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Page "Georgia Southwestern Railroad" ¶ 19
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fledgling and railroad
One thing clearly evident to the citizens of the fledgling town: it would only flourish if a railroad could be attracted.
Several businesses quickly sprang up in the fledgling town, including the Carrington Hotel, which became known for serving good meals to hungry railroad travelers.
As the fledgling railroad towns of Buda and Kyle sprang to life in the early 1880s, the residents of Mountain City began their exodus.
Hubbard's brother-in-law, Elijah Lindsey, anticipating growth around the new railroad, opened the fledgling community's first general store in 1871, and Lindale had its start ; Lindsey was elected the town's first mayor a year later.
Nicknamed the Lyon, engine # 1 was one of three 2-6-0's purchased from Booth by the fledgling railroad, along with engines # 2, the Ormsby and # 3, the Storey.
The decision to build the transcontinental railroad to the north had left the fledgling city stranded from the major transportation routes.

fledgling and was
Light chose, not without opposition, a site on rising ground close to the River Torrens, which was the chief early water supply for the fledgling colony.
However, the University of Washington was unwilling to let the fledgling league use Husky Stadium, probably due to the excessive wear and tear that would have caused to the facility's grass surface.
As the unrest sweeping Europe was bleeding over into the United States, calls for secession reached unparalleled heights, and the fledgling nation seemed ready to rip itself apart.
Anderson was involved in the fledgling alternative comedy scene in the early 1980s and was the first act to come on stage at The Comedy Store when it opened in 1979.
His life was characterised by debates over issues that arose within the fledgling organisation and some of this process can be found in the book Robert Roberts — A study of his life and character by Islip Collyer.
The Convention was designed to incorporate a traditional civil liberties approach to securing " effective political democracy ", from the strongest traditions in the United Kingdom, France and other member states of the fledgling Council of Europe.
As part of the fledgling nation's government, he was treasurer of the Continental Loan Office in 1778 ; appointed judge of the Admiralty Court of Pennsylvania in 1779 and reappointed in 1780 and 1787 ; and helped ratify the Constitution during the constitutional convention in 1787.
Chapman was a vocal spokesman for LGBT rights, and in 1972 he lent his support to the fledgling newspaper Gay News, which publicly acknowledged his financial and editorial support by listing him as one of its " special friends ".
It was a policy that attracted criticism ; however, Adenauer started his administration from absolute zero, and " it would have been folly to deprive the fledgling republic of the services of civil servants and professionals for that reason alone.
As the fledgling Athens ( and probably other continental Greek cities ) was under tribute to Crete, it can be assumed that such tribute included young men and women for sacrifice.
Stephney accepted, and his first assignment was to help fledgling producer Rick Rubin sign Chuck D, whose song " Public Enemy Number One " Rubin had heard from Andre " Doctor Dré " Brown.
Many regard the 356 as the first Porsche simply because it was the first model sold by the fledgling company.
The Republic of Ararat ( Ağrı Province, Turkey ), the Republic of Mehabad ( West Azerbaijan Province, Iran ) and the Kingdom of Kurdistan ( Sulaymaniyah Province, Iraqi Kurdistan, Iraq ), each of these fledgling states was crushed by military intervention.
Ohio was a crucial swing state in presidential elections, and it would have been devastating to the fledgling Democratic Party to lose Ohio's electoral votes.
It was the first practical and mass deployment of man's newly built steel battleships, cruisers, fledgling destroyers and submarines, and the torpedo boat.
It was the first massive and practical testing of man's new steel battleships, cruisers, his fledgling destroyers ( DDs ) and submarines, and the torpedo boat ( TB ).
By 1918, there were about five million people in the army and the fledgling Royal Air Force, newly formed from the Royal Naval Air Service ( RNAS ) and the Royal Flying Corps ( RFC ), was about the same size of the pre-war army.
From 1867 to 1890 the fledgling church, known as the Free Protestant Church, rented premises in a commercial building in Cape Town, and in 1890 a warehouse in the city was purchased and converted into the present church.
The last Radio Act of 1912 was considered " inadequate " and " chaotic "; change was necessary to help the fledgling radio industry.
While in Revolutionary Paris in 1792, the 22-year-old Wordsworth made the acquaintance of the mysterious traveller John " Walking " Stewart ( 1747 – 1822 ), who was nearing the end of a thirty-years ' peregrination from Madras, India, through Persia and Arabia, across Africa and all of Europe, and up through the fledgling United States.
The fledgling network soon needed additional investors though, and the Columbia Phonograph Company, manufacturers of Columbia Records, rescued it in April 1927 ; as a result, the network was renamed " Columbia Phonographic Broadcasting System.
On 11 July 1967 a referendum on Anguilla's secession from the fledgling state was held.
The band's 1973 album Atem was named as Album of the Year by British DJ John Peel, and this attention helped Tangerine Dream to sign to the fledgling Virgin Records in the same year.

