As a wainwright, Hebert employed a number of other skilled craftsmen, including a wheelwright and a blacksmith. |
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Mervill is still suffering the effects of a dead leg while Wainwright is having trouble with his knee. |
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In the 1960s, Nelson spent about a year living with the Inupiaq in the tiny village of Wainwright. |
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In addition, there is one set of specially produced Wainwright mugs on offer as a runner-up prize. |
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Among the farm workers welcoming the weather was Paul Wainwright, of Holtby, near York. |
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Thomas plays Baz Wainwright, a troubled lad who has serious problems at home that spill over into school. |
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The coach is likely to switch full back Chris Beaver to the wing in place of Smith and return Chris Wainwright to the starting line-up after leaving him out against Rochdale. |
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Wainwright touches on politics, daydreamy romantics and humour. |
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And Mrs Wainwright and her mentally handicapped son didn't get the justice they had been hoping for. |
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Wainwright withholds the easy pleasure of revenge, or the noble suffering of a Robin Hood character. |
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David Letterman's people strong-arm Loudon Wainwright into switching songs. |
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Teddy Thompson sang This Little Light of Mine and Rufus Wainwright sang Over the Rainbow. |
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While Wainwright and Neville showed that sticking to what you know may also provide reward. |
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In response to the increase in mercury emissions in 2003, the Wainwright Facility reevaluated their screening techniques. |
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Bob Wainwright heard it and felt unaccountably heavy-hearted. |
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The boatman steers the boat out into the current where Paul and his fellow co-celebrity, Scotland rugby star Rob Wainwright, make the first casts of the season. |
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A fascinating exhibition into the life and works of the well known fell-walker, author and artist Alfred Wainwright opens at Kendal Museum tomorrow. |
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More fully enclosed lagoons and inlets, like Peard Bay and Wainwright Inlet on the Chukchi Sea coast, are less susceptible to influxes of high-salinity water from offshore. |
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But, just hours after she left, Wainwright called emergency services in a panic, saying Joshua had choked on his own vomit and had stopped breathing. |
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It was first published in 1977, and features a few location maps drawn by Alfred Wainwright, a fellwalker and author. |
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Rufus Wainwright knows how to make an entrance. |
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With the influx of new families and a broader awareness of the Wainwright MFRC and its services, the building has been bursting at the seams with children in and out of the youth centre. |
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The Commendation was to recognize MCpl Blondeau's actions during an Oct 2001 armed standoff at CFB Wainwright while he was posted there as a patrolman. |
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Nigel looked at his heavily annotated Wainwright guide. |
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Disciple has already livestreamed gigs by singer songwriter Rufus Wainwright and will film 10 dates of the forthcoming tour by US country artists Luke Bryan. |
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Furthermore, WATC Wainwright has an anti-tank range that was one of the first in Canada to be studied, and energetic material contamination was found in surface soils. |
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They were followed by John Tunnicliffe, David Denton, Ted Wainwright and George Hirst. |
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The Women's Swimming Association sponsored Helen Wainwright and Trudy for an attempt at swimming the Channel. |
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Helen Wainwright pulled out at the last minute because of an injury, but Trudy decided to go to France on her own. |
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In 1930, at the age of 23, Wainwright saved up for a week's walking holiday in the Lake District with his cousin Eric Beardsall. |
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They arrived in Windermere and climbed the nearby Orrest Head, where Wainwright saw his first view of the Lakeland fells. |
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Wainwright was a lifelong Blackburn Rovers fan and a founder member of the Blackburn Rovers Supporters Club. |
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According to Wainwright, in his autobiography Fellwanderer, he initially planned the series for his own interest rather than for publication. |
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Haystacks was the favourite summit of influential guidebook author Alfred Wainwright. |
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In Buttermere Church, there is a memorial to Wainwright, and one can look out of the window to Haystacks. |
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The direct ascent noted by Wainwright from the hamlet appears to have access problems. |
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Alfred Wainwright included a drawing of himself regarding Blencathra from this viewpoint in his Pictorial Guides to the Lakeland Fells. |
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The author, Mark Richards, notes his differences with Wainwright in the introduction. |
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Despite regarding Slight Side as a separate entity, Wainwright included the wide upland area beyond it to the south west as a part of Scafell. |
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In his Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, Alfred Wainwright describes Crinkle Crags as. |
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The Coniston Fells form part of the Southern Fells of the Lake District as defined by Alfred Wainwright. |
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Wainwright himself later relented and included these lesser hills in a supplementary volume, The Outlying Fells of Lakeland. |
