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Sackville and 2001
His last tournament victory was the 2001 Canadian Open Chess Championship in Sackville, New Brunswick.
Before amalgamation into the Halifax Regional Municipality in 1996, Lower Sackville was an unincorporated part of Halifax County ( 2001 pop.
He won the Canadian Grade 7 Championship in 2001, and in the Canadian Youth Championship 2001 ( Boys ' U14 Group ), held at Sackville, New Brunswick, he took clear first with 6. 5 / 7.

Sackville and many
As the 19th century progressed, a great many changes took place on Sackville Street, resulting in the gradual erosion of the unified classical street created by the Wide Streets Commission and its replacement with an ostentatious high-Victorian boulevard, made up of elaborate individually designed buildings.
In the 17th century, John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester ( 1647 – 80 ) was notorious for obscene verses, many of which were published posthumously in compendiums of poetry by him and other Restoration rakes such as Sir Charles Sedley, Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset, and George Etherege.
Sackville acquired a large fortune through his real estate dealings in many counties, as well as his investments in the iron foundry business.
There have been two houses at Buckhurst for many centuries: the older Buckhurst House, now no more, and the present day ‘’ Buckhurst Park ’’: both have been in the hands of the Sackville family for generations ; today Earl De La Warr, a member of the family, lives there.
Sackville became the main patron of the Kent team and captained the side in many matches until 1745 at least, but he is not mentioned in the sources after that.
Sackville North's name was in common usage for many years but was not officially adopted by the Geographical Names Board of New South Wales until 1996.

Sackville and members
Buckingham was one of the archetypal Restoration rakes, part of the " Merry Gang " of courtiers whose other members included John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, Sir Charles Sedley, Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset, and the playwrights William Wycherley and George Etherege.
Dubbed the " Merry Gang " by poet Andrew Marvell, their members included George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, Sir Charles Sedley, Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset, and the playwrights William Wycherley and George Etherege.

Sackville and have
Sackville Street prospered in the 1800s, though an invisible boundary seems to have been maintained for some time between the Upper and Lower street.
* China Radio International, an important user of RCI Sackville will have to find a new shortwave relay site.
The play had been written by Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton for the 1561 / 2 Christmas festivities at the Inner Temple in London and appears to have been selected because it was a story of a divided kingdom descending into anarchy that was applicable to the situation in Ireland at the time of the performance.
In 1566, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, it came into the possession of her cousin Thomas Sackville whose descendants the Earls and Dukes of Dorset and Barons Sackville have lived there since 1603.
The eye is especially drawn to some of Reynolds ' portraits in the house: a late self-portrait in doctoral robes and the depictions of Samuel Johnson, Oliver Goldsmith and Wang-y-tong, a Chinese page boy who was taken into the Sackville household have particular character and force.
For Sackville-West, Sissinghurst and its garden rooms came to be a poignant and romantic substitute for Knole, reputedly the largest house in Britain, which as the only child of Lionel, the 3rd Lord Sackville she would have inherited had she been a male, but which had passed to her cousin as the male heir.
They appear to have been acquitted, for when in 1663 Sir Charles Sedley was tried for a gross breach of public decency in Covent Garden, Sackville, who had been one of the offenders, according to Samuel Pepys was asked by the Lord Chief Justice " whether he had so soon forgot his deliverance at that time, and that it would have more become him to have been at his prayers begging God's forgiveness than now running into such courses again.
The rebuilding of the church does not seem to have been finished until 1672 and the Sackville Chapel was not completed for another eight years.
The US government-operated international broadcaster Voice of America no longer has call signs assigned to it ; however, Radio Canada International's transmitter in Sackville, New Brunswick is still assigned CKCX-SW. Privately-operated shortwave stations ( such as WWCR and CFRX ) also have call signs.
* Capital city: Moncton, New Brunswick ; Sackville, New Brunswick ; and Amherst, Nova Scotia have been suggested as capitals due to their central locations.
Provinces which currently have some EastLink service are: Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick ( limited to Sackville area ) Newfoundland and Labrador, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta, British Columbia.
It appears that Surrey won the game in view of a comment made by Lord John Philip Sackville in a letter to Richmond dated Saturday 14 September: " I wish you had let Ridgeway play instead of your stopper behind it might have turned the match in our favour ".
The memorial is placed where Fort Sackville is believed to have been established ; no archeological evidence has shown the exact location, but it is undoubtedly within the park's boundaries.
In 1745, Sackville wrote a letter to the Duke of Richmond after Sussex had lost to Surrey and said: " I wish you had let Ridgeway play instead of your stopper behind it might have turned the match in our favour ".
Very few of this type have ever been built-RCI Sackville may have 2 HRRS type antennas — perhaps the only ones in North America.

