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Even more elaborate, was an article entitled "Aged Buzzard Thought Dead" by the Warren Sheaf that not only claimed that the belled buzzard was thought to have died after escaping entanglement from its leather strap, which a sleigh bell had been affixed, but added that the belled buzzard had been belled during the War of 1812 and was "present at ...
Source/Photographer: Image taken from Luttrell Psalter. Originally published/produced in England [East Anglia]; circa 1325-1335. Held and digitised by the British Library, and uploaded to Flickr Commons.
The Times was sold to the owners of the Warren Sheaf later that year who had printed The Times for a short time after the second fire. In 1927, The Times was consolidated with rival paper, The Tribune. Former owner of The Tribune, William Dahlquist, stayed on as editor and part owner of The Times.
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Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 20:52, 19 September 2017: 1,600 × 1,200 (335 KB): Geograph Update Bot: Higher-resolution version from Geograph.
This timeline of Sheffield history summarises key events in the history of Sheffield, a city in England. The origins of the city can be traced back to the founding of a settlement in a clearing beside the River Sheaf in the second half of the 1st millennium AD. The area had seen human occupation since at least the last ice age, but significant growth in the settlements that are now ...
Pamela Colman Smith (16 February 1878 – 18 September 1951), nicknamed "Pixie", was a British artist, illustrator, writer, publisher, and occultist.She is best-known for illustrating the Rider–Waite tarot deck (also called the Rider–Waite–Smith or Waite–Smith deck) for Arthur Edward Waite.
Frederick John Bahr (1837–1885) was a German inventor who purchased Lover's Leap on Wills Mountain, in Cumberland, Maryland, in 1860.He is best remembered for his paddle-wheel-powered blimps he attempted to fly in the mountains.