「Worcester」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Worcester

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  • cil until his appointment in 1934 as Dean of Worcester, a post he held for 15 years.
  • In 1949 he was appointed Dean of Worcester, a position he held to his death on 22 May 1
  • ubourg from Waleran de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Worcester, a Beaumont family cousin, as Comte de Meula
  • North of Worcester, a spur road of the same number heads toward
  • s title he was known as (styled) Marquess of Worcester, a courtesy title.
  • service is also provided by the Providence & Worcester, a regional railroad, on the Providence Line
  • mothy Ruggles, of Hardwick, in the county of Worcester, a member of the Stamp Act Congress of 1765
  • Near Worcester, a sharp cavalry engagement, now known as th
  • d within a few years a prebendary's stall at Worcester, a canonry of Windsor, and the deanery of He
  • He was elected to the see of Worcester about 8 June 1266 and consecrated on 19 Sept
  • He was elected to the see of Worcester about 25 May 1186 and consecrated on 21 Sept
  • LaMontagne is a graduate of Worcester Academy and Boston College.
  • Rowe continues his involvement with both the Worcester Academy and the University of Connecticut.
  • He was educated at Worcester Academy and then Deerfield Academy, Williams
  • Pat did a postgraduate year at Worcester Academy where he was named MVP of the Hillto
  • He was an alumnus of the Class of 1899 of Worcester Academy and Georgetown University.
  • Chelmsford High School then to prep school, Worcester Academy in Worcester, MA.
  • Mayhew graduated from the Worcester Academy in 1904 and from Brown University in
  • in Chelsea, Massachusetts and graduated from Worcester Academy before pitching two innings in his o
  • Worcester Academy
  • Jewett studied at Worcester Academy and Brown University and took his DD
  • he United States as a boy and attended first Worcester Academy from which he graduated in 1846, the
  • Roy was a graduate of Worcester Academy in Worcester, Massachusetts.
  • serving in the U. S. Army, Rowe returned to Worcester Academy in the fall of 1955 as the Athletic
  • d college football at Boston College, and at Worcester Academy for High School.
  • He attended Worcester Academy (Class of 1923) and played college f
  • At Worcester Academy, he met Roy McGillicuddy, the son of
  • homa), Chandler attended the public schools, Worcester Academy, Vinita, Indian Territory, in 1888,
  • Obinna prepared for college at Worcester Academy, graduating in 1995.
  • He graduated from Worcester Academy, then attended Yale College and, in
  • He played at Worcester Academy, then college football at Harvard Un
  • In addition, Worcester Academy, Lawrence Academy at Groton and St.
  • bought the building and land to make it into Worcester Academy.
  • She also attended High School at Worcester Academy.
  • igh School and then attended the prestigious Worcester Academy.
  • Doc graduated from Worcester Academy.
  • He is a graduate of Worcester Academy.
  • He attended Worcester Academy] for two years.
  • He was sent to RGS Worcester after which he proceeded to New College, Oxf
  • ned Gloucester Rugby from The King's School, Worcester after 4 years at The Chantry High School, Wo
  • He joined Worcester after completion of his Modern Languages deg
  • He was sent to the Royal Grammar School Worcester, after which he entered Oxford University.
  • He was sent to the Royal Grammar School Worcester after losing his right eye at the age of 12
  • He made his debut in Worcester against Northampton Saints in the Powergen C
  • A monument marks the site of the Worcester Agricultural Fairgrounds where Richmond thre
  • The game was played at the Worcester Agricultural Fairgrounds near the intersecti
  • Worcester Airport terminal curbfront
  • 19: Worcester Airport / Leicester via Main St.
  • as mayor Sullivan worked to develop the new Worcester Airport, blacktop the city's streets, coveri
  • :00 p.m., the tornado moved into the city of Worcester, alarming many residents.
