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Kearsley and Clifton
From Manchester Victoria it goes through Salford Central, Salford Crescent and Clifton and then before reaching Bolton, it passes through Kearsley, Farnworth and Moses Gate following the Irwell Valley for much of the route.

Kearsley and was
The North part of Burton was part of Kearsley Township along with the Southern part of Genesee Township from 1839 until 1843 when the township was merged back into Flint Township.
Ortonville, a northern rural village in Oakland County, was founded in 1848 by Amos Orton, who built a dam across Kearsley Creek to furnish water power for his sawmill.
One of the most successful books ever written comes from Fleet Street: in 1786 at 46 Fleet Street there was published for the first time Baron Munchausen's Narrative of his Marvellous Travels and Campaigns, written anonymously by Rudolph Erich Raspe, printed by Smith and Kearsley.
The city's boundaries have been increased by incorporating parts of other local government areas since then ( most notably Kearsley Shire which from 1946 to 1949 was the only local government area in Australia's history to have a Communist majority of councillors ).
Mitchell, son of the final private owner of the Turk, John Kearsley Mitchell, wrote that " no secret was ever kept as the Turk's has been.
When Wilkes was arrested he gave Churchill a timely hint to retire to the country for a time, the publisher, Kearsley, having stated that he received part of the profits from the paper.
He was son of a physician, John Kearsley Mitchell ( 1798 – 1858 ), and was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Statistician Harry Campion, who played a leading role in the development of official statistics after the Second World War, was born in Kearsley in May 1905 and raised in Worsley.
It was written by Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild and directed by Seth Kearsley.
The episode originally aired on September 25, 2005 and was written by Mark Hentemann and directed by Seth Kearsley.
The episode was written by future showrunner Mark Hentemann and was directed by Peter Shin and Seth Kearsley.

Kearsley and National
* The National Rail station code for Kearsley railway station, England

Kearsley and .
Parts of the City are served by Carman-Ainsworth Community Schools, Davison Community Schools, Grand Blanc Community Schools and Kearsley Community Schools.
) The Kearsley volume appeared during publication of the 1st edition ( 1796 – 1808 ) of the German Brockhaus Encyclopedia, which emphasised the raising of the " right hand " during installations and coronations of German Kings.
Only when Dr. John Kearsley Mitchell from Philadelphia, Edgar Allan Poe's personal physician and an admirer of the Turk, approached Ohl did the Turk change hands again.
Director Seth Kearsley stated in a making-of featurette that all logos were used without permission from every company.
* General zoology, or Systematic natural history London, Printed for G. Kearsley in part with George Shaw and sole author of the last 6 volumes of the 16 volumes after the death of George Shaw ( 1800 – 1826 )-I-II Mammalia ( 1800 ), III-Amphibia ( 1802 ), Pisces ( 1803-4 ), VI Insecta ( 1806 ), VII-VIII Aves ( 1809-120, IX-XIV, pt.
It meets the Irwell at Nob End, Kearsley after a total course of around ten miles.
The Cessnock City Council area includes Kurri Kurri, Weston, Pelaw Main, Abermain, Bellbird, Kearsley, Mulbring, Kitchener, Paxton, Millfield, Ellalong, Wollombi, Neath Branxton and Greta.
Most employment comes from the local port city of Newcastle, the nearby major centres of Maitland and Singleton and in service industries in the local council area, which comprises many small towns, such as Kurri Kurri, Weston, Neath, Abernethy, Kearsley and Pokolbin.
* Kearsley Power Station No. 1 = Bo-Bo Overhead 550vDC Electric Loco b. 1928 Hawthorn Leslie Wks No. 3682
File: Kearsley power station 9m07. JPG | Kearsley Power Station loco
Chloe Morgan ( née Staines ), Lynsey Brown, Emma Beard, and Aimee Kearsley, decided to form a band after they were voted off the series.
Kearsley and Beard had now decided to leave Clea behind, and move onto a new dance duo project called LoveShy, which disbanded in 2008.
T. Egerton and G. Kearsley London, UK

