「CONNECTICUT」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

CONNECTICUT

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  • Hamilton Park (New Haven), Connecticut, a former sports venue in New Haven, Connec
  • aseball coach at Sacred Heart University in Connecticut, a position he has held since 1988.
  • y 8, 1822 -?), daughter of Samuel Mather of Connecticut, a descendant of Rev. Richard Mather of Dor
  • the fine sediments would have rendered Lake Connecticut a turquoise blue-green.
  • lticultural music and arts venue in Hamden, Connecticut, a suburb of New Haven.
  • Island Sound between Hell Gate and Norwalk, Connecticut, a territory that included eastern parts of
  • article is within the scope of WikiProject Connecticut, a collaborative effort to improve the cove
  • on ordered the fleet to sail to New London, Connecticut, a potential raiding site.
  • by Shannon's Fine Art Auctioneers, Milford, Connecticut, a Bannarn original oil titled "Modernist E
  • sed by the Ashland Mill Bridge in Griswold, Connecticut, a bridge which is listed on the U.S. Natio
  • The Barn", at 33 Highland Ave. in Rowayton, Connecticut, a building that currently houses the Roway
  • Starting in 1837, Connecticut abandoned general tickets and adopted distr
  • f the bridge from its opening in 1940 until Connecticut abolished tolls in 1988.
  • in Fairfield County in the Town of Newtown, Connecticut about 1 mile outside of the Incorporated Bo
  • ttended the district school and Plainfield ( Connecticut) Academy.
  • ark of Northport can be seen as far away as Connecticut across Long Island Sound.
  • The Family Institute of Connecticut Action Committee is a registered state of C
  • The title refers to the Westport, Connecticut address where the band stayed while recordi
  • Born in Stonington, Connecticut, Adee attended Yale University where he was
  • was applied, more cases were discovered, in Connecticut, adjoining states, and the upper Midwest.
  • The Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, adopted in 1639, replaced the committees w
  • The president of the Connecticut AFL-CIO, however, disagreed with this expla
  • r played the organ in a church in Hartford, Connecticut, after which he spent four years playing th
  • e an $8,000 cash bond for Edward McGuire in Connecticut, after he was charged with grand larceny.
  • 20 January 2011, Toledo returned to Groton, Connecticut after a six-month deployment that included
  • 's Digest and was shot largely in Stamford, Connecticut after Kazan was denied permission to film i
  • lic elementary and high schools in Enfield, Connecticut, after which he graduated from the Universi
  • tt died on November 3, 1929 in Wallingford, Connecticut after a three-year illness.
  • ries of criminal prosecutions in New Haven, Connecticut against various members of the Black Panthe
  • Tossy Spivakovsky died in Westport, Connecticut, age 91, survived by his daughter, Ruth Voo
  • Harding died in New Haven, Connecticut, aged 82.
  • ennis died from ovarian cancer in Westport, Connecticut, aged 54.
  • He died at his home in Westport, Connecticut, aged 51, of cancer.
  • In 1997 she died of cancer in Southport, Connecticut, aged 64.
  • He died in Danbury, Connecticut, aged 92.
  • Manning died at Norwalk Hospital in Connecticut, aged 89.
  • The state of Connecticut agreed to sell the building to the group fo
  • Bruce Gould, MD, FACP, Director, Connecticut AHEC
  • The Connecticut Air National Guard consists of approximatel
  • Gunther hopes to see the Connecticut Air and Space Museum move to the former Str
  • The Connecticut Air and Space Center occupies part of the s
  • unit assigned to Suffolk County AFB was the Connecticut Air National Guard's 103rd Fighter-Intercep
  • The Connecticut Air and Space Center features displays and
  • The Connecticut Air and Space Center opened in 1998 to the
  • rport was established as the first State of Connecticut airport in 1929.
