「settler」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 428件
Roy was named after an early | settler, a Mr. Roy, and appeared on the map first in |
is thought to have been named after an early | settler, a Joe Blissto, replacing an older name for t |
uestion: the case for the lease-in-perpetuity | settler: a valuable contribution, n.p.: Watkins, Tyer |
The town was named after another early | settler, Adrian Cullen. |
Hooper was named around 1883 for early | settler Albert J. Hooper. |
Samuel Robertson, named after the early | settler, also entices students from other neighbourho |
ip take their names from this early Norwegian | settler, although the evidence is inconclusive. |
His father was Charles Carroll the | Settler, an immigrant to Maryland who had arrived in |
soldier John Paul Formy-Duval, an early area | settler and landowner. |
Tommy Farrell as Frank Baker, | settler and Ann's brother |
Phineas Shepard early | settler and Pensioner Revolutionary War |
1750-1794) was an early American soldier, | settler, and explorer. |
lothing store, thus becoming the first Jewish | settler and the first long-time clothier in the city. |
09-1875) was a Kansas state senator, American | settler, and land developer who is best known as the |
In 1775 a female | settler and her four kids were crossing a bridge on t |
l 1783) was a ship's captain, merchant, early | settler and political figure on St John's Island (lat |
Richard Pace was an early | settler and Ancient Planter of Colonial Jamestown, Vi |
he town is named after John Thurman, an early | settler and founder. |
He was the great-grandson of noted | settler and diplomat Conrad Weiser of the Pennsylvani |
ad been lured to the cabin of Joshua Baker, a | settler and rum trader who lived across the Ohio Rive |
“The Power of Numbers: | Settler and Native in Ireland, America, and South Afr |
Captain Walls was an early | settler and merchant of the region in the 1880s. |
5, 1842) was an American soldier and pioneer | settler, and a prominent figure in the establishment |
1586- after 1666) was an early | settler and "founder of Portland, Maine"; Deputy Pres |
Son of early Atlanta | settler and war hero Robert Flournoy Maddox, he was e |
1771 - August 10, 1856) was an American-born | settler and district constable in Upper Canada. |
Cooper, the area was first settled in 1895 by | settler and developer John Henry Kirby. |
re a diverse mix: descendants of the original | settler and rancher families, artists and other creat |
once known as Aura Lake, is named after early | settler and mining prospector Fredrick W. Schumacher, |
February 23, 1846) was a Canadian fur trader, | settler, and politician. |
ngham, and his son Henry Spelman was an early | settler and explorer of Virginia. |
nard Elliot Bee, Sr. (1787-1853) was an early | settler and political leader in the Republic of Texas |
nghouse, circa 1734, belonged to the original | settler and family partiarch, Richard Morgan. |
It was named for Elijah Creel, an early | settler, and was at one time the busiest river port o |
med Thornberry after Amos Thornberry, a local | settler and orchardist who introduced large-scale orc |
Katherine Drayton (ancestress to the pioneer | settler Anne Hutchinson, born Anne Marbury) |
The first known | settler arrived around 1733. |
part of historic Hoggs Hollow where the first | settler arrived in 1794. |
ter William A. McConnell was Richmond's first | settler, arriving in 1837 and erecting the village's |
rs earlier Barsimson and another early Jewish | settler, Asser Levy, joined in a petition to the gove |
Jacob Klute (or Cloete), the first permanent | settler at the Cape. |
The first | settler at the site was Frederic Ravesies, who establ |
Elizabeth Armstrong was a | settler at the site of the Apple River Fort in presen |
Puritan clergyman, an early but not permanent | settler at Dover, New Hampshire. |
nother one was erected by Rathbone, the first | settler at the hamlet of Rock City. |
J.A. Gorrick, an early | settler, became the father-in-law of the actor Bert B |
May 11, 1976.. John Kinzie, a prominent early | settler, bought and expanded Point du Sable's post in |
May 9: two 14-year | settler boys Koby Mandell and Yosef Ishran were stone |
