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Bridgeman and got
His successor in November 1911, Sir Francis Bridgeman also got the job by default.

Bridgeman and into
In 1696 Henry Every ( or Avery ), using the assumed name Henry Bridgeman, brought his ship Fancy, loaded with pirate's loot, into Nassau harbor.
These land parcels were bordered by what is now Graham Road, Roghan Road, Hawbridge Street / Lacey Road and Bridgeman Road, and were subsequently subdivided into smaller land parcels and sold.
Mavis and Lambert ( 1990, p. 156 ) wrote of this garden: “ at Rousham the views out into the countryside are as important as those in the garden .” Other estate gardens Bridgeman had a hand in planning include Claremont
Kent's theme was to create and transform the natural landscape created by Bridgeman into an Augustan landscape to recall the glories and atmosphere of ancient Rome.
In the case, Bridgeman Art Library questioned the Corel Corporation's rights to redistribute their high quality reproductions of old paintings that had already fallen into the public domain due to age, claiming that it infringed on their copyrights.

Bridgeman and under
The first coherent landscaping was undertaken by Charles Bridgeman for Queen Caroline ; under the supervision of Charles Withers, the Surveyor-General of Woods and Forests, who took some credit for it.
Lady Ida Bridgeman was the last member of the family to live at the Hall before her death in 1936 and the Gardens were well looked after again under her care.
* The court case Bridgeman Art Library Ltd. v. Corel Corporation established that exact photographic copies of public domain works of art are not copyrightable under United States law.
W. C. Bridgeman, the Home Secretary, said that he had directly ordered the police to arrest the ISDL members under the Restoration of Order in Ireland Act 1920, and that he had consulted the Attorney General who considered it perfectly legal.
The most influential figure in the later development of the English landscape garden was Lancelot " Capability " Brown ( 1716 – 1783 ) who began his career in 1740 as a gardener at Stowe under Charles Bridgeman, then succeeded William Kent in 1748.

Bridgeman and house
The first house at Bowood was built circa 1725 on the site of a hunting lodge, by the former tenant Sir Orlando Bridgeman, 2nd Baronet, who had purchased the property from the Crown.
Scampston Hall is a country house in North Yorkshire, England, with a serpentine park designed by Charles Bridgeman and Capability Brown.

Bridgeman and park
The Gardens were designed as a serpentine park by Capability Brown from 1758 onwards, overlying an earlier formal design attributed to Charles Bridgeman.
Sir Henry Bridgeman commissioned Capability Brown to landscape the park.
The serpentine park of about 1. 7 square kilometres was laid out first by Charles Bridgeman and later by Lancelot " Capability " Brown in 1772.

Bridgeman and were
Cellier and Bridgeman wrote in 1914 that, prior to the creation of the Savoy operas, amateur actors were treated with contempt by professionals.
It was during this period that the former gardens designed by Charles Bridgeman were swept away in favour of a more natural looking landscape.
The family estates, including Weston Park, were inherited by his nephew, Sir Henry Bridgeman, 5th Baronet, of Great Lever ( see below ).
Among his contemporaries and intimate friends were Hezekiah Burton, Sir Samuel Morland, who was distinguished as a mathematician, and Orlando Bridgeman, who became Lord Keeper of the Great Seal.
Wimpole Hall's grounds were laid out and modified by landscape designers such as George London and Henry Wise ( 1693 – 1705 ), Charles Bridgeman ( 1720s ), Robert Greening ( 1740s ), ' Capability ' Brown ( 1767 ), and Humphry Repton ( 1801 – 1809 ).
Kensington Gardens were laid out by Henry Wise and Charles Bridgeman with fashionable features including the Round Pond, formal avenues and a sunken " Dutch " garden.
Adjacent to ' The Bridgeman Arms Inn ' were several cottages, used for servants, and an estate office for the Earl of Bradford who then owned much of the land in Castle Bromwich.
A contemporary of Bridgeman ’ s, Horace Walpole, describing his colleague ’ s design style in his essay On Modern Gardening, wrote: ‘ though he still adhered much to strait walks with high clipt hedges, they were only his great lines ; the rest he diversified by wilderness, and with loose groves of oak, though still within surrounding hedges ’ ( Amherst, 1896, p. 249 ).
On the 18 December 1716 Gibbs joined the " Vandykes clubb " ( sic ), also called the Club of St Luke for " Virtuosi in London " fellow architects that were members included William Kent and William Talman, other notable members with who Gibbs would later work included the garden designer Charles Bridgeman and the sculptor John Michael Rysbrack who sculpted many of the memorials Gibbs designed.
In March 1721 Charles Bridgeman, James Thornhill, John Wootton and Gibbs were all travelling together from London to Wimpole Hall where they were all working for the Edward Harley Earl of Oxford, Thornhill recalled they drank Harley's " healths over and over, as well in our civil as bacchanalian hours " and talked " of building, pictures and may be towards the close of politics or religion ".
The new style that became known as the English garden was invented by landscape designers William Kent and Charles Bridgeman, working for wealthy patrons, including Richard Temple, 1st Viscount Cobham, Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, and banker Henry Hoare ; men who had large country estates, were members of the anti-royalist Whig Party, had classical educations, were patrons of the arts, and had taken the Grand tour to Italy, where they had seen the Roman ruins and Italian landscapes they reproduced in their gardens.
In the 1730s, William Kent and James Gibbs were appointed to work with Bridgeman, who died in 1738.

