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Clayton and became
The bequest of a collection of books, engraved gems, coins, prints and drawings by Clayton Mordaunt Cracherode in 1800 did much to raise the Museum's reputation ; but Montagu House became increasingly crowded and decrepit and it was apparent that it would be unable to cope with further expansion.
On May 11, 1892, African-American jockey Alonzo " Lonnie " Clayton, age 15, became the youngest rider to win the Derby.
Wide receivers Mark Clayton ( 73 receptions, 1, 389 yards, 18 touchdowns ) and Mark Duper ( 71 receptions, 1, 306 yards, 8 touchdowns ) became the first teammates ever to each gain over 1, 300 receiving yards in one season, while Clayton's 18 touchdown catches broke the NFL single season record of 17 set by Don Hutson in 1942.
* Christopher Clayton, Royal Navy pilot during the Falklands War, who later became an admiral
In 1969, under the leadership of publisher Harold Grumhaus and editor Clayton Kirkpatrick ( 1915 – 2004 ), the Tribunes past conservative partisanship became history.
He later went through a junction of Cherokee trails called Dividings ( which would later become Clayton ), and then traveled north to an area called Passover ( which would later became Mountain City ).
Durante became a vaudeville star and radio personality by the mid-1920s, with a trio called Clayton, Jackson and Durante.
Much later, after Clayton had grown to include the Dividings, two of the old Cherokee trails became the main roads for Clayton and the county: U. S. 441 and U. S. 76.
George Northing was made director of the executive board ; Gwynn Williams became music director ; Harold Tudor was Director of Publicity and W. Clayton Russon, a local businessman and High Sheriff of Merionethshire became President.
He then became an articled clerk with the firm of Robinson Cox ( now Clayton Utz ) and was admitted to practice in Western Australia in 1970.
Following Welch's retirement from General Electric, he became an adviser to private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice and to the chief executive of IAC, Barry Diller.
He spent his school summer holidays at the home of his Uncle Tom and Aunt Lizzie in Clayton, his own family having moved to Huddersfield when Henry ceased to be an executioner, and he became very close to his uncle.
Beginning in 1873, the village was served by the Clayton Division of the Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg Railroad ( RW & O ), which later became a part of the New York Central network.
The Village of Clayton became the main railroad terminus for the Thousand Islands resort region, during its heyday at the turn of the twentieth century.
Sir Robert Clayton, a Lord Mayor of the City of London and wealthy merchant became owner in the mid-1650s and after his death in 1707 the island was sold to William Benson, a Whig Member of Parliament and architect.
A poem on the fireplace in the lobby of the Crescent Hotel is attributed to Clayton Tourism rose dramatically in Eureka Springs after the railroad was completed ; it became the center for a variety of entertainments.
Powell Clayton, a 35-year-old former Brigadier General in the Union Army and former Democrat, became the head of the Arkansas Republicans during Reconstruction.
A series of papers in the 1970s by Donald D. Clayton based on the assumption of an exponentially declining neutron fluence as a function of the number of iron seed so exposed became the standard model of the S-process and remained so until the details of AGB-star nucleosynthesis became advanced enough that they became a standard model based on the stellar structure models.
Frick sold the land to Clayton Mark that became Marktown, one of two planned worker communities in the Chicagoland area.
From then on the Clayton cousins became McLane ’ s principle political opponents in Delaware.

Clayton and county
When Clay County was created as Arkansas's 67th county on March 24, 1873 ( alongside Baxter County ), it was named Clayton County after John M. Clayton, then a member of the Arkansas Senate and the brother of then-U. S.
In either case, the name change was apparently inspired by lingering distrust of Powell Clayton within the county, due to his declaring martial law and suspending elections there in 1868 when he was Governor of Arkansas and the area was still part of Greene County.
There are also a number of state-owned wildlife management areas, such as the one at Sny Magill Creek, where Clayton County also maintains a county park.
Its county seat is Clayton.
Oilman and rancher Clayton W. Williams, Sr., served for sixteen years as a Pecos county commissioner.
The county is divided into twenty-three townships: Capital, Clayton, Cross Plains, Fair, Foster, German, Grandview, Kassel, Kaylor, Kuim, Liberty, Mittown, Molan, Oak Hollow, Pleasant, Sharon, Silver Lake, Starr, Susquehanna, Sweet, Valley, Wittenberg, Wolf Creek.
Its county seat is Clayton.
Gloucester County is home to the first county based EMS agency in New Jersey providing services to the municipalities of Logan, Woolwich, Swedesboro, East Greenwich, Gibbstown, Paulsboro, West Deptford, National Park, Mantua, Pitman, Glassboro, Clayton, Woodbury, South Harrison and Wenonah.
Its county seat is Clayton.
Clayton said the site " a half day's ride from the city " and more accessible than other villages in the county.
The first $ 38, 000 courthouse in the newly defined county opened December 1878 west of Hanley Road and north of Clayton Road.
Clayton County is a county located in the U. S. state of Iowa.
The county seat is Clayton.
Among other things, Ranger Nick was responsible for arranging for telephone lines to be run from Clayton, Georgia to the Pine Mountain community in the eastern part of the county.
Clayton County is a county located in the U. S. state of Georgia.
Clayton County is within the five-county core of the Atlanta Metropolitan Area, and is the county in which most of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport lies.
The county was established in 1858 and named in honor of Augustin Smith Clayton ( 1783 – 1839 ), who served in the United States House of Representatives from 1832 until 1835.
Clayton is a town in and the county seat of Barbour County, Alabama, United States.
Clayton has been the county seat since 1834, two years after the creation of Barbour County.
Clayton is located geographically in the center of the county.
File: Barbour County Alabama Courthouse. JPG | The Barbour County Courthouse is located in Clayton which is the county seat of Barbour County.
Eufaula is the largest city in Barbour County, Alabama, United States, even if the county seat is Clayton.

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