Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Elizabeth, Lady Thurles; Patrick Ambrose Treacy This page was last edited on 3 June 2023, at 16:02 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Corbett lined out at centre-forward and scored a point from play, however, he ended the game on the losing side after a 2–14 to 0–17 defeat. [13] Corbett played in a second successive final on 18 October 2009 when he lined out at full-forward against Drom-Inch. He was held scoreless throughout the game but collected a second winners' medal ...
Corbitt was an American automobile, truck, and farm equipment manufacturer. Founded as a horse-drawn carriage manufacturer in 1899, the company began building automobiles in 1907, and the business expanded over the years to include light and heavy trucks, intracity buses, personnel vehicles for the U.S. Army, and farm tractors.
Cheat Lake is a census-designated place in Monongalia County, West Virginia, United States, surrounding the Cheat Lake reservoir. The population was 9,930 at the 2020 census. [ 4 ] It is included in the Morgantown metropolitan area .
George Wilcken Romney (July 8, 1907 – July 26, 1995) was an American businessman and politician. A member of the Republican Party, he served as chairman and president of American Motors Corporation from 1954 to 1962, the 43rd governor of Michigan from 1963 to 1969, and 3rd secretary of Housing and Urban Development from 1969 to 1973.
Corbett was the first general merchant in Portland and probably in Oregon Territory. [17] Front St. in Portland in 1852. H.W. Corbett, third from right in stove pipe hat, in year after he arrived. (Oregon Historical Society) Corbett sold most of his initial stock of goods in fourteen months at a profit of $20,000.
James William Corbett (25 August 1928, Manhattan – 25 April 1994, Albany, New York) was a solid-state physicist. [1] He received his bachelor's degree from the University of Missouri and his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1955. Beginning in 1955 he was a research associate at the General Electric Research Laboratory in Schenectady, New York.
Later in the 1920s, Corbett was part of one of the three firms that designed Rockefeller Center in Manhattan. [6] Corbett, however, left the Rockefeller Center project in 1928, so he could work on plans for the Metropolitan Life North Building, designed as a 100-story skyscraper and the world's tallest building, [7] [8] but eventually built as ...