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Colin Roach was a 21-year-old black British man who died as a result of a fatal gunshot wound having entered a police-station reception. [1] [2] A subsequent inquest ruled his death was suicide - him having placed the barrel of a shotgun in to his mouth before squeezing the trigger - inside the entrance of Stoke Newington police station, in the London Borough of Hackney, on 12 January 1983.
Stoke Newington is an area in the northwest part of the London Borough of Hackney, England. The area is five miles (eight kilometres) northeast of Charing Cross.
The Connecticut Mirror – Hartford; The Darien Times – Darien; Darien News-Review – Darien; East Hartford Gazette – East Hartford; East Haddam News – East Haddam; The Easton Community Gazette – Easton; Fairfield Citizen-News – Fairfield; Glastonbury Citizen – Glastonbury; Haddam-Killingworth News – Haddam, Killingworth [3 ...
Stoke Newington's boundaries with the two neighbouring metropolitan boroughs within the County of London were as follows: [7] Islington to the west and south: the centres of Blackstock Road, Mountgrove Roads, Green Lanes, (diverting to take in Petherton Road and Leconfield Road) Matthias Road and Boleyn Road.
Justin Elicker, mayor of New Haven, Connecticut Stuart Symington , U.S. Senator for Missouri and Secretary of the Air Force Walter Childs Wood (1864–1953), state legislator and retired surgeon [ 15 ]
The Hackney North and Stoke Newington constituency was used for the Greater London Council elections in 1973, [2] 1977 [3] and 1981. [4] One councillor was elected at each election using first-past-the-post voting. [5] Ken Livingstone, who was elected from the constituency in 1977, was Leader of the Greater London Council from 1981 to 1986.
St Andrew, Stoke Newington; St Mary, Stoke Newington; St Matthias' Church, Stoke Newington; Stoke Newington (London County Council constituency) Stoke Newington (parish) Stoke Newington (UK Parliament constituency) Stoke Newington Central (ward) Stoke Newington Church Street; Stoke Newington Common; Stoke Newington School
Pat Sheehan, born c. 1945, is a retired American television news anchor from Connecticut.. Sheehan spent most of his TV journalism career at WTNH-TV from 1971-74 and from 1979-83, WFSB-TV from 1974-79 and from 1983-88, and WTIC-TV from 1989-99, as a reporter, and then an anchor, that made him a Connecticut Television icon.