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Ludlow and p
Ludlow typograph co., 1928 15 p. 30 cm
" ( Ludlow, Editor, p. 493 ).

Ludlow and .
Cynthia Flower, daughter of the Ludlow Flowers Jr., to Todd Huntington, son of the David Huntingtons.
* All-Purpose Linotype, a fully manual linecasting machine similar to the Ludlow Typograph, built to compete with the Ludlow on point sizes too large for a conventional Linotype.
The English Civil War ( 1642 – 1651 ) provoked a number of examples of this genre, including works by Sir Edmund Ludlow and Sir John Reresby.
Housman's grave at St. Laurence's Church in Ludlow.
His ashes are buried near St Laurence's Church, Ludlow, Shropshire.
Butterworth's death on the Somme in 1916 was considered a great loss to English music ; Ivor Gurney, another most important setter of Housman ( Ludlow and Teme, a work for voice and string quartet, and a song-cycle on Housman works, both of which won the Carnegie Award ) experienced emotional breakdowns which were popularly ( but wrongly ) believed to have originated from shell-shock.
Among other composers who set Housman songs were John Ireland ( song cycle, Land of Lost Content ), Michael Head ( e. g. ' Ludlow Fair '), Graham Peel ( a famous version of ' In Summertime on Bredon '), Ian Venables ( Songs of Eternity and Sorrow ), and the American Samuel Barber ( e. g. ' With rue my heart is laden ').
Once married, Arthur was sent to Ludlow Castle on the borders of Wales to preside over the Council of Wales and the Marches, as was his duty as Prince of Wales, and his bride accompanied him.
The couple stayed at Castle Lodge, Ludlow.
* von Bismark, Friedrich Wilhelm, Graf, Beamish, North Ludlow, ( translator ), On the Uses and Application of Cavalry in War from the Text of Bismark: With Practical Examples Selected from Antient and Modern History, T. & W. Boone, London, 1855
" A group of eight young birdwatchers from The Bronx later became the Bronx County Bird Club, led by Ludlow Griscom.
Jenner trained from the age of 17 for eight years in Chipping Sodbury, South Gloucestershire, as an apprentice to Daniel Ludlow, a surgeon.
Edmond Ludlow made several attempts to reconcile the army and parliament in this time period but was ultimately unsuccessful.
Though Col. Lambert subsequently acquitted himself to Henry Vane the Younger and Edmond Ludlow and the " Committee on Safety " an instrument of the Wallingford House party acting under their miss-direction.
" Edmond Ludlow warned both the army and key members of Parliament that unless a compromise could be made it would " render all the blood and treasure that had been spent in asserting our liberties of no use to us, but also force us under such a yoke of servitude, that neither we nor our posterity should be able to bear.
Ludlow stated in early January, 1660 when in conversation with several key officers of the army: ' Then ,' said Capt.
John Jones, Col. Thomlinson, and Edmond Ludlow on 19 January 1660.