  • its namesake county), Norfolk, Plymouth and Worcester, all of which are located in the similarly n
  • During the months after the surrender of Worcester, all other Royalist strongholds fell to the
  • ark is a Massachusetts state park located in Worcester along the western shore of Lake Quinsigamond
  • William Worcester also records the feast of his translation, a
  • ratford-on-Avon, Warwick and Leamington, and Worcester, although this may not have been true for th
  • ishop of London, and Hugh Latimer, Bishop of Worcester, although it is believed that he took no act
  • d Alstone now lie in the Anglican Diocese of Worcester, although they have been part of Gloucesters
  • e village of Hanbury roughly mid-way between Worcester and Redditch.
  • he 2008-09 season, he split the year between Worcester and ECHL affiliate, the Phoenix Roadrunners.
  • It is supported by BBC Hereford and Worcester and Wyvern FM.
  • es (0.80 km) to the north, where the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Line diverged north-westwa
  • hat it was consecrated by the then Bishop of Worcester and Coventry, the Right Reverend John Perown
  • e area is in Herefordshire, the post town is Worcester and the postcode WR6.
  • y station was a station built by the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway in 1854 as Daisy B
  • rafts of the French Sugar Pear and the Black Worcester, and later the Catherine (from Boston) and t
  • won numerous tournaments himself throughout Worcester and the English Midlands.
  • s Norton Junction and roving bridge over the Worcester and Birmingham Canal The termination of the
  • Alexander Inglis, a general practitioner in Worcester, and his first wife, Florence on 31 July 187
  • High on the wall of the Worcester and Birmingham toll house is a 1993 reproduc
  • Wasthill Tunnel, on the Worcester and Birmingham Canal, passes beneath the are
  • used to transport salt from Droitwich Spa to Worcester and then on to boats on the River Severn.
  • Hugh Latimer (1470-1555) Bishop of Worcester and Protestant Martyr.
  • l) heads, via a flight of locks, towards the Worcester and Birmingham Canal at Kings Norton Junctio
  • hey fielded their first Saturday team in the Worcester and District League.
  • run for the Massachusetts Senate seat in the Worcester and Hampden District.
  • It was opened in 1862 as part of the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton railway.
  • When he left the Navy in 1920 he lived in Worcester and taught many hundreds of children to swim
  • on of three children born to the 3rd Earl of Worcester and Christian North.
  • its pupils mainly from the St John's area of Worcester and the surrounding west side of Worcester C
  • rling and West Boylston, on the southeast by Worcester, and on the southwest by Paxton.
  • d be dispatched daily to Oxford, Gloucester, Worcester and the like.
  • Worcester and Birmingham Canal to Tardebigge top lock
  • was the son of Edward Somerset, 4th Earl of Worcester and Elizabeth Hastings.
  • y belonged to the late Thomas Percy, Earl of Worcester, and was forfeited by his rebellion.
  • He died on November 4, 1984, in Worcester, and was interred in St. John's Cemetery in
  • on 13 November 1307 he was elected bishop of Worcester and consecrated on 13 October 1308.
  • hire Royal Hospital is the main hospital for Worcester and its surrounding areas, having been opene
  • e second son of Edward Somerset, 4th Earl of Worcester and the brother of Henry Somerset, 1st Marqu
  • emoved in June 1845 to St. Nicholas rectory, Worcester, and was soon after appointed an honorary ca
  • A third local encompassing Worcester and central Massachusetts was under formatio
  • He studied at The King's School, Worcester and Caius College, Cambridge, then resided a
  • He was also present following the Battle of Worcester and aided Prince Charles's escape.
  • 100 top flight games and scored 22 tries for Worcester and has again being named as club captain fo
  • ed (in order) Bishop of St Davids, Bishop of Worcester and Archbishop of York.
  • rvoirs: one on the Nashua River northeast of Worcester, and one in the Swift River Valley.
  • Walter Reynolds (died 1327) was Bishop of Worcester and then Archbishop of Canterbury (1313-1327
  • During his early career he served on the Worcester and the Archibald Russell, and then joined t
  • It essentially covered the area of Worcester and northward to the New Hampshire border.
  • He fell ill at Worcester and died, being buried in the family vault a
  • His son George Higginson Allsopp was MP for Worcester, and Alfred Percy Allsopp (1861-1929) was MP
  • umb was educated at the Royal Grammar School Worcester and Magdalen College, Oxford.
