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was and buried
The head was then fixed on a pole at Westminster, and the rest of the body was buried under the gallows.
The closet was faintly fragrant with lavender, and as Lucy shut the door an unhappy memory slipped into her mind, like a lavender ghost: Greg's house, on the day he was buried, and the child, pale, silent, baffled, watching the funeral guests with panicky eyes.
Johnston was initially buried in New Orleans.
Alp Arslan died four days later from this wound on 25 November 1072 in his 42nd year, and was taken to Merv to be buried next to his father Chaghri Beg.
Poirot was buried at Styles, and his funeral was arranged by his best friend Hastings and Hastings ' daughter Judith.
The other account is found in Deuteronomy 10: 6, where Moses is reported as saying that Aaron died at Moserah and was buried there.
He died in Toronto and was buried in Lakeview Cemetery in Sarnia, Ontario.
He was buried in the Cimetière de Montmartre in Paris.
Childebert had her body brought to Paris where she was buried alongside her father Clovis.
He died on 13 November 1170, possibly in Stendal, and was buried at Ballenstedt.
After his death, the king was buried in the church which he had built ; his original tomb has been lost, while his alleged remains are preserved in the shrine where he was reburied after being declared a saint ; his saintliness, however, was never very widely acknowledged outside the bishopric of Liège where he may still be venerated by tradition.
He was buried in a specially built shrine at Hasanabad in the Mazagaon area of Bombay.
His body was embalmed in wax, and buried at Sparta.
He died in Rome and was buried in Bergamo.
She died broken-hearted in July of the next year, at the castle of Poissy, and was buried in the Convent of St Corentin, near Nantes.
Alaric died soon after in Cosenza, probably of fever, at the age of about forty ( assuming again, a birth around 370 AD ), and his body was, according to legend, buried under the riverbed of the Busento.
Ealdred was back at York by 1069 ; he died there on 11 September 1069, and was buried in his episcopal cathedral.
Sybilla died in unrecorded circumstances at Eilean nam Ban ( Kenmore on Loch Tay ) in July, 1122 and was buried at Dunfermline Abbey.
He died there in 1249 and was buried at Melrose Abbey, Roxburghshire.

was and Hale
In 1911, Carnegie became a sympathetic benefactor to George Ellery Hale, who was trying to build the 100 inch ( 2. 5 m ) Hooker Telescope at Mount Wilson, and donated an additional ten million dollars to the Carnegie Institution with the following suggestion to expedite the construction of the telescope: " I hope the work at Mount Wilson will be vigorously pushed, because I am so anxious to hear the expected results from it.
The Boston Daily Advertiser was established in 1813 in Boston by Nathan Hale.
At a time when scientific research in the United States was still in its infancy, George Ellery Hale, a solar astronomer from the University of Chicago, founded the Mount Wilson Observatory in 1904.
In 1919, Hubble was offered a staff position in California by George Ellery Hale, the founder and director of the Carnegie Institution's Mount Wilson Observatory, near Pasadena, California, where he remained on the staff until his death.
Shortly before his death, Mount Palomar's giant reflector Hale Telescope was completed, and Hubble was the first astronomer to use it.
This was changed to vacuum deposited aluminum on glass, used on the 200-inch Hale telescope.
The accuracy problem was greatly improved in 1844 when William Hale modified the rocket design so that thrust was slightly vectored, causing the rocket to spin along its axis of travel like a bullet.
The Hale rocket removed the need for a rocket stick, travelled further due to reduced air resistance, and was far more accurate.
When I was nine or ten years old, the assigned reading in the class was “ The Man without a Country ", a short story by Edward Everett Hale.
The Revolutionary War hero Nathan Hale ( Yale 1773 ) was the prototype of the Yale ideal in the early 19th century: a manly yet aristocratic scholar, equally well-versed in knowledge and sports, and a patriot who regretted he had but one life to lose for his country.
* Hale Johnson was a major leader of the temperance movement.
From September 2005 until early 2008, the manager of the space shuttle program was Wayne Hale.
William Hale Thompson ( May 14, 1869 – March 19, 1944 ) was Mayor of Chicago from 1915 to 1923 and again from 1927 to 1931.
Thompson was born in Boston, Massachusetts to William Hale and Mary Ann Thompson, but his family moved to Chicago when he was only nine days old.
During the robbery, a traffic cop, Hale Keith, was severely wounded when Nelson spotted him, jumped onto a teller's desk, and gunned Keith down through a plate glass window.
Ryan White was born at St. Joseph Memorial Hospital in Kokomo, Indiana, to Jeanne Elaine Hale and Hubert Wayne White.
The screenplay is an adaptation by Bridget Boland, John Hale and Richard Sokolove of the 1948 play by Maxwell Anderson ; Anderson's blank verse format was retained for only portions of the screenplay, such as Anne's soliloquy in the Tower of London, but then again, Anderson did not use blank verse throughout the play either, only in portions of it.
At the urging of his wife, Ponzi pleaded guilty on November 1, 1920 to a single count before Judge Clarence Hale, who declared before sentencing, " Here was a man with all the duties of seeking large money.
Halley's approach was first detected by astronomers David Jewitt and G. Edward Danielson on 16 October 1982 using the 5. 1 m Hale telescope at Mount Palomar and a CCD camera.
* Anne of Cleves was played by Elvi Hale in the episode Anne of Cleves in the television series The Six Wives of Henry VIII
During World War II, Leadville was a popular spot for visits by soldiers at nearby Camp Hale, but only after the town acted to curb prostitution ; until then, the United States Army declared the town off-limits for its personnel.

