James Cuppaidge Cochran

James Cuppaidge Cochran (1798–1880) was an Anglican priest and editor in Lunenburg and Halifax, Nova Scotia.[1] He was a minister at St. John's Anglican Church (Lunenburg) (1825-1852). He also published both the Colonial Churchman (1835-1840) in Lunenburg and later the Church Times in Halifax. While in Halifax, he supported the establishment of the Halifax School for the Deaf. He is the son of Rev. William Cochran (clergyman), the founder of King's College, Nova Scotia.[2][3]

gollark: TuxN for all N in **R** IRL.
gollark: Would people be interested in osmarks internet radio™ but it plays random beeping noises™?
gollark: It's presumably the rolling-counter code being broken somehow.
gollark: Oops. No idea how that happened.
gollark: However, it is known that Superconducting digital logic circuits use single flux quanta (SFQ), also known as magnetic flux quanta, to encode, process, and transport data. SFQ circuits are made up of active Josephson junctions and passive elements such as inductors, resistors, transformers, and transmission lines. Whereas voltages and capacitors are important in semiconductor logic circuits such as CMOS, currents and inductors are most important in SFQ logic circuits. Power can be supplied by either direct current or alternating current, depending on the SFQ logic family.

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