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Stow Persons ( Englewood Cliff, N. J .: Prentice-Hall, 1963 ).
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Among these may be mentioned: the Mazatzal Mountain region in Gila and Maricopa Counties, Arizona ; Red Feather Lakes, near Ft Collins, Colorado ; Amethyst Mountain, Texas ; Yellowstone National Park ; Delaware County, Pennsylvania ; Haywood County, North Carolina ; Deer Hill and Stow, Maine and in the Lake Superior region of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Ontario in Canada.
Teacher training was interrupted during World War II between 1941 and 1943, when Alexander accompanied children and teachers of the Little School to Stow, Massachusetts to join his brother.
Oxford was a champion jouster, travelled widely throughout Italy and France, and is recorded by Stow as having introduced various Italian fashions to the English court.
Andrewes liked to move among the people, yet found time to join a society of antiquaries, of which Walter Raleigh, Sir Philip Sidney, Burleigh, Arundel, the Herberts, Saville, Stow and Camden were members.
Many bronze objects, such as swords, spearheads, arrows, axes, palstaves, knives, daggers, rapiers, armour, decorative equipment ( in particular for horses ) and fragments of sheet bronze, are entrusted to St Edmundsbury heritage service, housed at West Stow just outside Bury St Edmunds.
2011 began on a dark note when Giants fan Bryan Stow was critically injured after being attacked by Dodgers fans in the Dodger Stadium parking lot on Opening Day.
Historian John Stow, writing in his Survey of London ( 1598 ), noted ' this place is called the Star Chamber, because the roof thereof is decked with the likeness of stars gilt ...' The chamber's description is regarded as the most likely explanation for its name by the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary.
Stow-on-the-Wold, originally called Stow St. Edward or Edwardstow after the town's patron saint Edward, probably Edward the Martyr, is said to have originated as an Iron Age fort on this defensive position on a hill.
It is likely that Maugersbury was the primary settlement of the parish before Stow was built as a marketplace on the hilltop nearer to the crossroads, to take advantage of passing trade.
The aim of these annual fairs was to establish Stow as a place to trade, and to remedy the unpredictable passing trade.
Many alleyways known as " tures " run between the buildings of Stow into the market square ; these once were used in the herding of sheep into the square to be sold.
It is still a very popular Fair, with the roads around Stow being blocked for many hours on the day.
The famously abrasive columnist and restaurant reviewer A A Gill in his 2005 book The Angry Island called Stow " catastrophically ghastly " and " the worst place in the world ", resulting in an angry response from the town's mayor.
Given its exposed spot on the top of Stow Hill, the town is often referred to with the couplet " Stow on the Wold, where the winds blow cold and the cooks can't roast their dinners ", but there is no source for this.
The Fosse Way ( A429 ), which runs from Exeter to Lincoln ; the A424, which runs from Burford, into the A44 and into Evesham ; and the A436, which connects Cheltenham and Gloucester with Stow.
From 1881 until 1962, Stow was served by Stow-on-the-Wold railway station which was on the Great Western Railway's Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway.
Rankine is now a lecturer in music at Stow College in Glasgow, and worked with Belle & Sebastian on their debut album, Tigermilk in 1996.
Stow and J
* A Survey of London, Vol I Stow, J p427: Originally, 1598: this edn-London, A. Fullarton & Co, 1890
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" He was also a history enthusiast, and in 1559 suggested to the tailor John Stow to become a chronicler ( as Stow recalled in 1604 ).
Shiloh was incorporated as a borough by an Act of the New Jersey Legislature on April 9, 1929, from portions of Hopewell Township and Stow Creek Township, based on the results of a referendum held on ( May 16, 1929 ).
The Veterans Memorial Bridge ( also known as the Chautauqua Lake Bridge ) was completed on October 30, 1982 and joins Bemus Point to Stow on I-86 ( at the time known as Route 17 ).
Galashiels Academy is the high school in Galashiels, Scotland, that serves the surrounding area as well as Stow ( which does not have its own high school ).
While still at Oxford, Gilpin anonymously published A Dialogue upon the Gardens ... at Stow in Buckinghamshire ( 1748 ).
The geldable lands were divided into two quarter sessions divisions: Bungay ( Hundreds of Blything, Mutford And Launditch and Wangford ); and Ipswich ( Bosmere and Claydon, Hartismere, Hoxne, Samford and Stow ).
Bray was born in Adelaide, South Australia, the elder son of Harry Midwinter Bray ( 1879 – 1965 ), an Adelaide stockbroker, and his wife, Gertrude Eleanore Stow ( members of whose family were Congregationalist missionaries in South Australia ).
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