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The Airedale Terrier Today. Ringpress Books. ISBN 1-86054-142-9. Cites the Airedale as a police dog and as a dispatch bearer in war. Jardine, Deborah. "A Short History About the Aire-dale (âr'dal) Terrier". Keegan's Kingdom. Archived from the original on 2009-10-22; Jenkins, Alexandra C. (1930). Pal: The Story of an Airedale. New York: D ...
Having a dog doesn't mean your home must become a nest of pet hair. Some dogs are literally hairless, and even ones with long coats can be non-shedding.
The pack was founded in 1891 following a chance meeting between Dawson Jowett and Tom Clark, the former becoming the huntsman and the latter the kennelman.
At Airton the valley widens and becomes Airedale proper. The river flows past Skipton on to Keighley, Bingley, Shipley, and Leeds. Airedale, in conjunction with the Ribble Valley, provides low-altitude passes from Yorkshire to Lancashire through the Aire Gap. It is therefore an important transport route and was a strategically important area ...
John Nicholson (29 November 1790 – 13 April 1843) [3] was popularly known as the Airedale Poet [4] and also as the Bingley Byron. [5] His most notable work was Airedale in Ancient Times . He died trying to cross the swollen River Aire near to Dixon's mill in Saltaire .
Bradford Dale (or Bradfordale), is a side valley of Airedale that feeds water from Bradford Beck across the City of Bradford into the River Aire at Shipley in West Yorkshire, England. Whilst it is in Yorkshire and a dale, it is not part of the Yorkshire Dales and has more in common with Lower Nidderdale and Lower Airedale for its industrialisation.
The Airedale and Terrier were intended as stop-gap designs to keep production shops busy and to be sold whilst more modern designs were developed [25] However, Beagle lost almost £500,000 on the Airedale, due to its old design, poor performance and high cost; [25] the Terrier was also not profitable, due to the extensive number of man-hours in ...
The entrance to the Coram Campus. The Thomas Coram Foundation for Children is a large children's charity in London operating under the name Coram.It was founded by eighteenth-century philanthropist Captain Thomas Coram who campaigned to establish a charity that would care for the high numbers of abandoned babies in London, setting up the Foundling Hospital in 1739 at Lamb's Conduit Fields in ...