  • one of the four co-founders of Stonington, Connecticut, along with Thomas Stanton, Thomas Miner, a
  • istrict is a historic district in Brooklyn, Connecticut along parts of Bush Hill Road, CT 169, and
  • 9, 1967, Zwerin was arrested in New Haven, Connecticut along with fellow journalists Tim Page and
  • 2-acre (0.81 ha) historic site in Andover, Connecticut along the 1781 and/or 1782 march routes of
  • He later formed a colony at New Haven, Connecticut, along with Reverend John Davenport and Dav
  • is the public high school of East Hartford, Connecticut, along with its next-door neighbor, Connect
  • to the United Church of Christ in Hartford, Connecticut, alongside Barack Obama, who was then a Pre
  • The Seth Seelye House in Bethel, Connecticut, also known as the Bethel Public Library, w
  • The Swain-Harrison House in Branford, Connecticut, also known as Harrison House and Museum or
  • he Sanford-Curtis-Thurber House in Newtown, Connecticut, also known as James Thurber House, is a Ge
  • ered at Pine Brook Country Club in Nichols, Connecticut, also the summer home of the Group Theatre
  • Avery Homestead, in Griswold, Connecticut, also known as Hopeville Pond Park House or
  • Meadowlands, in Darien, Connecticut, also known as the Darien Community Associa
  • 2007 and is reported to have been found in Connecticut also.
  • 983, a second location opened in Waterbury, Connecticut, although it lasted only three years.
  • 1936 Connecticut Amateur
  • Isabelle Lendl (born 1991, Greenwich, Connecticut), an American amateur golfer, a daughter of
  • Jen Hudak (born 1986, Hamden, Connecticut), an American freestyle skier
  • are hospital located in central Manchester, Connecticut, an eastern Connecticut community about 10
  • se Hill School is located in New Fairfield, Connecticut and has approximately 750 students.
  • then went to Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut and received her Ph.D in 1926.
  • He was born in Stanford, Connecticut and attended schools in Scarsdale, New York
  • e attended elementary school in Bloomfield, Connecticut, and then the Haaren Aviation High School,
  • aw with Judge William Bristol of New Haven, Connecticut, and afterward finished at the Law School i
  • He attended Kent School in Kent, Connecticut and graduated from Harvard in 1917, after w
  • iral Karen Flaherty is a native of Winsted, Connecticut, and joined the United States Navy as a Nur
  • missionaries, Dungan was born in New Haven, Connecticut, and grew up in Shanghai, China (until 1940
  • Allen was born in Westport, Connecticut and died in Saugatuck, Connecticut.
  • pers have been donated to the University of Connecticut and are available for research.
  • piece of chemical equipment in the State of Connecticut and purchased by the department on June 24,
  • He settled in New Haven, Connecticut and is buried in the Grove Street Cemetery
  • Allen was born in Danbury, Connecticut and claimed a Mayflower ancestry.
  • October 25, 1812) was the 22nd Governor of Connecticut and a member of the US House of Representat
  • n order to become the quarterbacks coach at Connecticut, and Mulholland was promoted as his replace
  • , northeast of Carting Island, Long Island ( Connecticut) and Peacock Island (Connecticut), and sout
  • At Trumbull in Connecticut and Kimpu-san in Japan large crystals of sc
  • r 6, 1835) was a United States Senator from Connecticut, and was the brother of Nathaniel Smith and
  • ittee of The Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticut, and is on Governor M. Jodi Rell's Commissi
  • DiSalvatore grew up in South Windsor, Connecticut and played high school hockey there, with h
  • 008, Kimberly-Clark's mills in New Milford, Connecticut, and Romagnano Sesia, Italy, improved their
  • Keyes worked on the revitalization of the Connecticut and Passumpsic Rivers Railroad.
  • It is located in Hamden, Connecticut and opened in 1956.
  • Argentina, migrating northward to Ohio and Connecticut, and rarel in Ontario.
  • He was born in Killingly, Connecticut and was graduated from Yale College in 1806
  • Later, she resided in Greenwich, Connecticut and in Southern California.
  • r lived at 27 Riverside Drive in Waterford, Connecticut, and they were the designers of Waterford's
  • Moody was born in New Haven, Connecticut and attended the public schools in Providen
  • She is a native of Connecticut and a graduate of Hopkins School and Wesley
  • Born in Waterbury, Connecticut and raised in Watertown, Connecticut, Kaess
  • He was appointed postmaster of Danbury, Connecticut and served from April 9, 1805, to May 26, 1
  • , University of Rhode Island, University of Connecticut, and Boston College Law School.
  • he clear channel stations WTIC in Hartford, Connecticut and KRLD in Dallas, Texas on the same frequ
  • Nancy Wyman, Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut and former State Comptroller
  • vier, and 13-seed Penn State led to Temple, Connecticut and Eastern Michigan (respectively) being c
  • Rosemary Hall a prep school in Wallingford, Connecticut, and Chatham Township High School in Chatha
  • d occurrence in which a 10 (Temple), an 11 ( Connecticut), and a 12-seed (Eastern Michigan) advanced
  • He attended the University of Connecticut and Southern Connecticut State.
