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Edmunds and was
Edmunds returned with Martyn Farr on 27 February 1976 when the latter was able to dive from Chamber 24 into Chamber 25.
The East of England Regional Assembly was seated in Bury St. Edmunds until its abolition.
The local levies mobilised to stop them immediately changed sides, and by the following day Isabella was in Bury St Edmunds and shortly afterwards had swept inland to Cambridge.
Dave Edmunds ' band Love Sculpture included the Mars movement on their 1970 album " Forms and Feelings ," though this was only included in the U. S. version of the album due to Holst's family preventing worldwide release of the track.
PICA was founded in 1996 by Kristy Edmunds, formerly the Director of the Portland Art Museum's " Art on the Edge " program.
Rolls was introduced to Henry Royce by a friend at the Automobile Club, Henry Edmunds, who was also a director of Royce Ltd. Edmunds showed him Royce's car and arranged the historic meeting between Rolls and Royce at the Midland Hotel, Manchester, on 4 May 1904.
No one knows who the namesake of the island is, but some suppose that since Gosnold's mother-in-law and his second child, who died in infancy, were both named Martha, Gosnold perhaps named Martha's Vineyard after his daughter, who was christened in St James ' Church ( now St Edmundsbury Cathedral ), Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, England.
Mary died at Westhorpe Hall, Westhorpe, Suffolk, on 25 June 1533, and was first buried at the abbey at Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.
Her body was moved to nearby St Mary's Church, Bury St Edmunds, when the abbey was destroyed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
Eustace died suddenly the next year, in early August 1153, struck down ( so it was said ) by the wrath of God while plundering church lands near Bury St Edmunds.
Jacob's Mouse was a three-piece indie rock band from Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, England.
Police questioned and interviewed hundreds of potential suspects including one individual, Bret Michael Edmunds, a 26-year-old drifter who was pursued across the country but ultimately was cleared of suspicion in the case after being located in a West Virginia hospital suffering from a drug overdose.
In October 1985, George Harrison, Eric Clapton, Dave Edmunds, Lee Rocker, Rosanne Cash and Ringo Starr appeared with him on stage for a television special that was taped live at the Limehouse Studios in London called Blue Suede Shoes: A Rockabilly Session.
* Smiley Lewis was a rhythm and blues musician whose songs have been covered by Fats Domino, Elvis Presley, and Dave Edmunds.
A few days later, on 15 June 1381, the elder John Cavendish was seized at Bury St Edmunds and beheaded by a mob led by Jack Straw.
This was to no avail, however, and he was taken to the market place at Bury St. Edmunds and beheaded by a mob led by Jack Straw on 15 June 1381.
He was buried in Bury St. Edmunds.
In 1721, Henry Edmunds was elected as a Fellow by 9 votes to 3 ; his election was rejected by Provost George Carter, and on appeal, by the Visitor, Edmund Gibson, then Bishop of Lincoln.

Edmunds and only
Written by the only living student of both Wittgenstein and Popper, an eyewitness to the famous " poker " incident described above ( Edmunds & Eidinow ).
These included not only abbots from monastic houses inside his province, such as Æthelsige as abbot of St Augustine's Abbey in Canterbury, but also Baldwin as Abbot of Bury St. Edmunds and Thurstan as Abbot of Ely.
Because the two main singers in Rockpile had recording contracts with different record labels and managers, albums were always credited to either Lowe or Edmunds, so there is only one official Rockpile album, which was not released until the waning days of the collaboration: 1980's Seconds of Pleasure, featuring the Lowe songs " When I Write The Book " and " Heart ".
A total of 31 mints were employed in this recoinage — Bedford, Bristol, Bury St Edmunds, Canterbury, Carlisle, Chester, Colchester, Durham, Exeter, Gloucester, Hereford, Ilchester, Ipswich, Launceston, Leicester, Lincoln, London, Newcastle, Northampton, Norwich, Oxford, Pembroke, Salisbury, Shrewsbury, Stafford, Thetford, Wallingford, Wilton, Winchester, and York — but once the recoinage was completed only 12 mints were allowed to remain active.
Edward II coins were only minted at Berwick, Bury St Edmunds, Canterbury, Durham, and London.
Edmunds ' only acting role followed, as a band member in the David Essex movie, Stardust.
One of these songs, a Lynne composition, " Slipping Away ", became Edmunds ' only other US Top 40 hit, albeit just barely, spending a single week at # 39 while having a video clip in heavy rotation on MTV.
The judge agreed and, while the unpaid royalties only amounted to around £ 70, 000 to be divided between the four musicians, the associated court costs to be paid by Stevens and Edmunds amounted to £ 500, 000.
In 1796 he married Catherine Buck of Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk ; their only child Thomas was born in 1796.
The main religious houses in the medieval diocese were the Benedictine Abbeys of Bury St Edmunds, Wymondham, and St Benet's of Hulm, the cathedral priory of Norwich, along with the Cistercian Abbey of Sibton, the only Cistercian Abbey in East Anglia ( the ruins now privately owned by the Levett-Scrivener family ), and the abbeys of the Augustinian Canons at Wendling, Langley, and Laystone.
Of these, only the Belhaven Brewery remains open, with the surviving brews of the other three now being produced at Bury St Edmunds.
Chase Edmunds led a raid to capture the terrorist, only to discover that the targeted safehouse was an empty decoy.