  • The last major section of the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway (OWW), between Eve
  • four Welsh dioceses, as well as Hereford and Worcester, and on 21 December 1559 he was consecrated
  • n in Birmingham, England, he was educated at Worcester and migrated to Australia in 1864.
  • a Bishop-elect of Bath and Wells, Bishop of Worcester and Bishop of London as well as Lord Privy S
  • War Cabinet would move to Hindlip House near Worcester and Parliament to Stratford-upon-Avon.
  • way stop for travelers on the way to Boston, Worcester and Connecticut, and it was a commercial cen
  • a posse led by Richard Walsh (the Sheriff of Worcester), and in the ensuing fight most of the plott
  • heart of Worcestershire on the A449 between Worcester and Kidderminster.
  • Hereford and was educated at King's School, Worcester, and Hertford College, Oxford.
  • epresented Saracens, Harlequins, Gloucester, Worcester and Moseley.
  • 317, Cobham was provided to the bishopric of Worcester, and was consecrated on 22 May 1317.
  • Air Stations -- also owned WLEX (now WVEI in Worcester), and as such renamed the station WLEY.
  • was a junction station built by the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway in 1854.
  • Oldcorne were arrested at Hindlip Hall, near Worcester, and were committed to the Tower of London,
  • co-author, with Sir Robert Worcester and Roger Mortimore of Explaining Labour's L
  • re Bewdley Bridge, 20 miles (32 km) north of Worcester and on the enemy's line of retreat.
  • Opened by the Worcester and Hereford Railway, it became part of the
  • tive to the General Court, City Solicitor in Worcester, and in various other civic positions.
  • as then shelled by the W class destroyer HMS Worcester and sank.
  • Assistant Bishop, firstly in the Diocese of Worcester and latterly at Wakefield.
  • John of Worcester and William of Malmesbury add some lively de
  • The station was opened by the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway in 1853.
  • He attended RGS Worcester and Pembroke College, Oxford before training
  • the IWA stand at Tardebigge Top Lock on the Worcester and Birmingham Canal.
  • om Kings Norton Junction, where it joins the Worcester and Birmingham Canal to Stratford-upon-Avon,
  • n at Kidderminster was opened by the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway (OW&WR) in 1854.
  • Trapp studied at the Free School in Worcester and then at Christ Church, Oxford (B.A., 162
  • he only son of Charles Somerset, Marquess of Worcester, and Rebecca Child.
  • e, RI, then through northern Rhode Island to Worcester and on to Canada.
  • In 1628 he was re-elected again for Worcester and sat until 1629 when King Charles decided
  • smitter on 738 kHz is on the western edge of Worcester and covers most of the two counties.
  • an English Roman Catholic churchman, Dean of Worcester and Warden of All Souls' College, Oxford und
  • and has performed at both Mechanics Hall in Worcester and Symphony Hall in Boston.
  • He attended parochial schools in Worcester, and received a B.S. degree from College of
  • tween then and the arrival of the Sheriff of Worcester and his men, Bates left the house, possibly
  • e; she was stepdaughter of Samuel Collett of Worcester, and afterwards married Sir Nigel Bowyer Gre
  • Baker was born in Worcester, and died in Wolverhampton aged 55.
  • served the station - originally the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway and the South Staf
  • am via Honeybourne was opened by the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway on 9 July 1859.
  • shire estate and owned the Manor of Bewdley, Worcester and rendered service for it, of a fully equi
  • aw; was admitted to the bar and practiced in Worcester, and later in Boston, Massachusetts.
  • broadcast by BBC Shropshire, BBC Hereford & Worcester, and BBC Radio Stoke.
  • y between Buckingham Junction on the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway and Oxford Road Ju
  • Bishop Godfrey Giffard (1240-1306) Bishop of Worcester and Lord Chancellor of England.
  • at Diglis, just before the junction with the Worcester and Birmingham Canal.
  • 976 until 1986 he was Professorial Fellow at Worcester and Director of Oxford University Department
  • am via Honeybourne was opened by the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway on 9 July 1859, bu
  • esowen, Merry Hill, Stourbridge, Bromsgrove, Worcester and Droitwich.
