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The Darlington & Stockton Times is a British, regional, weekly, paid for, newspaper covering the Richmond - Darlington - Stokesley - Thirsk - Leyburn area. [4] It is published in Darlington by Newsquest Media Group Ltd, a subsidiary of Gannett Company Inc. [2] Three separate editions are published for County Durham, North Yorkshire and ...
Newspapers published in Charleston, South Carolina: . The Charleston Evening Gazette.D., T.W., July 11, 1785- Oct. 18, 1786 [21]; The Charleston Morning Post, and ...
The Northern Echo has a number of sister publications, including the weekly Darlington & Stockton Times and the free Advertiser series. In recent years, the web edition has used a paywall - allowing a limited number of articles to be viewed free.
Pease was born on 31 May 1767 as the eldest son of the Darlington woollen manufacturer Joseph Pease [3] (1737–1808) and his wife, Mary Richardson. The family were prominent Quakers: his brother Joseph Pease (1772–1846) was a founder of the Peace Society in 1817 and involved in the second, 1839 Anti-Slavery Society, for which he wrote tracts.
Darlington Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Darlington, Darlington County, South Carolina. The district encompasses 21 contributing commercial buildings in the central business district of Darlington, and built between about 1870 and 1935. The one, two, and three-part commercial buildings exhibit typical ...
The Darlington News was established in 1875 [2] as a weekly, publishing on Thursdays. [3] In 1908 it was consolidated with the Darlington Press, under the new name News and Press. [ 4 ]
Mitchell Robinson invited his high school coach, Butch Stockton, to move in with him after his wife died this year 💙 Robinson visited Stockton's wife every day in the hospital when she was sick.
The Pease family is an English and mostly Quaker family associated with Darlington, County Durham, and North Yorkshire, descended from Edward Pease of Darlington (1711–1785). [1] They were 'one of the great Quaker industrialist families of the nineteenth century, who played a leading role in philanthropic and humanitarian interests'. [2]