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Cockerell and S
Cockerell R. A., S. P.

Cockerell and .
The architect was Samuel Pepys Cockerell.
* 1999 Christopher Cockerell, English engineer and inventor, invented the hovercraft ( b. 1910 )
In 1797 Samuel Pepys's great-great-nephew Samuel Pepys Cockerell sold the estate of Rev.
It was designed by Charles Cockerell in a classical style and stands on Beaumont Street.
In Britain's Best Sitcom, Bernard Ingham says that he wrote it ; other sources give Thatcher sole credit, while Michael Cockerell says that she wrote it with Ingham's help.
* Salix eastwoodiae Cockerell ex A. Heller Eastwood's willow, mountain willow, or Sierra willow
British architects whose drawings, and in some cases models of their buildings, in the collection, include: Inigo Jones, Sir Christopher Wren, Sir John Vanbrugh, Nicholas Hawksmoor, William Kent, James Gibbs, Robert Adam, Sir William Chambers, James Wyatt, Henry Holland, John Nash, Sir John Soane, Sir Charles Barry, Charles Robert Cockerell, Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin, Sir George Gilbert Scott, John Loughborough Pearson, George Edmund Street, Richard Norman Shaw, Alfred Waterhouse, Sir Edwin Lutyens, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Charles Holden, Frank Hoar, Lord Richard Rogers, Lord Norman Foster, Sir Nicholas Grimshaw, Zaha Hadid and Alick Horsnell.
Somerleyton was the home of Christopher Cockerell while he invented the hovercraft using the resources of ' Ripplecraft ' a business operating cabin cruisers for the boat hire trade serving holidaymakers cruising the Norfolk Broads Somerleyton Hovercraft.
In an early 1990s documentary, journalist Michael Cockerell played to Clarke some tape recordings of himself speaking at the Cambridge Union as a young man ; Clarke displayed amusement at his own stereotypically upper class accent.
The school's former students ( Old Greshamians ) include Benjamin Britten, W. H. Auden, Lord Reith, Sir Alan Lloyd Hodgkin, President Erskine Childers, Sir Christopher Cockerell, Donald Maclean, Sir Lennox Berkeley, Sir Stephen Spender, Tom Wintringham, Sir James Dyson, Ralph Firman, Sir Peter Brook, Sebastian Shaw, Sienna Guillory and Michael Cummings.
29 Clapham Common Northside ) is a Georgian house of five bays and three stories, designed by Samuel Pepys Cockerell as his own home.
Cockerell for a brief time.
The idea of the modern hovercraft is most often associated with Sir Christopher Cockerell.
Cockerell came across the key concept in his design when studying the ring of airflow when high-pressure air was blown into the annular area between two concentric tin cans, one coffee and the other from cat food.
Cockerell built several models of his hovercraft design in the early 1950s, featuring an engine mounted to blow from the front of the craft into a cavity below it, combining both lift and propulsion.
Cockerell was finally able to convince the National Research Development Corporation to fund development of a full-scale model.
Latimer-Needham and Cockerell devised a 4 foot ( 1. 22 m ) high skirt design which was fitted to the SR. N1 to produce the Mk V, displaying hugely improved performance, with the ability to climb over obstacles almost as high as the skirt.
Christopher Cockerell was on board, and the flight took place on the 50th anniversary of Louis Blériot's first aerial crossing.
Prior James Cockerell of Guisborough was forced to resign and was replaced by Robert Pursglove, who was more loyal to the king.
" Popular discontent sparked a major uprising, the Pilgrimage of Grace, in which the former Prior Cockerell was implicated.
In the following years, he remodelled the mansion to the designs of Samuel Pepys Cockerell, with classical and Indian decoration, and gardens landscaped by John Davenport.

Cockerell and 1945
1945: September-Hugh Cockerell appointed Secretary.

Cockerell and from
It looked as though Gielgud would retire from the stage after appearing in Half Life at the Duke of York's Theatre in 1978, but he made a successful comeback in 1988 in Hugh Whitemore's play The Best of Friends as museum curator Sydney Cockerell.
* Cockerell, Sydney C. and John Plummer ( 1969 ), Old Testament miniatures: a medieval picture book with 283 paintings from Creation to the story of David ( New York: G. Braziller ) reproductions of all paintings in the Morgan Bible.
Formicium mirabile, named by Theodore D. A. Cockerell in 1920, and Formicium brodiei, named by John O. Westwood in 1854, are both known from fore wings found in the middle Eocene of Bournemouth, Dorset, England.
Like Bimota, the name is a portmanteau derived loosely from the names of its designers Meixner, Cockerell, and Landgraf.
With the lease on Little Holland House nearing its end and the building soon to be demolished, in the early 1870s he commissioned a new London home nearby from CR Cockerell ( New Little Holland House, backing onto the estate of Lord Leighton ) and acquired a house at Freshwater on the Isle of Wight-his friends Julia Margaret Cameron and Lord Tennyson already had homes on the islands.
* Cockerell, Michael: Live from Number 10: The Inside Story of Prime Ministers and Television ; Faber and Faber, London, 1988, ISBN 0-571-14757-7 ; p277
Charles Robert Cockerell was born in London on 27 April 1788, the third of eleven children of Samuel Pepys Cockerell ( grandson of Samuel Pepys ), educated at Westminster School from 1802, where he received an education in Latin and the Classics.
From Venice, Cockerell visited Andrea Palladio's buildings along the Brenta ( river ) and at Vicenza, passing on to Mantua and the Palazzo del Te, Parma, Milan, Genoa and back to Rome from where he set off in March 1817 to return home via Paris.
As an archaeologist, Cockerell is remembered for removing the reliefs from the temple of Apollo at Bassae, near Phigalia, which are now in the British Museum.
By 1851 Cockerell was in poor health and spent that summer recuperating at his sister Anne Pollen's house in Somerset, from this time on his architectural practice virtually ceased.
Cockerell designed the Picture Room, now housing a fine display of paintings from Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery.
Kelly gained a stepbrother, Scott Windsor ( Toby Cockerell ), Viv's son from her first marriage, and a half-sister, Donna ( Sophie Jeffery ), from Vic and Viv's marriage.

Cockerell and Edward
The " Founder's Building " itself was designed by George Basevi, completed by C. R. Cockerell and opened in 1848 ; the entrance hall is by Edward Middleton Barry and was completed in 1875.
Between 1827 and 1828 Tite built the Scottish church in Regent Square, St Pancras, London, for Edward Irving, and ten years later collaborated with Charles Robert Cockerell in designing the London & Westminster Bank head office in Lothbury, also in the City.

Cockerell and Johnston
Johnston was introduced to 10th-century manuscripts, at the Fitzherbert Museum by Sir Sidney Cockerell and based his own calligraphy on them.

Cockerell and ed
The term was first used by Charles Robert Cockerell in a lecture he gave as Professor of Architecture to the Royal Academy in 1842 .< ref > ( ed.

Cockerell and s
The neoclassical building was designed by Sir Charles Robert Cockerell ( 1788 1863 ), who was later to complete the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, and build St. George ’ s Hall, Liverpool, and was later used as the Freemasons Hall.
Among them were Viv ( Deena Payne ), Kelly's father Vic Windsor ( Alun Lewis ), Scott ( Toby Cockerell ), and Kelly ’ s half-sister Donna ( Sophie Jeffery ).

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