Edmunds and member
Youngs was a member of St. Margaret's Church in Reydon, where he likely assisted the vicar, who also ministered at St Edmunds Church in Southwold.
Following success at another band competition ( Burysound in Bury St Edmunds ) in December 2000, Gish was made a full-time member of the band.
He received his education partly from Dr Richardson, author of the Dictionary of the English Language, and partly at the grammar school of Bury St Edmunds, where he obtained in 1826 an exhibition to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he became a member of the Cambridge Apostles.
He was also a member of Rockpile fronted by Dave Edmunds.

Edmunds and group
Edmunds offered to work with the group, and they entered the studio to record their self-titled debut album, Stray Cats, released in Britain in 1981 on Arista Records.
Bury St Edmunds is home to England's oldest Scout group, 1st Bury St Edmunds ( Mayors Own ).
File: Volunteer cyclist group Bury St Edmunds Suffolk England. jpg | Volunteer cyclist group, c. 1900-1910
The first group that Edmunds fronted was the Cardiff-based 1950s style rockabilly trio The Raiders formed in 1961, along with Brian ' Rockhouse ' Davies on bass and Ken Collier on drums.
Because Edmunds and Lowe signed to different record labels that year, they could not record as Rockpile until 1980, but many of their solo LPs ( such as Lowe's Labour of Lust and Edmunds ' own Repeat When Necessary ) were group recordings.
The fayre was originally staged near Bury St Edmunds, East Anglia in July 2005, and featured jousting, birds of prey, a medieval market, two ( semi-contact ) battle reenactments and a full-contact tournament and combat display by the Lancasters Armourie display group.

Edmunds and which
Great abbeys and priories like Glastonbury, Walsingham, Bury St. Edmunds, and Shaftesbury which had flourished as pilgrimage sites for many centuries, were soon reduced to ruins.
By road, Sudbury is served by the A131 which runs from near Little Waltham, north of Chelmsford in Essex, and the A134 which runs from Colchester in Essex, through Bury St Edmunds, past Thetford in Norfolk to its west, before merging with the A10 south of King's Lynn.
The men's and women's basketball teams play at the J. Ollie Edmunds Center, an on-campus arena which opened in 1974 and seats approximately 5, 000 spectators.
Remains of a Roman villa and over 6, 000 Bronze-Age artefacts, which are now in the Moyse's Hall Museum at Bury St Edmunds, indicate that it has been a centre of occupation since antiquity.
In 1790, there were plans for a link from Bury St Edmunds to the River Orwell at Mistley, which John Rennie surveyed, but it involved heavy engineering work, including a tunnel, and the estimated cost of £ 75, 000 could not be raised.
He rebuilt most of the locks and staunches in the 1830s, resulting in increased trade in coal and general merchandise which originated from Kings Lynn, but success was short lived, as the Eastern Union Railway opened a line from Ipswich to Bury St Edmunds in 1846, and decline was immediate.
Of the three, which were called Royce and had two cylinder engines, one was given to Ernest Claremont and the other sold to one of the other directors, Henry Edmunds.
However, others criticized the lack of interior room and reduced sight lines despite its full-sized exterior, and Edmunds noted that the eighth-generation Honda Accord ( which competes in the midsize category ) had superior driving dynamics and a more efficient design and offered almost as much interior space as the Taurus despite considerably smaller external dimensions.
* Broom's Barn, a 120 ha experimental farm near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, which is the UK's national centre for sugar beet research.
In 1974 they arranged for Dave Edmunds to produce their sixth album The New Favourites of Brinsley Schwarz which was more polished, and again received good reviews.
In 1882, the United States Congress enacted the Edmunds Act, which declared polygamy to be a felony.
Suffolk County Cricket Club play occasional games at the Victory Ground which is also the home ground of Bury St Edmunds Cricket Club.
Unlike most of England, which operates a two tier school system, state education in Bury St Edmunds and its catchment area is a three-tier system.
After Love Sculpture split, Edmunds had a UK Christmas Number 1 single in 1970 with " I Hear You Knocking ", a Smiley Lewis cover, which he came across while producing Shakin ' Stevens and the Sunsets ' first album entitled A Legend.
* Lydgate is a character in a 2003 mystery novel The Bastard's Tale, by Margaret Frazer, which takes place in Bury St. Edmunds in 1447.
The Icknield Way is depicted by a straight line from Salisbury to Bury St Edmunds which intersects the other three roads near Dunstable.
Among the works of art are seven Flemish tapestries depicting The Hunt of the Unicorn, Robert Campin's Mérode Altarpiece, and the Romanesque altar cross known as the Cloisters Cross or Bury St. Edmunds Cross, which was acquired under the curatorship of Thomas Hoving.
Shadwell was born at Stanton Hall, Norfolk, and educated at Bury St Edmunds School, and at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, which he entered in 1656.
In 1616 he was appointed to the rectory of Horningsheath ( near Bury St Edmunds, where he had previously worked ), which he held for twelve years.
In 1756, he entered Parliament as MP for Boroughbridge, a pocket borough ; several months later, he switched constituencies to Bury St Edmunds, which was controlled by his family.
Moyse's Hall Museum Bury St Edmunds discovered and facilitated the handing over of the collections following a VE Day ( Victory in Europe Day )/ VJ day ( Victory over Japan Day ) exhibition, to which the family had bought Brian's art and other personal artefacts.
In 1986, Lang signed a contract with an American record producer in Nashville, Tennessee, and received critical acclaim for her 1987 album, Angel with a Lariat, which was produced by Dave Edmunds.

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