Stephenson can be justifiably proud of his achievements over the last three seasons and John has a hard act to follow. |
|
Stephenson sat on the sink in his dressing-room while he spilled his guts about his marriage problems. |
|
Stephenson fully admits that she had to push her husband into confronting his family with the truth. |
|
My first memory was when I was 15 and went down with Bobby Oxley, the main travelling lad for Arthur Stephenson. |
|
When Stephenson made a quick move along the baseline, the Brooklynites erupted. |
|
Thinking quickly, Stephenson stripped the paint from his beer can, punched a hole in the bottom, and fixed it in place on the model. |
|
Stephenson comes to realise that he's actually the one who's ushered in this new age and decides to revel in it. |
|
Richard Stephenson will take Connolly's place providing he comes through a late fitness test on a hamstring. |
|
His clients included Kosset Carpets, Thomas Burnley, Stephenson Bros, Damart and Christopher Pratts. |
|
There was a saddlery and a well-stocked store, operated by W.D. Stephenson and his wife. |
|
Solicitor Susan Stephenson was working on some papers when there was a violent jolt and she realised the carriage was going over. |
|
Since no strong theoretical reason exists to confine the analysis to geodesics, Stephenson and Zelen's measure might be preferable. |
|
A letter dated July 25, 1828, to fellow engineer Timothy Hackworth confirms that Stephenson still was using inefficient bellows to help to power his engines. |
|
Less than 24 hours after Stephenson stood down, assistant commissioner John Yates quit Monday over similar allegations. |
|
In his resignation statement, Stephenson insisted that he was leaving the job with his integrity intact. |
|
And would-be collectors like Henry Stephenson continue to distort the cultural record in their hunt for hidden treasures. |
|
Miss Stephenson was wearing black baggy knee-length combat trousers covered in zips and chains, and knee-length stripy socks with white Adidas trainers. |
|
In the early 2000s, after splitting with his wife of 20 years, Stephenson began devoting more time to his interest in art. |
|
Missing student Vicky Stephenson was today found alive and well in Dublin. |
|
If Stephenson, who writes at enormous length, is considered to be such a hotshot then do we have to admit that the suggested general rule is a load of eyewash? |
|
|
Today, Stephenson is cooperating with a federal investigation of the eBay reseller whom he purchased these works from. |
|
Nor was it Neal Stephenson, the visionary science fiction writer who imagined a future transformed by nanotechnology in his 1995 novel The Diamond Age. |
|
In inventing the locomotive, Watt and Stephenson were part inventors of time. |
|
In 1825 George Stephenson built the Locomotion for the Stockton and Darlington Railway. |
|
Stephenson played a pivotal role in the development and widespread adoption of steam locomotives. |
|
Originally it was planned to terminate the extension at Stephenson Street, adjacent to New Street railway station. |
|
From Snow Hill the tramway runs along Colmore Circus, Upper Bull Street, Corporation Street and Stephenson Street, with three stops. |
|
Proposed from 1844, the supporting and surveying engineers were George and Robert Stephenson. |
|
Pioneering biochemist Marjory Stephenson studied at Cambridge, as did plant physiologist Gabrielle Howard, social anthropologist Audrey Richards. |
|
Fans held a collection for Stephenson, and presented him with a hat bought with the proceeds. |
|
It links Newport Bridge to George Street Bridge, Newport City Bridge and, via Stephenson Road, Newport Transporter Bridge. |
|
Although he had been instructed by George, Locke hoped to become chief engineer as his contract with Stephenson had expired. |
|
It was the 118th engine from the locomotive works of Robert Stephenson and stood under patent protection. |
|
The current chair of the council is Professor Terence Stephenson and current chief executive and registrar is Charlie Massey. |
|
During the session, Adams, Brown, Chisholm, Halliwell and Stephenson were selected to the band, initially named Touch. |
|
Gowns are not worn for formals at Collingwood, St Aidan's, St Cuthbert's, Hild Bede, Van Mildert, Stephenson or Ustinov. |
|
A statue of Robert Stephenson by Carlo Marochetti, previously in the old ticket hall, stands in the forecourt. |
|
The Conwy Railway Bridge, a Tubular bridge, was built for the Chester and Holyhead Railway by Robert Stephenson. |
|
He had heard of this from his good friend George Stephenson, the great railway engineer. |
|
George Stephenson came from a mining family and by 1804 had secured the post of brakesman at Killingworth colliery. |
|
|
Later Stephenson designs also incorporated a gauze screen as a protection against glass breakage. |
|
The mines inspector recommended that only Stephenson lamps were used for illumination and Davys for testing. |
|
Locke ranked alongside Robert Stephenson and Isambard Kingdom Brunel as one of the major pioneers of railway development. |
|
Joseph's father had been a manager at Wallbottle colliery on Tyneside when George Stephenson was a fireman there. |
|
In 1823, when Joseph was 17, Stephenson was involved with planning the Stockton and Darlington Railway. |
|
He and Robert Stephenson became close friends, but their friendship was interrupted, in 1824, by Robert leaving to work in Peru for three years. |
|