Bridgeman and by
After 1924 Beatty, supported by the First Lord of the Admiralty Bridgeman, clashed with the new Chancellor of the Exchequer, Winston Churchill, over the number of cruisers required by the Royal Navy.
She commissioned works such as terracotta busts of the kings and queens of England from Michael Rysbrack, and supervised a more naturalistic design of the royal gardens by William Kent and Charles Bridgeman.
The Act was sponsored by Senator George H. Pendleton, Democratic Senator of Ohio, and written by Dorman Bridgeman Eaton, a staunch opponent of the patronage system who was later first chairman of the United States Civil Service Commission.
The front office was unable to convince him otherwise and on June 16, 1975, the Bucks pulled a mega-trade by sending Abdul-Jabbar to the Lakers for Elmore Smith, Junior Bridgeman, Brian Winters and David Meyers.
His influence was so great that the contributions to the English garden made by his predecessors Charles Bridgeman and William Kent are often overlooked ; even Kent's apologist Horace Walpole allowed that Kent had been followed by " a very able master ".
Robbie Brennan temporarily replaced original drummer Bridgeman until June 1969 and Cheevers was replaced by the 16-year-old Gary Moore in early 1968, and the band recorded a single, " New Places, Old Faces " / " Misdemeanour Dream Felicity ", for the Irish ' Song Records ' label ( the only released recording of Lynott with Skid Row ).
There are two major types of saccadic suppression ( or masking ), the first is flash suppression ( the inability to see a flash of light during a saccade-see Dodge 1900 ) and the second is saccadic suppression of image displacement which is characterized by the inability to perceive whether a target has moved or not during a saccade ( Bridgeman, G., Hendry, D., & Stark, L., 1975 ).
While travelling from Cambridge to Ely, where he had been collated in 1668 by Sir Orlando Bridgeman to a prebendal stall, he caught a severe cold, and died at Ely.
* Paintings by Thomas Stothard ( Bridgeman Art Library )
Kensington Gardens was carved out of the western section of Hyde Park and designed c. 1728-1738 by Henry Wise and Charles Bridgeman, with fashionable features including the Round Pond, formal avenues and a sunken Dutch garden.
Charles Bridgeman created the Serpentine in the 1730s by damming the eastern outflow of the River Westbourne from Hyde Park for Queen Caroline.
His grandfather Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, had previously been granted the lease by Charles II.
A daughter tree was planted ceremonially in 1951 near the site of the original Royal Oak by the Orlando Bridgeman, 5th Earl of Bradford, who was the owner of Boscobel House at the time, to mark the tercentenary of Charles II's escape.
The project offers music, digital video footage shot over the course of six months by Catto and Bridgeman, images, rhythms and spoken word content.
George Bridgeman, 2nd Earl of Bradford, by Sir George Hayter
John Bridgeman by Johann Closterman

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