Clifton and Pendlebury
Historically a part of Lancashire, Pendlebury together with the neighbouring settlements of Swinton and Clifton, formed the municipal borough of Swinton and Pendlebury.
As well as Agecroft Colliery, there were coal mines at the Wheatsheaf Colliery on Bolton Road ( A666 ) between Carrington Street and City Walk on what is now known as Wheatsheaf Industrial Estate ( which includes a McDonald's fast food restaurant ), Wet Earth Colliery in Clifton, which featured in several of Lowry's works, Clifton Hall Colliery ( also in Clifton ) on the western side of Lumns Lane, which closed in 1929, and Newtown Colliery ( on the Clifton / Newtown, Pendlebury boundary, bounded by Manchester Road / Bolton Road ( A666 ), Billy Lane, Rake Lane and the pit lodge, which later became known as " Queensmere ").
Incorporation of Clifton into the Municipal Borough of Swinton and Pendlebury was a result of the abolition of the predecessor, Barton-upon-Irwell Urban District.
Swinton and Pendlebury was a municipal borough of the administrative county of Lancashire, which contained Pendlebury along with Swinton and Clifton.
Pendlebury is situated on a ridge overlooking the lower Irwell Valley, almost midway between Manchester and Bolton and is neighboured by Irlams o ' th ' Height, Pendleton ( M6 ) and Clifton.
Pendlebury, between Patricroft on the Manchester to Liverpool line and Clifton Junction until the Black Harry Tunnel collapse of 1953.
In 1907 there were exchanges of land with the neighbouring Worsley Urban District, and in 1933 most of Clifton and a part of Prestwich Urban District were added to Swinton and Pendlebury.
The constituency, known as South East Lancashire, Eccles Division, was defined as consisting of the civil parishes of Barton upon Irwell, Clifton, Flixton, Urmston, Worsley and the part of the parish of Pendlebury not in the Parliamentary Borough of Salford.
Historically a part of Lancashire, Clifton, a former centre for coal mining, once formed part of the municipal borough of Swinton and Pendlebury.

Clifton and Association
He first played as a goalkeeper but played initially as a stop-gap but later as the mainstay centre-half for the Old Carthusians ( the club for ex-Charterhouse boys ) ( appearing against them in the 1896 London Charity Cup Final, Clifton Association ( the Association which took in Bristol and its environs and with whom he played in the inaugural Gloucestershire Cup ), as well as the Corinthians and captained England twice against Wales in 1894 and 1895 ( when the team consisted entirely of amateur players ).
The Clifton Corridor Transportation Management Association ( CCTMA ) operates a shuttle connecting Emory with downtown Decatur and the Decatur MARTA station.
Bedminster ( later merged with Bristol South End to form Bristol City ) | Clevedon ( later Clevedon Town ) | Clifton Association | Eastville Rovers ( later Bristol Rovers ) | Mangotsfield | St. George ( later merged with Roman Glass F. C.
Clifton based community groups like the Staten Island Liberian Community Association ( SILCA ) have become politically active in defending the estimated 3, 600 Liberians across the country who are on DED status.
There are a number of associations that serve to preserve and improve these neighborhoods: Clifton Improvement Association and Clifton Heights Improvement Association are of particular note for the work they have done.
* Clifton Heights Association
* Clifton Improvement Association
The Clifton Diocese makes up part of the Catholic Association Pilgrimage.
Clifton was previously the editor of Ceefax, and before joining the BBC was a news and sports reporter at the Chronicle and Echo in Northampton, a sports journalist at the Exchange Telegraph national news agency, chief sports sub at the UK's Press Association ( PA ) and editor of the PA's Teletext service.
In addition to translating hymns, Winkworth was deeply involved in promoting women's rights, and was the secretary of the Clifton Association for Higher Education for Women, a supporter of the Clifton High School for Girls, where a house is named after her, and a member of the Cheltenham Ladies ' College.
Gloucester's first competitive game was in October 1889 in the 1st Round of the Gloucestershire FA Junior Challenge Cup beating Clifton Association Reserves 10 – 0 at Budding's Field.
Nathaniel " Sweetwater " Clifton ( October 13, 1922 – August 31, 1990 ) was an American multi-sport athlete best known as one of the first African Americans to play in the National Basketball Association.
* Southwestern Youth Association, a youth sports league for Centreville, Virginia and Clifton, Virginia
Clark Clifton Kellogg, Jr. ( born July 2, 1961 ) is the VP of player relations for the Indiana Pacers as well as the lead college basketball analyst for CBS Sports and former player in the National Basketball Association.
Bange's Airfield, six kilometres west of Clifton, is a thriving center for ultralight aircraft, and home to the Lone Eagle Flying School and the Darling Downs Sport Aircraft Association Inc. Boab trees are an important cultural heritage feature, particularly alongside the main street.
Marion Clifton Blakey ( born March 26, 1948 ) is president and chief executive officer of the Aerospace Industries Association.

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