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Chicago Evening Post (1865–1875) - see Newspapers of the Chicago metropolitan area; Chicago Evening Post (1886–1932) Evening Post (1892–1893), then the Denver Evening Post (1895–1900), now The Denver Post; Memphis Evening Post (1868–1869), last name of the Memphis Post; New-York Evening Post (1801–1934), now the New York Post
Nottinghamshire Archives. In 1939, Nottingham Corporation appointed Violet Walker the first City Archivist; she had been appointed a librarian at Radford in 1926, before moving to Nottingham Reference Library in 1928, where she became librarian in 1936 and oversaw the re-cataloguing of its stock using the Dewey decimal system.
The Nottingham Post (formerly the Nottingham Evening Post) is an English tabloid newspaper which serves Nottingham, Nottinghamshire and parts of Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Lincolnshire. [ 4 ] The Post is published Monday to Saturday each week, and was also available via online subscription until 10 March 2020. [ 5 ]
The New York Evening Post occupied the building until moving to the New York Evening Post Building in 1926. [5] The building, which was later called the Garrison Building, [6] was designated a New York City landmark in 1965, [2] and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.
The base plates were 12 inches wide and inch thick in lengths 11 feet 11 inches long, and were laid continuously in order to avoid the plate joints and the rail joints coming together, as the rails were in 24 ft (7.3 m) lengths. [The rail length figure reported in the Nottingham Evening Post is 27 ft.] The base plate length of 11 ft 11 inches ...
Christopher Gerald Pole-Carew (17 May 1931 – 12 February 2020) [3] was a British appointee as High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire in 1979. [1] After serving in the Royal Navy, he was a newspaper executive, who rose to notoriety in his handling of trade union membership, initially as managing director of the Nottingham Evening Post.
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He was born in Stafford on 15 July 1850, the son of Charles Nelson Bromley, a surgeon (1817–1853) and Emma Bakewell (1819–1907). His father died two years later and the family moved to Nottingham, where they lived with Bromley's maternal uncle, the architect and surveyor Frederick Bakewell.