was and churchyard
Thomas died on 9 November 1953 and his body was returned to Wales where he was buried at the village churchyard in Laugharne.
Following his death, Thomas ' body was brought back to Wales for burial in the village churchyard at Laugharne.
Yale died on July 8, 1721 in London, England, but was buried in the churchyard of the parish church of St. Giles in Wrexham, Wales.
In the Elsinore churchyard, two " clowns ", typically represented as " gravediggers ," enter to prepare Ophelia's grave, and although the coroner has ruled her death accidental so that she may receive Christian burial, they argue that it was a case of suicide.
The grave of Princess Yourievsky ( 1878-1959 ) who was a member of the ill-fated Russian Royal family and who lived in North Hayling for many years, may be found in St. Peter's churchyard ; and the grave of Scotsman George Glas Sandeman, nephew of the founder of Sandeman Port and second head of that company, is prominently featured in the north-east part of St. Mary's graveyard.
If any one of the sides makes the bung reach that end of the churchyard it is victorious .” The actual word hockey was mentioned centuries before, in 1363, when King Edward III of England issued a declaration banning a list of games: " moreover we ordain that you prohibit under penalty of imprisonment all and sundry from such stone, wood and iron throwing ; handball, football, or hockey ; coursing and cock-fighting, or other such idle games.
He was buried in the churchyard of St George's, Hanover Square.
When the churchyard of St. George's was redeveloped in the 1960s, his skull was disinterred ( in a manner befitting somebody who chose for himself the nickname of " Yorick "), partly identified by the fact that it was the only skull of the five in Sterne's grave that bore evidence of having been anatomised, and transferred to Coxwold Churchyard in 1969.
He was buried in the churchyard of St Mary's in the village of Burpham, Sussex.
Jordan was cremated and his ashes buried in the churchyard of St. James Church in Goose Creek, outside Charleston.
According to a letter published in the Rye and Battle Observer, Milligan's headstone was removed from St Thomas's churchyard following the burial of his wife Shelagh.
At his death at Kelmscott House in 1896 he was interred in the Kelmscott village churchyard.
A testimony to Knox was pronounced at his grave in the churchyard of St Giles ' by the Earl of Morton and newly-elected regent of Scotland: " Here lies one who never feared any flesh ".
She was buried on 15 March in the churchyard of St. Michael's, the local parish church.
T. Pelham Dale SSC, who was prosecuted and imprisoned for ritualist practices in 1876 and 1880, and thus regarded as a martyr by Anglo-Catholics, was the parish priest from 1881-1892 ; his grave can be seen under the trees on the eastern side of the churchyard.
In the latter engagement, Graves was severely wounded while leading his men through the churchyard cemetery of Bazentin-le-petit on July 20, 1916.
It was disposed of in a sewer, but then retrieved and thrown in the Thames, from which the London shipmen rescued it and had it buried in a churchyard.
In 1895 a monument was erected to his memory in the churchyard at Osteel where he was pastor from 1603 until 1617.
By her own prior arrangement, she was first buried in the Abbey's churchyard, as an act of repentance for her many misdeeds.
He was buried in the churchyard of St Martin-in-the-Fields, his funeral sermon being preached by his friend Bishop Gilbert Burnet.

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