  • in 1793 he was advanced to chief justice of Connecticut, and remained in this post until his death
  • He died in New Haven, Connecticut, and was interred at Grove Street Cemetery.
  • It premiered in Waterbury, Connecticut and Phoenix, Arizona on October 27, 2006.
  • He attended the University of Connecticut, and obtained his Ph.D. from Cornell Univer
  • Brett, was born in Darien, Connecticut and spent most of his life in Woodstock, Ve
  • lled in medical school at the University of Connecticut and became an MD in the field of family med
  • He matriculated at Wesleyan University in Connecticut and graduated with honors in 1882 at the ag
  • e attended the Episcopal Academy, Cheshire, Connecticut and graduated from Yale College in 1804.
  • Luders Marine Construction Co. in Stamford, Connecticut and launched on 13 September 1942.
  • He clerked in a store in Norwalk, Connecticut and another in New York City.
  • attended a military high school in Hamden, Connecticut and upon graduation he attended Sanborn's s
  • Sherman was born in Norwalk, Connecticut and educated at the local school.
  • ington High School Athletic Hall of Fame in Connecticut and in May 2001, he as inducted into the Ce
  • anaan Village, in the town of North Canaan, Connecticut, and is a former union station.
  • or Christ-Janer & Associates of New Canaan, Connecticut, and fabricated of Vermont granite blocks.
  • ted States, including New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Virginia, and have also been featured o
  • le is about a mountain located in northwest Connecticut and southwest Massachusetts.
  • the 1908 Messina earthquake sent Illinois, Connecticut, and Culgoa to Messina.
  • He later moved to Connecticut and served in the state legislature multipl
  • The tour began on October 17 in Hartford, Connecticut and ended on December 3 in Los Angeles, Cal
  • At age fifteen he went to Hebron, Connecticut, and engaged in business with his uncle.
  • Tift was born in Groton, Connecticut and moved with his family to Key West, Flor
  • tfield (1597-1687) as minister at Guilford, Connecticut, and served as pastor of Salem from 1659.
  • amed the 1998 Mr. Football for the state of Connecticut, and also won All-State and All-District ho
  • a located partly in the town of Woodbridge, Connecticut and partly in the city of New Haven.
  • Middletown, Connecticut and surrounding towns.
  • eadmaster of the Thomas School in Rowayton, Connecticut, and taught at the University of Bridgeport
  • He also served as Governor of Connecticut, and as the first presiding officer of the
  • agy was born on May 5, 1967, in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and is a former Major League Baseball All-
  • head basketball coach at the University of Connecticut and he headed that program from 1969 until
  • w York, New Jersey, Vermont, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
  • y 16, 1923 of Irish heritage in Colchester, Connecticut and served in the United States Army Air Co
  • were raised in a compound near Litchfield, Connecticut, and were identified as "Adam" or "Eve" in
  • rsey, Pennsylvania, New York, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Massachusetts as federal disaster area
  • He was born on April 21, 1869 in Hartford, Connecticut and died on January 16, 1937 in Providence,
  • Miller died at the age of 57 in New London, Connecticut, and was interred at Comstock Cemetery in M
  • ers off Stonington, the states of New York, Connecticut and Rhode Island come together at a single
  • She is a graduate of the University of Connecticut, and most recently shot a scene alongside K
  • He died in 1883 in New Haven, Connecticut, and was interred at Cedar Hill Cemetery in
  • larger than Rhode Island, Delaware, Hawaii, Connecticut and New Jersey combined.
  • s Episcopal Church is located in New Haven, Connecticut and was listed on the NRHP in 2003.
  • It is located in West Hartford, Connecticut and was founded in 1932 by the Sisters of M
  • rhalder was born in New England, grew up in Connecticut, and moved to Oklahoma in 1975 after servin
  • ason, the Bicentennials moved to New Haven, Connecticut and adopted the name, the Connecticut Bicen
  • He was admitted to the Connecticut and Pennsylvania bars in 1883 and commenced
  • ered by the current towns of South Windsor, Connecticut and East Hartford, Connecticut.