Sackville and on
Congregation ceremonies were held at the University of Manchester on Oxford Road, but in 1991 the first congregation ceremony was held in the Great Hall at UMIST itself in the Sackville Street Building.
The New Brunswick towns of St. Andrews, Blacks Harbour, St. Martins and Sackville as well as the Nova Scotia towns of Amherst, Parrsboro, Truro, Windsor, Wolfville, Annapolis Royal, and Digby are also on the bay.
From Moncton, the highway continues southeast for to a junction at Aulac on the New Brunswick – Nova Scotia border ( near Sackville ) where the Trans-Canada Highway splits into the main route continuing to the nearby border with Nova Scotia as Route 2, and a route designated as Route 16 which runs east to the Confederation Bridge at Cape Jourimain.
A small private church dedicated to St. Audrey was built by Lord Sackville Cecil, son of the Marquess of Salisbury, on the site of Olive's Mill in 1889 ; The church and other mill premises came into the possession of the parish in 1908, and since 1925 the former Olive's Mill House has been used as the rectory.
Reginald Sackville, seventh Earl De La Warr, decided to transform what was then a village on a hill around its church into an exclusive seaside resort, which he named Bexhill-on-Sea.
Mount Allison University is a United Church-affiliated, but non-sectarian university which was established at Sackville, New Brunswick on January 19, 1843.
However due to the limited lands owned by the Gardiners in this area, the Rotunda Hospital sited just off the street at the bottom of Parnell Square-also developed by the family-was not built on axis with Sackville Street, terminating the vista.
Trams on Sackville Street
To guard against Mi ' kmaq, Acadian and French attacks on the new Protestant settlements, British fortifications were erected in Halifax ( 1749 ), Dartmouth ( 1750 ), Bedford ( Fort Sackville ) ( 1751 ), Lunenburg ( 1753 ) and Lawrencetown ( 1754 ).
To guard against Mi ' kmaq, Acadian, and French attacks on the new Protestant settlements, British fortifications were erected in Halifax ( 1749 ), Dartmouth ( 1750 ), Bedford ( Fort Sackville ) ( 1749 ), Dartmouth ( 1750 ), Lunenburg ( 1753 ) and Lawrencetown ( 1754 ).
* It is sometimes claimed that British officers tossed a coin over whether they would go on a killing spree in Croke Park or loot Sackville Street ( Dublin's main street, now called O ' Connell Street ) instead: see, for example, Ernie O ' Malley, " Bloody Sunday ," Dublin's Fighting Story 1916 – 1921 ( Tralee: The Kerryman, 1949 ); but there is no evidence to support this claim.
In 1803, a committee formed by then Archbishop John Thomas Troy bought Lord Annesley's townhouse on the corner of Marlborough Street and Elephant Lane ( now called Cathedral Street ), within sight of the city's premier thoroughfare, Sackville Street ( now O ' Connell Street ) as the location for the planned new pro-cathedral, pending the erection, when funds and the law allowed, of a full Roman Catholic cathedral.
Ultimately the northside was laid out centred on two major squares, Rutland Square ( now called Parnell Square for Charles Stewart Parnell ), at the top end of Sackville Street, and Mountjoy Square.
In June 1758 Sackville was second in command of a British expedition led by Marlborough which attempted an amphibious Raid on St Malo.
As the disrupted French began to fall back on Minden, Ferdinand called for a British cavalry charge to complete the victory, but Sackville withheld permission for their advance.
As Le Bon Marché evolved into a department store in the early 1850s, Delany's New Mart opened in 1853 in Dublin, Ireland on Sackville Street ( now O ' Connell Street ).
Afterwards Sir Richard Sackville, the treasurer, came up to Ascham and told him that " a fond schoolmaster " had, by his brutality, made him hate learning, much to his loss, and as he had now a young son, whom he wished to be learned, he offered, if Ascham would name a tutor, to pay for the education of their respective sons under Ascham's orders, and invited Ascham to write a treatise on " the right order of teaching ".
In 1914, he published Pittura e scultura futuriste ( dinamismo plastico ) explaining the aesthetics of the group: “ While the impressionists make a table to give one particular moment and subordinate the life of the table to its resemblance to this moment, we synthesize every moment ( time, place, form, color-tone ) and thus build the table .” He exhibited in London, together with the group, in 1912 ( Sackville Gallery ) and 1914 ( Doré Gallery ): the two exhibitions made a deep impression on a number of young English artists, in particular C. R. W.
Lady Anne's first husband was Richard Sackville, 3rd Earl of Dorset, whom she married on 27 February 1609.
The reading of the proclamation by Patrick Pearse outside the General Post Office ( GPO ) on Sackville Street ( now called O ' Connell Street ), Dublin's main thoroughfare, marked the beginning of the Rising.
Charles Jr. worked extensively on projects in London and East Anglia with fellow architect Robert Richardson Banks ( 1812 – 72 ), working from an office in Sackville Street, and then collaborated with his shorter-lived brother Edward on several schemes.
All shortwave transmissions ( including those from the Sackville Relay Station ), satellite, and all broadcast programming ended on June 26, 2012.
They constructed the earliest Methodist church in the colonies that later joined Canada at Point de Bute on the Aulac Ridge, a few kilometers from Sackville, in 1788.

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