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This group also includes the Wainwright of Black Fell and the summits of Black Brows and Rusland Heights. |
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Unlike many authors who dedicate books to particular people known to them, Wainwright commences each book with an unusual dedication. |
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Wainwright, notoriously shy, also includes one drawing of himself in each book, generally from behind, of him admiring a particular view. |
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In 1978 he published a panorama of the view from Scafell Pike with illustrations by Wainwright. |
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In 1979, he wrote to Wainwright offering to update the guides, but Wainwright replied that he did not want this done in his lifetime. |
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He must be expecting an onslaught, because Mr. Wainwright, 33, the singer-songwriter-rhinestone-lover, has been superfabulous lately. |
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No drama as Sally talks of writer's life SCREENWRITER Sally Wainwright gave a talk at a Fundraising ladies' lunch for Overgate Hospice, Elland. |
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Wainwright, of Upper Denby, on Easter Saturday when she found water in the bottom of the boiler cupboard. |
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Denly obligingly drove uppishly to short extra cover off David Wainwright while Jones dragged a Bresnan off-cutter onto off-stump. |
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On 27 June 2008 a landmark road bridge, in Blackburn, was opened and named the Wainwright Bridge in his honour. |
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Wainwright divided the fells into seven geographical areas, each surrounded by valleys and low passes. |
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North of the area defined by Wainwright the countryside takes on a moorland character, gradually declining toward the Solway Firth. |
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The guidebook author Alfred Wainwright popularised the use of the older Cumbric name, which is now used almost exclusively. |
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Wainwright recorded more routes of ascent for Blencathra than any other fell. |
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An outlier of High Spy in the 'Jaws of Borrowdale', Castle Crag is listed as a separate fell by Wainwright. |
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The Western Fells rise gradually from the Cumbrian coastal plain, Wainwright excluding some of the lower specimens nearest the sea. |
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Alfred Wainwright described the 'Gable Girdle', a circuit around the fell at mid height. |
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Wainwright's The Western Fells, and is thus classed as a Wainwright, despite having virtually no topographic prominence of its own. |
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On the left in this view is Green Crag, while the highest section, unnamed on Ordnance Survey maps is called Big Stack by Wainwright. |
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A Granada TV series Wainwright Country included Eagle Crag, Great Calva, Knott Rigg, Pike O'Blisco, Stybarrow Dodd, Thornthwaite Crag and Yewbarrow. |
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Wainwright was a supporter of animal rights and explained that the publisher of his books gave most of the profits from his books to animal charities. |
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While most of his classmates were obliged to find employment in the local mills, Wainwright started work as an office boy in Blackburn Borough Engineer's Department. |
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Dago, a retired Army service dog, served as a bomb detecting dog with the 28th Military Police Detachment at Ft. Wainwright, Alaska for eight years. |
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There are extensive views of Coniston Water from the two cairns which Wainwright visits on the ascent, and from the track used for the return journey. |
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Despite its limited independence, Wainwright listed it as a separate fell in his influential Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, a convention which is often followed. |
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Wainwright thus excluded the high moorland falling eastward to the M6 Motorway, although later writers such as Birkett have included everything to the park boundary. |
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First, directly above the Inn at the summit of the pass, is Stony Cove Pike, known to devotees of Wainwright by its alternative name of Caudale Moor. |
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Hotshots increased their lead when Mulvain fired home to make it 2-0 and, but for some great saves from goalkeeper Wainwright, it could have been more. |
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According to influential guidebook author Alfred Wainwright, the name Robinson comes from a Richard Robinson who purchased estates in the Buttermere area many centuries ago. |
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Barf is in truth a satellite of Lord's Seat but was given the status of a separate fell by Alfred Wainwright in his influential Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells. |
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Although falling within the Southern Fells area, Wainwright makes no mention of the low hills between Coniston and Windermere in the Pictorial Guides. |
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Alfred Wainwright was born in Blackburn, Lancashire into a family which was relatively poor, mostly because of his stonemason father's alcoholism. |
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The most frequently encountered approach is that made popular by Alfred Wainwright who published seven separate area guides to the Lakeland Fells. |
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This fame is partly due to the writings of Alfred Wainwright, who espoused its attractions and chose it as the place where he wanted his ashes scattered. |
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With typical self-deprecation, Wainwright says this desire to continually reveal bits and pieces of his personal life may actually be a character flaw. |
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According to Wainwright, the name comes from the Icelandic stack meaning 'a columnar rock' and the correct translation of this should be High Rocks. |
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In his guidebook The Southern Fells Alfred Wainwright suggests that the plane approached from the west, failed to clear the ridge and tumbled down the other side. |
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