine Porterfield (born before 1998), American child psychologist Leslie Porterfield (born 1976), American female motorcyclist who has set several speed records Lewis B. Porterfield (1879–1942), American admiral Matthew Porterfield (born 1977), American independent filmmaker Robert Porterfield , often referred to as "General Porterfield", (1751-1843),
66-471: The production of another evening of one-acts, entitled Wolves. Chancre, a hallucinatory tour de force, was Porterfield's final offering at the Corner Theatre. In 1987 The Yippie Book, Porterfield's instructional work for educators, was published by Perfection Form Co. Twelve years later, Porterfield came out of theatrical retirement with the critically acclaimed play Snow, which was performed at
77-458: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Porterfield . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Porterfield&oldid=1152253555 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
88-441: The story of a modern-day African-American Christ , following his movements through the stations of the cross. The production was highly controversial and drew large crowds. The following year, Brooklyn 's Chelsea Theater Center acquired the rights to Universal Nigger and produced it in their own space for New York City audiences, under the direction of Robert Kalfin . Gnomes, a collection of thirteen short one-act plays,
99-773: Was a Virginia planter, politician, magistrate and military officer who served in the Virginia House of Delegates representing Augusta County for one term Robert Porterfield (1905–71), American founder of the Barter Theatre Ron Porterfield (born before 1983), American Major League Baseball athletic trainer Shaletta Porterfield (born 1985), American beauty queen William Porterfield (born 1984), Irish cricketer See also [ edit ] Porterfield (disambiguation) References [ edit ] ^ Sims, Clifford Stanley (1862). The Origin and Signification of Scottish Surnames. With
110-527: Was presented the following year. Director Michael Makarovich subsequently staged two Gordon Porterfield one-acts at Corner: The Catcher Was A Fag and I And Silence Some Strange Race; as well as an original teleplay entitled Tigers. In 1972, Corner Theatre presented what many considered Porterfield's defining work for that time, a scatological romp down the Yellow Brick Road entitled whatisoneholycatholicapostalicbrownandstinksuptheuniverse. 1973 saw
121-410: Was the production of new plays. Porterfield's output was impressive by any standard, creating literally dozens of works both short and full-length. Authors and the apocalyptic The Earth Is Dead - an evening of one-acts under the collective title Ratsfeet, were the first Porterfield plays offered by the theatre, followed in very short order with a full-length play Universal Nigger (1969), which told
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