  • avelers on the way to Boston, Worcester and Connecticut, and it was a commercial center through the
  • Gober was born in Wallingford, Connecticut and studied at Middlebury College, Vermont
  • andment in December, he returned to the 6th Connecticut and became acting commander of the 1st Conn
  • studied at Oxford University, University of Connecticut and Harvard Business School.
  • opera company that performs across southern Connecticut and Rhode Island.
  • as was a manufacturer, Mayor of Middletown, Connecticut, and lieutenant governor of Connecticut in
  • Currently, she lives in Connecticut and teaches in the Creative Writing at Rhod
  • He was born in Woodbury, Connecticut and received a modest education.
  • 4 - July 19, 1808) was born in New Britain, Connecticut and graduated from Yale in 1762.
  • n at the Old Greenwich School in Greenwich, Connecticut and eventually studied political science an
  • The white oak is also the state tree of Connecticut and Maryland.
  • The Gartens live in Southport, Connecticut, and East Hampton, New York.
  • director of the War Manpower Commission of Connecticut and served until October 1, 1945.
  • appointed Judge of Admiralty for New York, Connecticut and the Jerseys, in place of Caleb Heathcot
  • s olor) are increasing their populations in Connecticut and cause damage to plants which provide fo
  • Two months later he moved to Hartford, Connecticut and became its first proprieter.
  • istoric house museum located in Woodbridge, Connecticut, and is owned and operated by the Amity & W
  • lter Henry Gray of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut and Kirk Stevan Smith of the Episcopal Dioc
  • Connecticut and Rhode Island reassigned the Route 101 d
  • It is not far from South Cove, Connecticut and the Fenwick Historic District.
  • He was born in New London, Connecticut and attended Madison College (now known as
  • He died on November 1, 1706 at New Haven, Connecticut and is buried in Center Street Cemetery, Wa
  • He returned to Canaan, Connecticut, and was admitted to the bar in Litchfield
  • explored in large part by the University of Connecticut and Inframat Corporation.
  • Born Jack Arnold Waks in New Haven, Connecticut and as a child read a lot of science fictio
  • ealthy Ohio family, attended prep school in Connecticut and graduated from Kenyon College in Gambie
  • Galusha was born in Norwich, Connecticut, and migrated to Shaftsbury, Vermont, in 17
  • He studied theology at Bethlehem, Connecticut, and in 1796, became pastor of the Congrega
  • He moved to Goshen, Connecticut, and later to Janesville, Wisconsin where h
  • s an unsuccessful candidate for Governor of Connecticut and is now a resident of Essex, Connecticut
  • d 26 shows throughout New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Ohio.
  • l is a school in the town of West Hartford, Connecticut and is one of the West Hartford Public Scho
  • She was educated in Waterbury, Connecticut and attended the Carnegie Institute of Tech
  • Kirtland was born in Wallingford, Connecticut and died in Rockport Township, Ohio.
  • He returned to Connecticut and settled in Canterbury in 1809, where he
  • A native of Connecticut and graduate of the United States Military
  • Chittenden was born in Salisbury, Connecticut, and moved to Vermont in 1776 in the wake o
  • odwin State Forest in the towns of Chaplin, Connecticut and Hampton, Connecticut and the northern t
  • They married June 17, 2006, in Greenwich, Connecticut, and welcomed their first child, Theodore N
  • t emeritus of the University of Hartford in Connecticut, and a dedicated Esperantist.
  • onomics at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, and Director of the John E. Andrus Public
  • gational minister, Peter Miles Snyder, from Connecticut and grew up in Rockford, Illinois.
  • ifornia, with locations in Wisconsin, Utah, Connecticut, and Shanghai, China.
  • He was born in Merryall, Connecticut and attended the common schools.
  • nly two years after her family arrived from Connecticut, and the two eventually married on June 21,
  • r of the first Catholic church at Hartford, Connecticut, and at Worcester, Massachusetts.
  • ended Bloomfield High School in Bloomfield, Connecticut and was a letterman in football.
  • n slope of Mount Frissell is located within Connecticut and rises to the highest elevation within t
  • is the current First Selectman of Westport, Connecticut and an Emmy Award-winning journalist.
  • Ephraim M. Wright was a Connecticut and Massachusetts teacher, clergyman and po
  • ack was arrested and imprisoned at Milford, Connecticut, and banished from the province of New York
  • that they would shutter their operations in Connecticut and Massachusetts due to the weak economy,
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