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Psst: Did you hear that IHOP is offering its House Faves menu through March 31? Available at most locations every Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m., it features four breakfast options ...
Jonathan Thacker / The Dial House, Winthorpe This is a photo of listed building number 1178872 . Wikidata has entry Dial House (Q26473565) with data related to this item.
The Deane Winthrop House is an historic house at 34 Shirley Street in Winthrop, Massachusetts. Deane Winthrop (1623–1704) was the sixth son of the second colonial governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, John Winthrop. The oldest part of the house was built about 1675 with an addition made in 1696.
Winthorpe is a village and civil parish located 2 miles (3 km) northeast of Newark-on-Trent in Nottinghamshire, England. The population at the 2011 census was 650, [1] falling to 595 at the 2021 census. [2] The name is probably from old English wynne þrop , which translates as 'hamlet of joy'. [3]
Winthrop House maintains an affiliation with Davenport College at Yale University. The house's name honors two notable men who shared the name "John Winthrop"—the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, as well as his descendant, an 18th-century astronomer who was both a Harvard professor and president of the university.
Winthrop is a town in Kennebec County, Maine, United States.Winthrop is included in the Lewiston-Auburn, Maine metropolitan New England city and town area.The population was 6,121 at the 2020 census. [4]
The airfield was known as RAF Winthorpe during the Second World War, opening in September 1940. [1] From 1942 to 1944, it housed No. 1661 Heavy Conversion Unit, training Avro Lancaster crews, in No. 5 Group with around thirty planes. In 1944 it joined No. 7 Group, still within Bomber Command. In 1945 it transferred to Transport Command.
The Deane Winthrop House located in what is now Winthrop, Massachusetts is the site of Deane's first house. The land of the site was first granted in 1637 to Captain William Pierce (1595–1641), a renowned mariner and slave trader. Pierce (also spelled Peirce, Pearce, Pearse, etc. in various records) built a house on his land sometime after ...