The report was highly critical of the work already done, which reflected badly on Stephenson. |
|
However, a clash of personalities between Stephenson and Vignoles led to the latter resigning, leaving Locke as the sole assistant engineer. |
|
The Stephenson Railway Museum in North Shields is named after George and Robert Stephenson. |
|
Some degree of safety was provided by the safety lamp which was invented in 1816 by Sir Humphry Davy and independently by George Stephenson. |
|
By the end of 1827 the company had also bought Chittaprat from Robert Wilson and Experiment from Stephenson. |
|
Later approved by George Stephenson, this plan was ratified by the shareholders on 26 October. |
|
He was the second child of Robert and Mabel Stephenson, neither of whom could read or write. |
|
In 1833 a House of Commons committee found that Stephenson had equal claim to having invented the safety lamp. |
|
The Stephenson lamp was used almost exclusively in North East England, whereas the Davy lamp was used everywhere else. |
|
There is a theory that it was Stephenson who indirectly gave the name of Geordies to the people of the North East of England. |
|
According to Rolt, Stephenson managed to solve the problem caused by the weight of the engine on the primitive rails. |
|
Pease and Stephenson had jointly established a company in Newcastle to manufacture locomotives. |
|
It was set up as Robert Stephenson and Company, and George's son Robert was the managing director. |
|
Stephenson evacuated the injured Huskisson to Eccles with a train, but he died from his injuries. |
|
|
Stephenson became famous, and was offered the position of chief engineer for a wide variety of other railways. |
|
Stephenson remained at Alton Grange until 1838 before moving to Tapton House in Derbyshire. |
|
Stephenson tended to be more casual in estimating costs and paperwork in general. |
|
Robert Stephenson expanded on the work of his father and became a major railway engineer himself. |
|
The Stephenson Centre, an SEBD Unit of Beaumont Hill School in Darlington, is named after him. |
|
In popular media, Stephenson was portrayed by actor Gawn Grainger on television in the 1985 Doctor Who serial The Mark of the Rani. |
|
Robert Stephenson departed for South America and William James became bankrupt. |
|
Consequently, in 1824 George Stephenson was appointed engineer in their place. |
|
The terms asked for by the Rennies proving unacceptable, George Stephenson was reappointed as engineer with his assistant Joseph Locke. |
|
Previous experience with civil engineers set Stephenson against allowing Vignoles to continue his survey and he resigned. |
|
This caused a rift between the two men, and strained relations between Locke and Robert Stephenson. |
|
Locke was more careful than Stephenson to get value for his employers' money. |
|
Stephenson had started his career at a time when locomotives had little power to overcome excessive gradients. |
|
It is significant that after the death of George Stephenson in August 1848, the friendship of the two men was revived. |
|
When Robert Stephenson died in October 1859, Joseph Locke was a pallbearer at his funeral. |
|
In 1845, Locke and Stephenson were both called to give evidence before two committees. |
|
Brunel and Vignoles spoke in support of the system, whilst Locke and Stephenson spoke against it. |
|
Meanwhile, Stephenson and Wilton restarted the train and went on to Manchester to fetch medical assistance. |
|
In 1929 a replica Rocket was commissioned from Robert Stephenson and Company by Henry Ford, using Stephenson's original construction techniques. |
|
The first trains were drawn by Stephenson engines imported from Great Britain. |
|
|
On 5th June Stephenson and Company presented a petition to be reponed, and the Sheriff pronounced an interlocutor reponing them. |
|
This was for many years a leading guide to the Pennine Way, rivalling the official guide book by Tom Stephenson. |
|
Stephenson proposed the concept in an article for the Daily Herald in 1935, and later lobbied Parliament for the creation of an official trail. |
|
The Pennine Way has attracted a number of writers over the years, including Stephenson himself, who wrote the first official guidebook. |
|
This and the local ironstone were promptly exploited by Stephenson, who set up a company in Clay Cross to trade in the minerals. |
|
Charity sleepover THURSDAY 23rd October was the night of the first charity sleepover at George Stephenson High School. |
|
Legend has it that one of the veteran coalmen objected to the teenager doing the job and that Stephenson challenged him to a st ght and won. |
|
Consider three organizations, three hierarchies that might be networked together in the heterarchical fashion that Stephenson posits. |
|
The statue was the gift of Sir William Haswell Stephenson, whose father founded a fire clay and gas works in Throckley in Newcastle. |
|
He bought two locomotives from Robert Stephenson and Company which proved more successful than Brunel's, and then designed a series of standardised locomotives. |
|
The engineer was Joseph Locke and the partnership of contractors consisted of Thomas Brassey, William Mackenzie, Robert Stephenson and George Heald. |
|
The path was the idea of the journalist and rambler Tom Stephenson, inspired by similar trails in the United States of America, particularly the Appalachian Trail. |
|
Gat Decor, Digital Blonde, Tilt, Grace, Sourmash, Moby, Jones And Stephenson, Breeder, Solarstone, Humate, Way Out West, Sasha, Matt Darey and loads more fantastic tunes. |
