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Page "Gonzales, Louisiana" ¶ 13
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village and continued
No one has lived in these houses since the time of the Famine, however the families that moved to Dooagh and their descendants, continued to use the village as a ' booley village '.
Land selection by the state of Alaska under the Statehood Act and for the regional and village corporations has continued through the present.
The laws of Biscay continued to be drawn up under this tree until 1876, with each town and village in the province sending two representatives to the sessions, known as General Assemblies.
Peasants continued to center their lives in the village, where they were members of a corporate body and help manage the community resources and monitor the community life.
The increasing numbers, which included followers outside of Rapp ’ s village, continued to concern the government, who feared they might become rebellious and dangerous to the state.
While Arab Christian families continued to live in Nazareth, its status was reduced to that of a poor village.
Céloron continued south until his expedition reached the confluence of the Ohio and the Miami rivers, which lay just south of the village of Pickawillany, the home of the Miami chief known as " Old Briton ".
He continued to work up until his death in Fordingbridge, Hampshire in 1961, his last work being a studio mural in three parts, the left hand of which showed a Falstaffian figure of a French peasant in a yellow waistcoat playing a hurdy gurdy while coming down a village street.
* 1955 — Attempts to detach the village and annex into Hamilton continued.
He continued his studies with the village deacon, S. N.
In Germany, peasants continued to center their lives in the village well into the 19th century.
For the next two decades, Sauks continued to live at Saukenuk, their primary village, which was located near the confluence of the Mississippi and Rock Rivers.
After leaving the village on the Napo, Orellana continued downstream to the Amazon.
The village continued to grow and the introduction in the 18th century of stagecoach services from the Dog and Fox public house made the journey to London routine, although not without the risk of being held-up by highwaymen such as Jerry Abershawe on the Portsmouth Road.
The village continued not to grow and the town of Shipshewana was platted nearby in 1899 and incorporated in 1916 in Newbury Township.
Although a series of barricades has been put up to protect the village, the shore has continued to erode at an alarming rate.
As traffic in the area continued to increase, village officials decided to install the town's first manually operated traffic signal at the corner of Ridge Road and Dixie Highway.
It was also during this period that the Village annexed large areas of existing homes in unincorporated Cook County, which laid the foundation for further annexations to the west, which continued to expand the village limits to what they are today.
His heirs continued to sell these lots and the village continued to grow.
After its incorporation the village continued to prosper, the downtown district was mostly complete by the 1870s, with all commercial lots purchased and improved.
By 1928 the decline in the business community of Orangeville was evident ; the bypass, coupled with the depression continued to negatively affect the village.
The Village continued to develop and on January 20, 1983, Louisiana Governor David C. Treen declared the village a town.

village and grow
Each family would then have two or three small pieces of land scattered about the village, which they used to grow crops.
A recently approved expansion plan will permit the village to grow in coming years by another 92 housing lots.
Later a trading post known as " Floyd " developed, and the village began to grow.
The village was often confused with Russian Mission on the Yukon, so in the 1960s the name was changed to Chuathbaluk, which is derived from the Yup ' ik word " Curapalek ", meaning " the hills where the big blueberries grow.
Due to its location at the juncture of Bayou Plaquemine with the Mississippi River, the village soon began to prosper and grow beginning a long history of prosperity that has never ceased.
By this time, the large Noblet holdings were also being subdivided and sold to newcomers, and the village that became Denham Springs began to grow.
The village continued to grow with the inclusion of a large Steam Grist and Flouring Mill, built by William Peters.
In February 1982, municipal elections were held and the first streekplan ( Structural plan ) was drawn, envisaging the village to grow to 15. 000 inhabitants.
The village is expected to grow with some 3, 000 households in the coming years, a 50 % growth ( Sonniuswijk or Breugel, which has to be decided after a MER investigation ), as a measure to prevent the municipality from being absorded within the neighbouring municipality of Eindhoven.
Its population began to grow significantly in the second half of the twentieth century as many middle-class people from the cities came to live in the village, but the village has maintained its village culture.
From then they started to build new quarters around the old village centre, so Zoetermeer began to grow and became a city in the meantime.
The village raised sufficient grain to send many tons of flour annually for sale to Lower Louisiana and New Orleans, which helped colonists in that region to survive, as they could not grow grains there.
The arrival of the Union Pacific Railroad helped the village grow.
It was during this period that the village began to grow.
Incorporated in 1896, Ardsley would continue to grow at a steady pace, until a fire destroyed the village center in 1914.
Due in part to funding by the WPA, which helped keep people employed through the Great Depression, the village continued to grow and was officially incorporated as a city in 1941.
In 1941, the village incorporated as a City and continued to grow until the population stabilized at its peak of around 12, 000 by 1960.
Upper Evesham as it was then known, continued to grow from scattered homesteads into a small village.
In the early years of Foster, Washington, the small village would grow into an agricultural center and a vital trading point in the upper-Duwamish River Valley.

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