Search references for LENGTHSMAN. Phrases containing LENGTHSMAN
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The term Lengthsman was coined in the 1700s in a concept rooted in the Tudor Era as far back as War of the Roses and enclosure. Originally, it referred
Lengthsman
his burning clothes and wrapped him in his own shirt. 1943 George Leach Lengthsman, Southern Railway After an ammunition train of some fifty wagons was hit
List of recipients of the George Medal, 1940s
List_of_recipients_of_the_George_Medal,_1940s
Art style associated with British canals
originates from the Llangollen Canal in the early 20th century, where a lengthsman grew an abundance of roses and had a picturesque view of Chirk Castle
Roses_and_Castles
Horticultural campaign in the UK
accounts for 2017-18 contradict this statement though as they show the local lengthsman was paid £3,500 to plant summer plants. In September 2025, Paul Hayhurst
Britain_in_Bloom
Circular canal workers' dwellings on the Thames and Severn Canal in England
junction of the canal and the River Thames, and a further requirement of the lengthsman there may have been to collect tolls from bargemasters and superintend
Round house (Thames and Severn Canal)
Round_house_(Thames_and_Severn_Canal)
British building conservation charity
Acton Burnell Shropshire 1992 1993 Repairs funded by English Heritage Lengthsman's Cottage Lowsonford Warwickshire 1992 2006 Located on the towpath of the
Landmark_Trust
River in Kent, England
temporary mooring in the lock. This work was extended in 2016 by a volunteer lengthsman Hugh Nesbitt. who is an amateur archaeologist. In February 2016, Network
River_Darent
Historical buildings in Islington, London
is more likely to be a late 18th-century building, possibly used by a lengthsman working on the New River. A similar rebus can also be seen above one of
Canonbury House and Canonbury Tower
Canonbury_House_and_Canonbury_Tower
River
maintained by The Dartford and Crayford Restoration Trust, who also organise Lengthsman duties for the banks. There is a signposted public footpath called the
River_Cray
52879 (Former canal lengthman's cottage) Late 18th century The former lengthsman's cottage is in gritstone and is roofless. There are two storeys and three
Listed buildings in Dethick, Lea and Holloway
Listed_buildings_in_Dethick,_Lea_and_Holloway
Railway station in Queensland, Australia
Retrieved 4 October 2015 – via National Library of Australia. "Railway Lengthsman Injured". The Brisbane Courier. 15 May 1911. p. 6. Retrieved 4 October
Eudlo_railway_station
Footpath in Kent, England
Signposted and marked DB10, it is maintained in passable condition by local lengthsman volunteers of "The Friends of Dartford and Crayford Creek". Nelsons Row
Darent_Valley_Path
Town in Queensland, Australia
Roehrig (aged 11) and Jane Roehrig (aged 8) were the children of railway lengthsman Charles Roehrig and his wife Matilda. The news of the children's deaths
Drillham,_Queensland
Village in Wiltshire, England
1941, crosses the parish south of the village. A three-storey circular lengthsman's cottage survives at Round House Farm alongside a bridge, a short stretch
Marston_Meysey
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Surname or Lastname
German
German : metonymic occupational name for someone who worked at a crushing mill, from Middle Low German stamp ‘pestle’, ‘crusher’.English : variant of Stamps.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Another name of Lord Krishna, Sweet like Honey
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Method; Law
Girl/Female
English Greek American
The name of a flowering vine used in folk medicine.
Male
English
Anglicized form of Hebrew Yehownathan, JEHONATHAN means "God has given." In the bible, this is the name of many characters, including the eldest son of Saul and a close friend of David.
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
Discreet prudent
Boy/Male
British, English
Triumph
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Flashing; Shining; With a High Forehead
Boy/Male
Indian
Black of adriatic
Surname or Lastname
English
English : regional name from the county of Cornwall, which is named with the Old English tribal name Cornwealas. This is from Kernow (the term that the Cornish used to refer to themselves, a word of uncertain etymology, perhaps connected with a Celtic element meaning ‘horn’, ‘headland’), + Old English wealas ‘strangers’, ‘foreigners’, the term used by the Anglo-Saxons for British-speaking people.English : variant of Cornwell.
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