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Cardonald and Stewarts
His granddaughter and heiress, Marion Stewart ( daughter of Isabella Norwald of Cardonald and Sir William Stewart of Castlemilk ), married Allan Stewart, establishing the line of Stewarts of Cardonald.
The Cardonald Stewarts were a junior branch of the House of Stewart.
The line of the Stewarts of Cardonald ended with Allan's great-grandson, James Stewart of Cardonald ( 1512 – 1584 ).

Cardonald and had
As he had no issue, the lands of Cardonald passed to his sister's son, Walter Stewart, 1st Lord Blantyre.
Govan has had several local newspapers over the years such as the Govan Chronicle and Govan Press published by the Cossar Family ( 1851-1983 & 2006 – present ) which also serves the communities of Cardonald, Penilee and Hillington and the Govan Post ( 1983 – 1988 ) published by Cook, Paton & Co. of Paisley, now part of Dunfermline Press.
In the intervening years, both had begun aborted courses at Glasgow University and Cardonald College respectively, and had enjoyed limited success with separate musical projects.
On 17 November 2011 Cardonald College announced it had entered merger talks with Anniesland College and on 28 March 2012 it was announced by Cardonald College principal, Susan Walsh, that a merger with Cardonald College, Anniesland College and Langside College was " highly likely.
Gilbert had expected to secure the Commendatorship, however Allan obtained it through the influence of his relative, Captain James Stewart of Cardonald.

Cardonald and their
The area was part of Renfrewshire until 1926 when the villages of Cardonald, Halfway and Crookston and their surrounding farmland were annexed to Glasgow.

Cardonald and at
His family resided at the Place of Cardonald for generations, and retained lands in Cardonald until the 20th century.
who once hailed from the Helen Street district of Govan but who are now based further to the west at Cardonald.
Undeterred, she was still resolute in her aim to study at Art School, so she spent another year at Cardonald College, finally achieving the results needed to pursue her dream of attending the Glasgow School of Art.
He left school at the age of 16 without any qualifications and worked for his father as a painter and decorator ; however, he continued his education by attending night classes at Cardonald College in Glasgow.

Cardonald and ),
Cardonald has three churches: Cardonald Parish Church ( Church of Scotland ) ( built 1889 ), Hillington Park ( Church of Scotland ) and Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church ( built 1938 ).

Cardonald and .
Cardonald (, ) is an outlying suburb of the Scottish city of Glasgow.
In the 15th century the lands of Cardonald were the property of Johannes Norwald or Normanville, Dominus of Cardownalde.
Allan Stewart of Cardonald, the first Stewart of Cardonald, was the younger son of John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox.
In 1926, Glasgow Corporation bought the Cardonald estates, They gave opportunity to private development replicating Kelvindale cottage flats By Western Heritable and Council housing in the area.
Cardonald was divided into North and South Cardonald, with the south mostly composed of owner-occupied and privately-rented cottage flats, whilst the north was made up of owner-occupied and rented accommodation owned by Glasgow Corporation, divided by the new Paisley Road West, including terraced houses, flats, and semi-detached property.
Cardonald College, one of Scotland's largest further education colleges, opened in 1972, and rapidly expanded in recent times.
The district is served by Cardonald railway station on the Inverclyde Line and by numerous bus routes.
* Cardonald, Glasgow.

Stewarts and had
Dorman Long, South Durham and Stewarts and Lloyds had merged as British Steel and Tube Ltd before vesting took place.
During the latter decades of the nineteenth century Battersea had developed into a major town railway centre with two locomotive works at Nine Elms and Longhedge and three important motive power depots ( Nine Elms, Stewarts Lane and Battersea ) all situated within a relatively small area in the north of the district.
By 1375, the king had commissioned John Barbour to write the poem, The Brus, a history intended to bolster the public image of the Stewarts as the genuine heirs of Robert I.
Whereas in Fine Fare's Scottish and Teesside heartland, Yellow Packs had merely been a successful product launch, they acquired a semi-iconic status in Ireland, and were extended throughout Quinnsworth's affiliate chains within the Power supermarket group ( such as Stewarts and Crazy Prices in Northern Ireland and Crazy Prices in the Republic ).
In addition to exercising considerable power and wealth, the Albany Stewarts were potential heirs to the throne ; Murdoch's grandfather was King Robert II of Scotland, who had founded the Stewart dynasty.
This may well have left James with the suspicion that the Albany Stewarts had personal designs on the throne of Scotland.

