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  2. Kenneth Grange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Grange

    Kenneth Grange in October 2016 with an InterCity 125 power car 43185 at National Railway Museum in York, the nose cone for which he designed in the 1970s. Sir Kenneth Henry Grange CBE RDI (17 July 1929 – 21 July 2024) was a British industrial designer, renowned for a wide range of designs for familiar, everyday objects.

  3. Zoysia matrella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoysia_matrella

    Zoysia matrella (L.) Merr., commonly known as Manila grass, is a species of mat-forming, perennial grass native to temperate coastal southeastern Asia and northern Australasia, from southern Japan (Ryukyu Islands), Taiwan, and southern China (Guangdong, Hainan) south through Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines to northern Australia (northeast Queensland), and west to the Cocos ...

  4. Zoysia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoysia

    These species, commonly called zoysia or zoysiagrass, are found in coastal areas or grasslands. [5] It is a popular choice for fairways and teeing areas at golf courses. The genus is named after the Slovenian botanist Karl von Zois (1756–1799).

  5. Godfrey Higgins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godfrey_Higgins

    Higgins was the son of Godfrey Higgins of Skellow Grange, near Doncaster. He was educated in Hemsworth before being admitted to Emmanuel College, Cambridge in 1790, and transferring to Trinity Hall in 1791. [1] He later studied law at the Inner Temple, but was not granted a license to practice law, and refrained from practice.

  6. The Adventure of the Abbey Grange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Adventure_of_the_Abbey...

    Sir Eustace's corpse is still lying at the murder scene. Hopkins tells Holmes some unsavoury things about Sir Eustace: that he poured petroleum over his wife's dog and set it alight, and once threw a decanter at her maid Theresa. Theresa corroborates Lady Brackenstall's account of Sir Eustace being an abusive alcoholic.

  7. Robert Henley, 1st Earl of Northington - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Henley,_1st_Earl_of...

    His grandfather, Sir Robert Henley, had been Master of the Court of the King's Bench, essentially a defence counsel. Henley's father Anthony Henley was educated at Oxford and interested in literature. When he moved to London, he became the friend of the Earls of Dorset and Sunderland, as well as a friend of Swift, Pope, and Burnet. After ...

  8. Matthew Hale (jurist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Hale_(jurist)

    Hale was born on 1 November 1609 in West End House (now known as The Grange or Alderley Grange) in Alderley, Gloucestershire to Robert Hale, a barrister of Lincoln's Inn, and Joanna Poyntz. [5] His father gave up his practice as a barrister several years before Hale's birth "because he could not understand the reason of giving colour in ...

  9. The Grange at High Force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grange_at_High_Force

    The Grange at High Force is a children's novel by Philip Turner, published by Oxford in 1965 with illustrations by William Papas. It was the second book published in the author's Darnley Mills series. [2] Turner won the annual Carnegie Medal, recognising the year's best children's book by a British subject. [3]