  • In 1991 he became Provost of Worcester and in 1997 he was appointed Pro-Vice-Chance
  • ia Halesowen and the tunnel at Lapal, to the Worcester and Birmingham Canal at Selly Oak, Birmingha
  • Kings Norton Junction toll house on the Worcester and Birmingham Canal
  • 72, the former Traffic Manager of the Oxford Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway.
  • Gas Street Basin, where the BCN ends and the Worcester and Birmingham Canal begins.
  • assage in Boston, Massachusetts, moved it to Worcester, and renamed it the Bancroft School of Massa
  • the Three Counties (Hereford, Gloucester and Worcester) and originally featuring their three choirs
  • In 1814 he left Worcester and established an art school in London, and
  • In 1819, he returned to Worcester, and was again employed at the Royal Porcela
  • The station is also situated alongside the Worcester and Birmingham Canal, a popular cycling and
  • on of Jeremiah Macklin Allcroft, merchant of Worcester and his wife Hannah Derby, daughter of Thoma
  • He burnt Worcester and expelled William de Beauchamp, but the c
  • for England, both the County of Hereford and Worcester and the seven districts within it were aboli
  • London Midland's service between Worcester and Gloucester via Ashchurch and Cheltenham
  • This line also connected with the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway's line from Wolver
  • s debut for Somerset on 16 June 1976 against Worcester and was awarded his Somerset Cap in 1978.
  • He stayed at Worcester, and was made a Fellow in 1976.
  • rd was educated at The Royal Grammar School, Worcester and later at Marjon's and is now in his seco
  • chaplain to Edward Stillingfleet, bishop of Worcester, and for his support of the ruling party in
  • On 23 August 1858 the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway ran a special day
  • h part of the Grand Union Canal) towards the Worcester and Birmingham Canal at the Worcester Bar (G
  • When the Worcester and Birmingham Company started their canal a
  • million, entered service operating from both Worcester and Kidderminster depots due to staff shorta
  • north; and Interstate 395, linking Oxford to Worcester and eastern Connecticut with three local exi
  • The road connected Providence, Worcester and Hartford.
  • Commuter rail service between Worcester and Framingham was discontinued October 27,
  • play are 20th century professional photos of Worcester and the highly anticipated Civil War Exhibit
  • n is the Massachusetts State Senator for the Worcester and Middlesex district, which includes her h
  • ed in the metropolitan areas of Springfield, Worcester, and Hartford.
  • Although the Bow, Chelsea, Worcester and Derby factories had, before Spode, estab
  • st located in the Chadwick Square section of Worcester and was a popular place for many of Bob's Wo
  • He was sent to the Royal Grammar School Worcester and began his career as a church organist in
  • th century, the others are by John Martin of Worcester and dated 1674.
  • Kingdon was born in Worcester and after playing for Kidderminster Harriers
  • to non-league football with Berwick Rangers ( Worcester) and then Stourport Swifts.
  • 21, 1589, he succeeded his father as Earl of Worcester, and in 1593 he was made a Knight of the Gar
  • pervision over his twin brother's earldom of Worcester, and in 1151 he intervened to frustrate the
  • Allen was born in Worcester and educated at the Royal Grammar School Wor
  • the principal limited access highway between Worcester, and Providence, Rhode Island, and is locate
  • intermediate railway station on the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway between Worcester
  • 1864, Eunice Elizabeth Preston, daughter of Worcester and Nancy (Evans) Preston, a native of Conco
  • Educated at the Royal Grammar School Worcester and Jesus College, Oxford he joined the Roya
  • g Norton Railway from Kingham on the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway to Chipping Norton
  • he village of Abberley about halfway between Worcester and Tenbury Wells in the north-west of the c
  • ion opened with the extension of the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton railway from Worcester to
  • In 1879, he was appointed Dean of Worcester, and then in 1886 to the See of Ely, He held
  • The suit was between Bishop Wulfstan (II) of Worcester and Walter, Abbot of Evesham, and Cyneweard'
  • ord-upon-Avon Canal terminates and meets the Worcester and Birmingham Canal at Kings Norton, Birmin
  • was present at a plea between the church of Worcester and Evesham Abbey regarding the estates of B
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