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It is located on the A469 road (Thornhill Road). Cardiff Crematorium was opened in 1953 and occupies a 40-acre (16 ha) site as part of the Thornhill Cemetery. The cemetery contains two chapels – Wenallt Chapel and Briwnant Chapel – and the Gardens of Remembrance for the scattering of cremated remains. [1]
Thornhill, 1999 Moxy Früvous album; Thornhill was the name of a play that John Cassavetes and others were developing in 1983, about Eugene O'Neill; Thornhill College, Derry, Northern Ireland; Thornhill Academy, Sunderland, England; Thornhill Community Academy, West Yorkshire, England; Thornhill Secondary School, Ontario, Canada
Thornhill is a village on the southern outskirts of Dewsbury in Kirklees, West Yorkshire, England. Historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, Thornhill was absorbed into Dewsbury County Borough in 1910. The village is located on a ridge on the south side of the River Calder. Dewsbury, Ossett and Wakefield are close by.
It is a relatively modern area with housing stock dating mainly from the late 1980s and beyond. The area has a centralised precinct providing services, comprising a community centre (Thornhill Church Centre), a Sainsbury's supermarket, with an integral Post Office and Pharmacy; and the North Cardiff Medical Centre.
In six days, the video was watched over 340,000 times on YouTube, and it has also received over 700,000 views on Facebook. [12] Khan's hashtag on Twitter, #BoycottJurassicWorld gained attention, [ 13 ] [ 14 ] [ 15 ] After the Birmingham Mail publicised the story, Khan was interviewed by radio stations in the United States and Indonesia.
Thornhill is a historic plantation near Forkland, Alabama. The Greek Revival main house was built in 1833 by James Innes Thornton . [ 2 ] The house was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 10, 1984.
William Thornhill may refer to: William Thornhill (British Army officer) (1768-1851), British Army officer William Thornhill (MP for Poole) (1500–1557), English politician
Thornhill, also known as the Hade–Lewis House, is a plantation in Talladega County, Alabama, built beginning in 1835 by planter John Hardie. Hardie was an immigrant from Scotland, arriving in the Alabama Territory in 1818 after first spending time in New York and Virginia. He acquired the 700 acres (280 ha) of land for Thornhill in 1834 or 1835.