Russia's first | settler built his house in the village in 1853; he wa |
The Kennedy Trail was the first | settler built trail in the Lower Mainland of British |
Not only an old | settler, but we may add, perhaps the eldest among the |
s of winter, to avenge the murder of a female | settler by one of his own relatives. |
854 by the city of Sycamore's first permanent | settler, Carlos Lattin. |
's name dervives from the name given by early | settler Charles Everard's property 'Ashford' in 1838 |
Chesaw was named for the Chinese | settler Chee Saw, who arrived in the mid-1890s and ma |
In 1694, the first | settler, Clement Briggs established his home near the |
White Mother to a Dark Race: | Settler Colonialism, Maternalism, and the Removal of |
Settler Colonialists in the 20th Century: Projects, P | |
The name is from Abraham Lansing, an early | settler, combined with the Scottish word burgh. |
Cape Town to serve the steady expansion of a | settler community from the mid-17th century. |
Since 1950 this | settler community has formed a significant share of t |
wfish River, Milford came into existence as a | settler community in the mid 19th century. |
Many members of the | settler community made the run from Caldwell, Kansas |
g Florida's natural resources to pre-European | settler conditions, the bison were reintroduced becau |
nd of eight years from the date of entry, the | settler could make final proof if the necessary condi |
maps as he felt that a map was more use if a | settler could ask a local Aboriginal where it was. |
Stirling | Settler Days is a celebration held every year on July |
Stirling | Settler Days (July), after Stirling's founding on May |
Stirling | Settler Days is celebrated to mark the Mormon pioneer |
Most Muslims consider themselves to be | settler descendents of maritime traders who had busin |
The town was later renamed by | settler Dolly Smith to Minooka. |
It was founded by | settler Edward Philip Ingle on July 13, 1889. |
The newspaper was founded by | settler Edward Philip Ingle on July 13, 1889, shortly |
has been significantly influenced by Liberian | Settler English. |
normalisation links with the Zionist, usurper | settler entity'. |
Silas Stow, an early | settler, established himself in Lowville in 1797. |
he widow of Elijah Haley, an early Cumberland | settler, established a tavern in the Ozone area, and |
American | settler families only arrived in significant numbers, |
s wife left Boston to became one of the first | settler families in the Pequonnock Plantation, which |
shall, Chandler, Dane and other early Andover | settler families. |
y for the western area, and to honour another | settler family in naming the eastern section Darch. |
1847 a Maori was executed for the murder of a | settler family. |
150 acres (600,000 m²) of rural land to each | settler family. |
ater, he organised struggles for the cause of | settler farmers in Kerala and founded the KTP with B. |
World War II and the establishment of soldier | settler farms that Dareton began to prosper. |
ived in Sydney from England in 1814 as a free | settler, following his wife who had been transported |
The town was named by an early | settler for a location in Canada. |
dear when they encountered Daniel Dimmick, a | settler for whom Dimmick's Grove is named after, and |
ights was established by George Innes, a free | settler from Bathurst who obtained 400 acres (1.6 km2 |
1822, the name was changed, as suggested by a | settler from Delaware, to "Wilmington" due to confusi |
the ten children of John MacLennan, an early | settler from Kintail Scotland. |
One confirmed case is that of a | settler from Cossack, Edward Chapman, who was caution |
It was built by early | settler Garrett Decker in 1730 and later expanded on |
Likely named for early nearby | settler George Wilkins Kendall, the community was sur |
The Gillespie House, built in 1792 by pioneer | settler George Gillespie, still stands in Limestone. |
Rancho Caymus deeded to the early Napa Valley | settler George C. Yount from General Mariano Guadalup |
rsville, Virginia, in 1792, in honor of early | settler George Taylor. |
tion did not prevent another African-American | settler, Giles Curtis, from being murdered. |
