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Grafton and House
The Court House, still in use, was designed by Dixon, Balbirnie and Dixon and completed within a year, constructed of limestone and marble donated by the Ridgely family, on land donated by Towson merchant Grafton Bosley.
( This information was received from the Auditors Office in the Court House at Grafton ND.
* The Grafton 123 Coffee House & Cafe
Son House first recorded in Grafton, Wisconsin ( 1930 ) for Paramount.
Artists that recorded in their Grafton studio included Son House, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Blind Blake, Skip James, Papa Charlie Jackson, Ida Cox, and Ma Rainey.
However, a year later, his grandfather died and he succeeded as 3rd Duke of Grafton, which elevated him to the House of Lords.
* Prime Minister, First Lord of the Treasury, and Leader of the House of Lords: The Duke of Grafton
Another museum dedicated to clocks is the Willard House and Clock Museum in Grafton, Massachusetts.
There are eight boys ' boarding houses ( Bramston, Crosby, Fisher Laxton House, Grafton, Laundimer, School, Sidney and St Anthony ), five girls ' boarding houses ( Dryden, Kirkeby, New House, Sanderson and Wyatt ) and a junior house ( The Berrystead ).
* Grafton House, Piccadilly ( c. 1760 ) demolished 1966
In Halifax, St. Matthew's dates back to 1749 as a " Dissenting Protestant Worship House ", and adhered to Presbyterian polity at a later date ; the Presbyterian Church of St. David is another 1925 " Minority Group " from within downtown Halifax congregations including St Matthew's, and celebrated its 80th Anniversary in 2005, meeting in the former Grafton Street Methodist ( 1869 ) building, acquired in their early days.
Son House recorded nine songs for Paramount in Grafton, Wisconsin, in 1930, released on a 78 rpm record.
The Grafton farm which held the original Willard family's workshop is open to the public and has become a museum, the Willard House and Clock Museum, which exhibits over 90 original clocks and many Willards ' heirlooms too.
Barnum House is now a museum in Grafton, and it is thought that Eliakim Barnum bought the house from another family who owned it before.
Grafton is currently home to such notable places as St. Annes Inn & Spa, the former home of Bob Homme (" The Friendly Giant "), the Barnum House museum, and a defunct canning factory ( often said to be one of most haunted places in Ontario ).
* Milldean and Alexander-Davis House, Grafton, Vermont, listed on the NRHP in Vermont

