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The Chatham Daily News (1934–1934) The Comber Herald (1892–1917) Le Courrier and Le Courrier De L'Ouest (1885–1909) Courrier D'Essex (1884–1885) La Defense (1 issue – Mar. 7, 1918) The Essex Free Press (1895–2011) Essex Record (1871–1882) The Flesherton Advance (1883–1950) The Georgetown Herald (1867–1992) The Halton Compass ...
A Massachusetts teacher and her 1-year-old baby have died after they were trapped in a New York house fire, according to authorities. Crews responded to the scene on Clinton Hollow Road in Clinton ...
After graduation from the University of Toronto School of Architecture in 1946, [4] [5] [b] Storey worked for one year in Toronto in the office of John Lang Architect. [4] [c] After winning $750 in a Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation competition, [1] [6] he returned to his hometown of Chatham, and at the age of twenty-four he established the practice of Joseph W. Storey, Architect in the ...
Daily Lee Enterprises: News-Gazette [5] Lexington 1801 [9] Weekly The News-Gazette Corp. Began as the Rockbridge Repository 1801: News Leader: Staunton: 1904 Daily Gannett Company [10] News Progress: Mecklenburg County: 1884 Weekly Womack Publishing Co. Inc. [2] News Virginian: Waynesboro: Daily Lee Enterprises: Northern Virginia Daily ...
Reginald "Jerry" Pickard [1] PC (November 14, 1940 – July 27, 2021) was a Canadian politician who served as a member of the House of Commons of Canada from 1988 until his retirement in 2005, representing the riding of Chatham-Kent—Essex for the Liberal Party in his later terms in office.
She had one sibling, an older brother. She was educated at Saint Patrick School in Chatham, the Academy of Saint Elizabeth, and Marymount College, Tarrytown of Fordham University, where she spent a year studying abroad at the University of London. [3] She earned an Executive MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in 1988. [4]
Daniel Webster Cluff (July 4, 1916 – March 5, 1989) was a United States Coast Guard officer who led one of the U.S. Coast Guard's largest small-boat rescue operations in the midst of a New England winter storm on February 18 through 19, 1952, as Chatham Lifeboat Station's officer-in-charge. [1]
The newspaper was known as the Chatham News, the Medway News and just the News but held the title Rochester, Chatham and Gillingham News (often known as the Roch-Chat-Gill) for the longest period. Until late 2008 it was published from offices in New Road Avenue, Chatham , and was one of a series of newspapers that included the Medway Standard ...