and opinion, three hundred acres of land per | settler, governance under a senate composed of the fi |
eyesa family: Nicolas Berreyesa, a Californio | settler granted the Rancho Milpitas in 1834. |
In 1947, Lettesi (a | settler group made up of nearly 150 families from the |
Amalga was settled by Mormon | settler Hans Jorgensen in 1869. |
For every | settler he placed on 50 acres (200,000 m2) of land, T |
The son of an 1820 | settler, he fought on the side of the Orange Free Sta |
In 1823, a white | settler heard the horn, and learnt of the prayer meet |
Named after an early | settler, Henry Haub, the town was legally platted in |
Early | settler Henry Taylor operated a grist mill on the cre |
ed for E. LeRoy, son of the community's first | settler Hiram Jones. |
ier rural functions, and many of the original | settler houses still stand today. |
r with Canada, the vast majority however were | settler immigrants, primarily of Ukrainian ethnic ori |
December: William Tucker, early | settler in Otago. |
d animal shot by Israel A. Hutchins, a Mormon | settler in Montana in 1886. |
(1585 - 1661) was an early Separatist Puritan | settler in the Massachusetts Bay Colony who helped fo |
Dicky Barrett, trader and first European | settler in Taranaki. |
r and the first non-Native-American permanent | settler in Chicago. |
Also the first free | settler in Brisbane (1837). |
wanus 1671), was an early and prominent Dutch | settler in the 17th century colonial province of New |
Valentine Sevier II (1747-1800) was a pioneer | settler in Tennessee and a younger brother of John Se |
grew up in Piermont, was the first permanent | settler in the Mojave Desert area now known as Victor |
(10 February 1832-21 March 1898) was an early | settler in colonial Western Australia, and became a M |
Frederick M. Adamson was an early | settler in Victoria, Australia. |
ard Wooster (1622-1689), "the first permanent | settler in Derby" |
This article is about the | settler in the Pacific Northwest. |
For the early | settler in Connecticut, see Thomas Bull (Hartford). |
The first | settler in present-day Graham was Seaborn Hall, Jr., |
John Oldham (1592-1636) was an early Puritan | settler in Massachusetts. |
Court, and named for James Fleming, an early | settler in the area originally from Hampshire County. |
8 May - Endre Johannes Cleven, | settler in Canada (d.1916) |
Blackstone) (1595-1675) was an early British | settler in New England, and the first European settle |
phen Griffith was said to have been the first | settler in the area some time before this. |
t 25, 1793 - December 9, 1866) was a founding | settler in Dunedin, New Zealand. |
was the eldest son on Thomas Anstey, an early | settler in Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). |
(25 August 1588 - 21 May 1654) was an English | settler in Plymouth Colony who founded the town of Ta |
an early | settler in Saskatoon and designed by Walter William L |
(21 June 1816 - 18 October 1882) was an early | settler in Western Australia. |
rummond (1814 - 8 February 1873) was an early | settler in Western Australia, and a Member of the Wes |
It was constructed by William Irvin, an early | settler in western Clearfield County. |
Allison was the first European | settler in the area, where he staked gold, copper and |
was the birthplace of John Bateman, a pioneer | settler in the area. |
1808 - 16 March 1869) was a pioneer | settler in New Zealand. |
Canadian fur trader and first permanent white | settler in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. |
The first | settler in the region was in 1870 by a man named Pfei |
ward Convers (1587-1663) was an early Puritan | settler in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and was one |
Blackstone was the first European | settler in Rhode Island in 1635, before Roger William |
It is named after Thomas Cooper, the first | settler in this location. |
eat-grandfather claimed to be the first Greek | settler in Australia, arriving in Adelaide in 1840. |
family and is considered the first permanent | settler in Kansas City. |
Lester Teeple was an early | settler in the Elgin, Illinois vicinity. |
Ball immigrated to Sierra Leone and became an | settler in Sierra Leone. |
John Boston (died 1804), was a | settler in Australia who was known for plying his han |
