Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On 6 November 1802 he had married Sophia (1775–1856), daughter of his former patron at Grimsby, Charles Anderson Pelham, by then first Baron Yarborough, and his wife, Sophia Aufrère. They had no children. Long North was dogged by ill health in his later years, which was exacerbated by his unwarranted anxiety about the state of his finances.
Nicknamed "the Mariners", the club was founded as Grimsby Pelham Football Club in 1878, changed its name to Grimsby Town a year later, and moved to its current stadium, Blundell Park, in 1898. Grimsby Town is the most successful team of the three professional clubs in historic Lincolnshire , being the only one to play top-flight English football.
Grimsby or Great Grimsby is a port town in Lincolnshire, England with a population of 86,138 (as of 2021). It is located near the mouth on the south bank of the Humber that flows to the North Sea. Grimsby adjoins the town of Cleethorpes directly to the south-east forming a conurbation.
In 2004 it became the Grimsby Institute of Further & Higher Education. Its connection (associate college status) with the former University of Lincolnshire and Humberside (formed in 1996) finished when this changed its name to the University of Lincoln in 2002, which rapidly closed most of its main Hull site down (now occupied by the Hull York ...
A History of Grimsby, 1970 (University of Hull) Green, Caitlin [Thomas Green, pseud.], Britons and the Anglo-Saxons: Lincolnshire AD 400–650. Lincoln: Lincolnshire Society for History and Archaeology, 2012. Grigg, David, The Agricultural Revolution in South Lincolnshire, 1966 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)
Pelham's Pillar, 128 feet high, on a hill at Cabourne between Caistor and Grimsby, was designed by Willson for the Earl of Yarborough. Willson was honoured as a citizen in Lincoln, and became a city magistrate in 1834 and mayor in 1852.
Center for Urban History of East Central Europe; Centre for Contemporary History; Study and Documentation Centre for War and Contemporary Society; Centre for History and Philosophy of Science, University of Leeds; Centre for Medieval and Renaissance Studies; Collegium Carolinum (1956) Colombian Institute of Anthropology and History
This page was last edited on 15 January 2024, at 18:19 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.