Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Havre de Grace, Maryland. Havre de Grace (/ hævər dɪˈɡreɪs /), [2] abbreviated HdG, is a city in Harford County, Maryland, United States. It is situated at the mouth of the Susquehanna River and the head of Chesapeake Bay. It is named after the port city of Le Havre, France, which in full was once Le Havre de Grâce (French, "Harbor of ...
Nov. 10—It doesn't take much digging to find the root of Lea Cataggio's coaching style which, in her first season, has hoisted Havre de Grace girls soccer to historic company. The Warriors lost ...
Aug. 31—Life for Stace Sullivan will never be the same since the fatal stabbing of her son, Kamren Faison, less than two weeks ago in front of a McDonald's in Havre de Grace. Sullivan's sister ...
Nov. 2—A group of Havre de Grace football family members counted down the clock's final seconds, savoring each number. The significance of hitting triple zeros with a lead was monumental. The ...
Aug. 22—A teen was fatally stabbed Monday afternoon at a McDonald's in Havre de Grace. At 2:26 p.m., the Havre de Grace Police Department received multiple 911 calls for a stabbing at the ...
LMS. Webcast. [1] Website. wxcyfm.com. WXCY-FM (103.7 FM) is a radio station in Havre de Grace, Maryland. Owned by Forever Media, it broadcasts a country music format serving the I-95 corridor from Wilmington, Delaware, to Baltimore, Maryland. In 2019, Delmarva Broadcasting Company was acquired by Forever Media. [3]
Havre de Grace (May 12, 2007 – April 30, 2023) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse who was bred in Kentucky and was 2011 American Horse of the Year. [2] During her racing career, she was owned by Fox Hill Farms and trained by J. Larry Jones. Her sire was the 2005 American Horse of the Year, Saint Liam. Her dam was the mare Easter Bunnette ...
Sion Hill is a National Historic Landmark in Havre de Grace, Maryland, notable as an example of high-style Federal architecture and as the home of a family of prominent officers of the United States Navy. Work began at Sion Hill around 1785 for the Rev. John Ireland, but progressed slowly, as the unfinished house was sold in 1795 to Gordon Denison.