Ludlow and during
And that the inhumanity of these men may the better appear, I ( Edmond Ludlow ) must not omit, that the executioner in an ugly dress, with a halter in his hand, was placed near the Major-General, and continued there during the whole time of his trial, which action I doubt whether it was ever equaled by the most barbarous nations.
As such, Oliver believes, The Shrew must have been written prior to June 1592, most likely in early 1592, and it was one of the performances during the Bath / Ludlow tour which gave rise to A Shrew.
The Ludlow Amendment, introduced several times to the House of Representatives by Louis Ludlow of Indiana between 1935 and 1940 during an era of heightened isolationist tendencies, proposed an amendment to the Constitution that would require a national referendum to declare war, except in the case of invasion and attack.
Ludlow Castle is first referred to by chroniclers during a siege 1139 during the civil wars of the reign of King Stephen ; the king himself besieged the castle and rescued his ally Prince Henry of Scotland when the later was caught on a hook thrown by the garrison.
After serving in home waters learning about convoy protection he was appointed to the newly built Ludlow Castle which he used to blockade the Scottish coast during the Jacobite Rebellion in 1745.
* Benjamin Chambers Ludlow ( 1831 – 1898 ), Union officer during the American Civil War
She spent most of her life in Ludlow, working as a legal secretary, but lived with her niece in Brattleboro, Vermont during her last eight years.
Ludlow is remembered for what he said of the Burren in County Clare during counter-guerilla operations there in 1651-52 ; " It is a country where there is not enough water to drown a man, wood enough to hang one, nor earth enough to bury him.
Ludlow took his seat in the Convention Parliament as member for Hindon, but his election was annulled on 18 May after the parliament ruled that all those that had been judges of Charles I during his trial should be arrested.
Tolstoy, joined by the head of the British mission in Tibet, Frank Ludlow, may have intimated to the Tibetans during this period that Tibet would be permitted to send a delegation to the postwar peace conference, an unauthorized representation both knew would not be supported by their respective governments.
The army has also been used during labor disputes, including in situations where use of the National Guard proved inadequate ( or disastrous, as in the Ludlow Strike ).
The massacre was committed by members ( and possibly at the instruction of local leadership ) of the United Mine Workers, just eight years after the deaths of miners ' wives and children during the Ludlow Massacre.
A move to the present side of the street was necessitated during this time by the construction of the subway system, although the entry remained on Ludlow street.
* Augustus Ludlow, officer in the United States Navy during the War of 1812
* Charles Ludlow, officer in the United States Navy during the War of 1812
* Ludlow massacre, the death of about 20 people during an attack by the Colorado National Guard on a tent colony
* Ludlow Group, rocks deposited during the Ludlow period of the Silurian in Great Britain
Augustus C. Ludlow ( 1 January 1792 – 13 June 1813 ) was an officer in the United States Navy during the War of 1812.
The famous names in the ornithology of the Indian subcontinent during this era include Andrew Leith Adams ( 1827 – 1882 ), Edward Blyth ( 1810 – 1873 ), Edward Arthur Butler ( 1843 – 1916 ), Douglas Dewar ( 1875 – 1957 ), N. F. Frome ( 1899 – 1982 ), Hugh Whistler ( 1889 – 1943 ), H. H. Godwin-Austen ( 1834 – 1923 ), Col. W. H. Sykes ( 1790 – 1872 ), C. M. Inglis ( 1870 – 1954 ), Frank Ludlow ( 1885 – 1972 ), E. C. Stuart Baker ( 1864 – 1944 ), Henry Edwin Barnes ( 1848 – 1896 ), F. N. Betts ( 1906 – 1973 ), H. R. Baker, W. E. Brooks ( 1828 – 1899 ), Margaret Cockburn ( 1829 – 1928 ), James A. Murray, E. W. Oates ( 1845 – 1911 ), Ferdinand Stoliczka ( 1838 – 1874 ), Valentine Ball ( 1843 – 1894 ), W. T. Blanford ( 1832 – 1905 ), J. K. Stanford ( 1892 – 1971 ), Charles Swinhoe ( 1836 – 1923 ), Robert Swinhoe ( 1836 – 1877 ), C. H. T. Marshall ( 1841 – 1927 ), G. F. L. Marshall ( 1843 – 1934 ), R. S. P. Bates, James Franklin ( 1783 – 1834 ), Satya Churn Law, Arthur Edward Osmaston ( 1885 – 1961 ), Bertram Beresford Osmaston ( 1868 – 1961 ), Wardlaw Ramsay ( 1852 – 1921 ) and Samuel Tickell ( 1811 – 1875 ).
Shrewsbury was forced to surrender in 1644, and the royalist strongholds of Ludlow and Bridgnorth were captured in 1646., the latter after a four weeks ' siege, during which the governor burnt part of the town for defence against Parliamentary troops.
Port Ludlow was assigned to honor Lieutenant Augustus Ludlow, who lost his life during the War of 1812.

Ludlow and period
It is clear from the writings of both Ludlow, Vane, and historians of the early American period such as Upham, that this is what they were striving for and why they were excepted from the acts of indemnity.
He worked for the Foundation until 1918, forming a close working association and friendship with Rockefeller, advising him through the turbulent period of the 1914 strike and Ludlow massacre at a family-owned coal company in Colorado, which subsequently set the stage for a new era in labor management in America.
The castles of Trim in Ireland and Ludlow were given over to the custody of the crown for a period of two years beginning in Easter 1224.
In April 1914, after a long period of industrial unrest, the Ludlow massacre occurred at the coal-mining company, Colorado Fuel and Iron ( CFI ).
* Ludlow epoch, part of the Silurian period in the geologic time scale
Of the castles built in this period the most famous are Ludlow, founded by Roger de Montgomery ; Bishop's Castle, which belonged to the Bishops of Hereford ; Clun Castle, built by the FitzAlans ; Cleobury Castle, built by Hugh de Mortimer ; Caus Castle, once the Barony of Sir Peter Corbet, from whom it came to the Barons Strafford ; Rowton Castle, also a seat of the Corbets ; Red Castle, a seat of the Audleys.
The Ludlow Library flourished during a period of perhaps the most intense media interest ever focused on the personal, social, scientific and political aspects of drug experience.

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