aft (Rhenish Missionary Society) and an early | settler in present-day Namibia. |
ead, the Crocketts sold the property to a new | settler in the area, a French Huguenot man named Colo |
Martin the Armenian was a | settler in the Jamestown Colony in Virginia. |
He became the first | settler in Omaha, as well as the first postmaster, a |
an Diego in territorial California, and early | settler in the City of San Diego in the new U.S. stat |
amuel B. Watkins was reported to be the first | settler in the area around 1817. |
d - 1861) was a minister, and the first white | settler in the area which now consists of the outer-e |
organ, reputedly the first permanent European | settler in what would become West Virginia. |
Baker was an early | settler in the Omaha area who lived on 160 acres (0.6 |
Apparently a | settler in the failed Scottish colony of Stuarts Town |
The first | settler in Jefferson County is believed to have been |
ived in the area as the patent's first female | settler in 1712. |
re financial troubles saw him become an early | settler in the Colony of Vancouver Island. |
on Pedro" Sainsevain (1818-1904) was a French | settler in California during the Mexican era. |
ty was named for William Carpenter, the first | settler in the area in 1865 (, p. 89). |
Valpy was the first | settler in the south Dunedin area, with two large far |
e father of Saint Clair", as he was the first | settler in the area now occupied by the suburb of Sai |
sted Harrismith, after Harry Smith, the first | settler in the vicinity. |
The first European | settler in the region was Robert Parsons, a veteran o |
Roger Mowry, an early | settler in Providence, built the house around 1653 ac |
uel Gonsalus (Gonzales), a Spaniard and early | settler in Sullivan County, New York who lived near R |
The first European | settler in the area is believed to be Stephen Parker, |
hildren (Alexander Scott who became a pioneer | settler in Louisville, Kentucky, Thomas James, France |
an, one of, if not the, first permanent white | settler in Tennessee. |
He came to Michigan in 1827 and was the first | settler in the town of St. Joseph. |
1800 - 26 October 1872) was an early European | settler in New Zealand, the first United States Consu |
pril 2, 1806 - October 15, 1862) was an early | settler in Illinois, namesake of McConnell, Illinois. |
The first | settler in the area was Robert Diamond but beginning |
n, traditionally stated to be the first white | settler in West Virginia. |
n Upper Swan, Western Australia) was an early | settler in the Guildford area of Western Australia an |
Joseph Bailly, an early | settler in the region, laid out a town to be develope |
er miller John Schneider was really the first | settler in the township, the Bristols were better kno |
Chamberlayne, the son of an English | settler in Ireland, entered Gray's Inn in 1578 and be |
- July 3, 1884) was a prominent early pioneer | settler in Utah. |
In 1881 it was renamed to Merkel, the first | settler in this area, S. M. Merkel from Germany. |
niversity before arriving as an early Atlanta | settler in 1847 where he practiced that trade and a f |
The first known permanent | settler in what is now Hartford was Solomon Williams, |
d early 1840s, Clark, a lawyer, represented a | settler in a dispute with some Choctaw Native America |
farm of Edward Read Parker, son of the first | settler in the region. |
n Isaac Van Deursen became the first European | settler in the upper Ramapo River valley. |
ounty Road 35, named after the earliest known | settler in the town. |
nted 640 acres (2.6 km²) and became the first | settler in the Gerringong area. |
outhwestern Wisconsin and the first permanent | settler in present-day Dane County, Wisconsin. |
ashington "R.W." Carpenter, a prominent early | settler in the Plano area. |
settler in Pinellas County | |
Any potential | settler, including foreign immigrants, could claim th |
or Franco (the personal name of the original | settler, is which in is probably derived from the nat |
The Mennonite | Settler is a 17-foot limestone statue in Newton, Kans |
Another old | settler is dead. |
Canton was founded in 1825 by | settler Isaac Swan, who mistakenly believed his new t |
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