fledgling and Columbus
Founded in Columbus, Indiana, in 1919 as Cummins Engine Company, for its namesake Clessie Lyle Cummins, the fledgling firm was among the first to see the commercial potential of the engine technology invented two decades earlier by Rudolf Diesel.
Thus they decided to redirect Columbus ’ s drive and ambition towards eliminating the fledgling Tlaxcalan empire when it was still vulnerable to European conquest.

fledgling and Rome
Antiochus in turn withdrew his troops westwards, where he would subsequently be embroiled in wars with Rome and so would leave the fledgling Parthian kingdom to its own devices.
In the winter of 1865, Verbist and his four companions arrived in inner Mongolia, which was entrusted to the fledgling congregation by Rome, and where they immediately began organizing small Christian communities.

fledgling and Railroad
Railroad officials commemorated his vision by naming the fledgling City in his honor.
A year later, the International-Great Northern Railroad extended its line through Lindale, and the town's fledgling canning and fruit packing industries took off.
Burdine & Son store in 1898 in the fledgling community of Miami, just two years after the first passengers had stepped off the newly completed Florida East Coast Railroad to incorporate the city.
Frost Company created Ravinia as an amusement park intended to lure riders to the fledgling Chicago and Milwaukee Electric Railroad.

fledgling and 1874
In 1874, Enomoto was given the rank of vice-admiral in the fledgling Imperial Japanese Navy.
Upon his return to Peru in 1874, he worked in the fledgling agricultural development and engineering circles of the country.

fledgling and after
Sousa remained active in the fledgling ATA for some time after its formation.
Soon after buying the Islanders, Pickett signed a very lucrative cable contract with the fledgling Sportschannel network.
Though William Barbee died shortly after establishing himself and his family in North Carolina, one of his eight children, Christopher Barbee, became an important contributor to his father ’ s adopted community and to the fledgling University of North Carolina.
Dell dropped out of school in order to focus full-time on his fledgling business, after getting about $ 300, 000 in expansion-capital from his family.
The city is part of the Palm Coast Metropolitan Statistical Area and is named after early resident, Alvah A. Bunnell, a shingle maker and supplier of wood to the area's fledgling rail industry.
It was named after the horse-powered grist mill around which the fledgling community grew.
Not long after Cedar Creek Lake ( a reservoir for the Tarrant Regional Water District ) completed construction, the fledgling community that sat on its banks took steps to officially become a city.
The fledgling Fox network launched their Fox Kids programming block on weekdays and Saturdays in 1990, while The WB joined the competition with a kid's programming block shortly after the network's 1995 launch.
Scherick had joined the fledgling ABC television network when he persuaded it to purchase Sports Programs, Inc. Scherick had formed this company after leaving CBS when the network would not make him the head of sports programming, choosing instead William C. McPhail, a former baseball public-relations agent.
Yamagata energetically modernized the fledgling Imperial Japanese Army, and modeled it after the Prussian army.
Mr. Nash continued to pay rent for the carriage house even after it was converted for use by the Girl Guides, becoming one of the first financial supporters for the fledgling movement.
The early days for fledged juveniles are more hazardous ; during its first dives into water, about four days after leaving the nest, a fledgling may become waterlogged and drown.
The young have a long, very fast-growing fledgling stage, followed by 3 – 8 weeks of nest care after first flight, and 1 to 3 years as sexually immature adults.
Two months after hatching, the fledgling period has ended and the duckling is now a juvenile.
The fledgling nation did not have the funds to pay annual tribute to the Barbary states, so their ships were vulnerable for capture after 1785.
The fledgling network was so weak in its first days, that, according to Crouch in his autobiography, Hello World !, it almost went bankrupt after just two days on the air.
The first strip design of the fledgling Paris Saint-Germain, founded after a merger between Paris FC and Stade Saint-Germain in 1970, was mainly solid red.
Novák would show his true colors, however, in the years shortly after graduation: just before and after 1900, he wrote a series of compositions that put distance between himself and the teachings of both Stecker and Dvořák, edging his style toward the fledgling modernist movement.
Publicity in Fur & Feather magazine had increased interest in the fledgling fancy and caused an increase in entries in the rat sections of mouse shows during 1974 and 1975 to the point that after cajoling from the mouse fanciers it was decided to form a club or society purely for rat fanciers.
Jor-El eventually met and married Lara: Daughter of Lor-Van, a young astronaut in Krypton's fledgling space program ( which was soon permanently grounded after Jax-Ur blew up one of Krypton's inhabited moons leading to eternal banishment to the Phantom Zone ), and the two had an infant son, Kal-El.
The fledgling town was named after the British statesman William Ewart Gladstone and has a 19th century marble statue on display in its town museum.
Their fledgling business was expanded the next year to include William Smith College ; after their graduation, in 1949, it grew to serve other colleges and universities across the country, eventually becoming Saga Corporation, a nationwide provider of institutional food services.
Immediately after the successful launch of Wizards of the Coast's Magic: The Gathering card game, TSR entered the fledgling CCG market with their take on a fantasy-themed card game.
But after the article is printed, the editor at Forbes Digital Tool, a fledgling webzine, asks reporter Adam Penenberg how he missed the scoop, and Penenberg begins to investigate.

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