Grafton and was
`` It was a terrible loss to me '', said Kate quietly, feeling the pain twist again at the mention, knowing now that Juanita must have written to him at Grafton.
During the war it was in constant use by the wagon trains transporting supplies from the railhead at Grafton to the troops operating in the interior.
The PI novel was a male-dominated field in which female authors seldom found publication until Marcia Muller, Sara Paretsky, and Sue Grafton were finally published in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Sir Earle Christmas Grafton Page, GCMG, CH ( 8 August 188020 December 1961 ) was the 11th Prime Minister of Australia, and is to date the second-longest serving federal parliamentarian in Australian history, with 41 years, 361 days in Parliament .< ref >
Writing for the court, Chief Justice Grafton Green rejected this argument, holding that the Tennessee Religious Preference clause was designed to prevent the establishment of a state religion as had been the experience in England and Scotland at the writing of the Constitution, and held:
Elizabeth was born about 1437 at Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire, the daughter of Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers and his wife, the former Jacquetta of Luxembourg, widow of John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford.
Grafton Elliot Smith, a fellow anthropologist, sided with Woodward, and at the next Royal Society meeting claimed that Keith's opposition was motivated entirely by ambition.
The name's earliest known appearance in print is in Richard Grafton's Chronicle at Large ( 1569 ): Grafton uses it on three occasions, saying that " some writers name him the black prince ", and ( elsewhere ) that he was " commonly called the black Prince ".
She was married to George Fitzroy, Earl of Euston, second son of Charles FitzRoy, 2nd Duke of Grafton and Lady Henrietta Somerset.
Although the first railroad had reached nearby Grafton in 1852, a narrow-gauge railroad was not laid through the County until the early 1880s ; a standard gauge line followed in the 1890s.
* HMS Grafton was a 70-gun third-rate ship of the line launched in 1679, rebuilt in 1700, and captured by the French in 1707.
Rivers published the results of his experimental treatment of patients at Craiglockhart in paper for The Lancet, " On the Repression of War Experience ", and began to record interesting cases in his book Conflict and Dream which was published a year after his death by his close friend Grafton Elliot Smith.
Such a theory was at odds with the hyper-diffusionism purported by Sir Grafton Elliot Smith which argued that all the cultural traits associated with civilisation must have originated from a single source.
Grafton was one of the five counties originally identified for New Hampshire in 1769.
It was named for Augustus FitzRoy, 3rd Duke of Grafton, who had been a supporter of American causes in Parliament, and who was serving as British Prime Minister at the time.
Coös County was separated from the northern part of Grafton County, New Hampshire and organized at Berlin December 24, 1803, although the county seat was later moved to Lancaster, with an additional shire town at Colebrook.
* Edward Lear, poet and illustrator, was born in Bowman's Place, now replaced by the playground of Grafton Primary School.
Probably its most famous resident was Karl Marx who lived at 9 Grafton Terrace from 1856.
In 1778, Lieutenant James Cook named the island after the family name of the Duke of Grafton, who was the British Prime Minister when his ship, the HMB Endeavour, had set sail.
Nudey Beach can be accessed by heading along the trail at the southern end of the resort, and leads along the edge of the island through rainforest, with occasional glimpses out to Cape Grafton, and then descends to Nudey Beach, which was once a nude bathing beach, with some coral available for snorkelers.
A modified version of the story was given by printer Richard Grafton, later elected MP for Coventry.
Grafton was an ardent Protestant and sanitized the earlier story.
McHenry County was established in 1837, and in 1838 the first settlers, mostly from New England, came to Grafton Township.

Grafton and built
one was located at East Grafton and was built and maintained by Thomas Scriven ; the other was located in the wester part of the town and was kept by Elijah Terry.
He built a sawmill in 1838, and a few of the men he hired to cut logs and mill lumber built homes along what is now Maine State Route 26 above Grafton Notch State Park.
The town school built just above Grafton Notch had 37 students by 1859, but that number slowly declined to 10 by 1900.
The company also built a hydroelectric station at Nymboida, New South Wales, near Grafton in 1923 – 1924.
On the West side, at the top of Grafton Street, is the Stephen's Green Shopping Centre, built in October 1988.
The first part of the North Coast line was built between Casino and Grafton in 1905, as an extension of a line from Murwillumbah.
After O ' Connell Bridge ( then called ' Carlisle Bridge ') was built to span the River Liffey, Grafton Street turned from a fashionable residential street into a busy cross-city route.
Master plans had called for quadrupling the size of the PWC Grafton Street campus to encompass most of what is now the eastern end of downtown Charlottetown with the proposed PWC-McGill campus being built along the area bounded by Grafton, Prince, Kent, and Edward Streets in a massive redevelopment of the community.
Other notable buildings include Bengall Manor and nearby farms built about 1840 by the Grafton Estate at nearby Caswell and Field Burcote.
The main " Chaffron Way " Campus in Leadenhall ( in Woughton, between Saxon Street and Grafton Street ) was built in
Moore, the designer of Grafton Bridge, it was also built by the same company, the Ferro-Concrete Company of Australasia ( in a time when almost all bridges in the country were being built by the Public Works Department ).
* Petrol / diesel bus collection — contains a significant collection of historic buses from the Auckland region, including a 1924 White Motor Company 4-cylinder side-valve petrol engine, wooden-bodied 23 seat omnibus, through a 1954 Bedford SB, petrol engine, 35-seat lightweight wooden-body bus specifically built for Grafton Bridge services, through to a 1978 Mercedes-Benz O305 which last operated in 2005.
It is named either directly or indirectly after the Fitzroy family, Dukes of Grafton, who owned much of the land on which Fitzrovia was built.
It was originally part of a group of villas built for well-off clients who included Thomas Rowe, John Grafton Ross, Charles Henry Hoskins and Sir Cecil Harold Hoskins.

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