|
The railway was engineered by Joseph Locke and George Stephenson, linked the rapidly expanding industrial town of Manchester with the port town of Liverpool. |
|
Stephenson advocated the use of steam locomotives on the line. |
|
Although, Stephenson usually gets the credit for this feat, it is believed that it was Locke who suggested the correct method for crossing the bog. |
|
He and his son Robert Stephenson visited William Locke and his son at Barnsley and it was arranged that Joseph would go to work for the Stephensons. |
|
It was not a practical success and Clanny subsequently changed the basis of operation of later lamps in the light of the Davy and Stephenson lamps. |
|
When online bill presentment, which removes all the paperwork, becomes widespread, says McKinsey's Stephenson, online banking will be far more compelling. |
|
Towards the end of the war, Dahl wrote some of the history of the secret organisation and he and Stephenson remained friends for decades after the war. |
|
|
Famous British engineers and inventors of the Industrial Revolution include James Watt, George Stephenson, Richard Arkwright, Robert Stephenson and Isambard Kingdom Brunel. |
|
Nigel Stephenson was appointed as coach and Huddersfield were helped by several clubs, in particular Featherstone Rovers, to put a reasonable squad together. |
|
With nature lovers ready with their binoculars for this month's Big Garden Birdwatch, Hannah Stephenson asks what we can do to help our feathered friends through the winter. |
|
George Stephenson George Stephenson 3 Burnside 2 ON A BRIGHT and sunny afternoon at George Stephenson High School the new campaign for the Year 8 lads got underway. |
|
Regular commentators are Eddie Hemmings and Mike Stephenson with summarisers including Phil Clarke, Brian Carney, Barrie McDermott and Terry O'Connor. |
|
Stephenson recommended using malleable iron rails, even though he owned a share of the patent for the alternative cast iron rails, and both types were used. |
|
This expedient has since been generally considered satisfactory for most purposes and makes possible the use of the simpler Stephenson, Joy and Walschaerts motions. |
|
Rolt in his biography of Stephenson suggests that a faction on the Board continued to ask Stephenson for second opinions, and Rennie took umbrage at this. |
|
The museum is in the Stephenson Memorial Hall not far from both Stephenson's final home at Tapton House and Holy Trinity Church within which is his vault. |
|
During the construction of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, Stephenson had shown a lack of ability in organising major civil engineering projects. |
|
Anne Stephenson toured with the group in the 80s and appears in a picture on the album Torment and Toreros with black spiky hair, goth make-up and a black choker. |
|
The engine was an important influence on George Stephenson, and its success was a key factor in promoting the use of steam locomotives at collieries in the North East. |
|
A significant difference in philosophy between George Stephenson and Joseph Locke and the surveying methods they employed was more than a mere difference of opinion. |
|
By 23 July 1821 it had decided that the line would be a railway with edge rails, rather than a plateway, and appointed Stephenson to make a fresh survey of the line. |
|
Locke and Robert Stephenson had been good friends at the beginning of their careers, but their friendship had been marred by Locke's falling out with Robert's father. |
|
Chesterfield Museum in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, has a gallery of Stephenson memorabilia, including straight thick glass tubes he invented for growing straight cucumbers. |
|
Back in villadom, Inglesyde was the home of steel works manager John Atlantic Stephenson, so named because he was born on board ship in the Atlantic. |
|
Stephenson was farsighted in realising that the individual lines being built would eventually be joined together, and would need to have the same gauge. |
|
The play, written by Janet Plater and directed by Robert Webb, starred professional actors as well as local actors and students from George Stephenson High School. |
|
The doctors suggested returning Huskisson to Liverpool for treatment, but George Stephenson insisted that it would be better to take him on to Manchester. |
|
|
The remaining three carriages of the Duke's train were detached and the band's carriage, hauled by Northumbrian, set off for Manchester with Stephenson driving. |
|
The original plan was to use horses to draw coal carts on metal rails, but after company director Edward Pease met Stephenson, he agreed to change the plans. |
|
With no medicines or surgical tools, they waited for the arrival of the surgical equipment and medical specialists Stephenson had gone to summon from Manchester. |
|
It was returned to Robert Stephenson and Company in 1851 with the intention of displaying it at The Great Exhibition, but this did not take place. |
|
Davy went to his grave believing that Stephenson had stolen his idea. |
|
Concerned about Overton's competence, Pease asked George Stephenson, an experienced enginewright of the collieries of Killingworth, to meet him in Darlington. |
|
The University of St Andrews owed its origin to a society formed in 1410 by Laurence of Lindores, archdeacon Richard Cornwall, bishop William Stephenson and others. |
|
At 17, Stephenson became an engineman at Water Row Pit in Newburn. |
|