Stewarts and their
In the spring and summer of 1423 their attempts to resolve the issue met with little response from the Scots, clearly influenced by the Albany Stewarts and adherents.
The Stewarts greatly increased their holdings in the west, in Atholl and in the far north: the earldoms of Fife and Menteith went to Robert II's second surviving son Robert, the earldoms of Buchan and Ross ( along with the lordship of Badenoch ) to his fourth son Alexander and the earldoms of Strathearn and Caithness to the eldest son of his second marriage, David.
The Engine Arm and Stewarts Aqueducts were built to carry their respective canals over the new mainline.
The fuel was pumped through steel pipes made by Stewarts and Lloyds at their ( then ) recently completed, integrated iron & steel tube-making plant at Corby, Northamptonshire.
The titles of Baron Mountjoy and Viscount Mountjoy have been created several times for members of two separate families: the Blounts and their descendants and the Stewarts of Ramelton and their descendants.
The Albany Stewarts took James's lands under their own control, depriving the king of income and any of the regalia of his position.
At this stage, it is probable that the king felt unable to move against the Albany Stewarts while Murdoch's brother, John Stewart, Earl of Buchan and Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas were fighting the English in France alongside their Dauphinist French allies.
The MacNaughtens did not put their faith in the Stewarts and opted more for the freedom that the presbyterian church offered.
The historical setting, which provides many plot elements and prominent characters for the novels, is the incessant jockeying for position through treaties, alliances of convenience, political marriages, wars, and even piracy, among the English Tudors, the Holy Roman Empire of the Habsburgs, the French Valois, the Ottoman Empire of Suleiman the Magnificent, and their respective secular and religious allies, including the Stewarts of Scotland, the Knights of St. John, the corsairs of North Africa, and even Tsar Ivan the Terrible of Russia.
One exception to this were the frequent balancing runs between their home depot of Eastleigh and their day-time out-stations of either Clapham Junction yard or Stewarts Lane depot in readiness for night-time postal and newspaper trains from Waterloo.
A few months later the Stewarts were forced from their home by a mob, and they relocated to Winter Quarters, Nebraska.

Stewarts and seat
It was the seat of the Stewarts of Horn Head from the 18th century until 1935.

Stewarts and at
The Stewarts once resided at a castle in nearby Renfrew.
The new Victoria station proved to be unexpectedly popular for both the main companies, and by 1862 there were frequent delays due to congestion at the Stewarts Lane Junction.
The London Brighton and South Coast Railway opened a new high level line between Pouparts Junction and Battersea Pier Junction 1 May 1867 as a means of reducing congestion at Stewarts Lane.
After leaving school, his father's failure in business as a wholesale ironmonger meant that the family could only afford to send his older brother to Birmingham University, so he taught at a primary school and worked as a clerk in Stewarts & Lloyds, a metal-tube maker, between 1910 and 1914.
With the basic steel pipe for HAMEL supplied by Stewarts & Lloyds of Corby, manufacturing of the final system was carried out by Siemens Brothers at Woolwich, Henley's at North Woolwich, Callender's at Erith and Standard Telephones and Cables at Greenwich.
The Class 73 Locomotive Preservation Company ( C73LPC ) formed in 2004 to manage locomotive 73136 at Stewarts Lane Depot, London.
The company has also restored 73210 at Stewarts Lane Depot, this locomotive is privately owned.
Stewarts Hospital, ( formerly the residence of the Hely-Hutchinson family, the Roman Catholic Church of St. Philomena, the National School, the Palmerstown House Pub and Restaurant and a variety of general enterprises, including a bank and convenience stores are located here. Stewartscare is an old health care facility at the Stewarts buildings and grounds which overlook the meandering Liffey valley.
The title track Steeltown was written about the town of Corby, telling how many Scots went to work at the Stewarts & Lloyds steelworks when it opened in 1935, at the height of the Great Depression, but later found themselves unemployed when the steelworks declined in the early 1980s.
* Chatsworth ( 1888 ), built for William Evans who worked at Stewarts of Stones Corner.
The first section, from Stewarts Point Wharf near Bordentown north to Hightstown, was opened to the public on October 1, 1832, being operated by horse at first.
Mainline's fleet consisted of Class 08, Class 09, Class 31, Class 33, Class 37, Class 47, Class 56, Class 58, Class 60 and Class 73 locomotives based at Toton, Stratford, Hither Green, Stewarts Lane and Eastleigh depots
Picture of the Singing Stewarts at Newbold College

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