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Mellor & Meigs, its predecessor and successor firm, was founded in 1906 by Walter Mellor and Arthur Ingersoll Meigs, who had worked together in the office of Theophilus P. Chandler Jr. The young architects designed clubs and suburban residences in a variety of revivalist styles.
England within the United Kingdom. This is an as yet incomplete list of listed buildings in England, which are the majority of the listed buildings of the United Kingdom.. The organisation of the lists in this series is on the same basis as the statutory register.
Mellor is a civil parish in Ribble Valley, Lancashire, England. It contains ten listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, one is at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. The parish contains the village of Mellor, and is otherwise rural.
William Bree, Archdeacon of Coventry (1887–1908) [1]; Rev. Robert William Eyton (1815–1881), Rector of Ryton and author of The Antiquities of Shropshire (1853–60). Bishop James Fraser (1818–1885), reforming Bishop of Manchester.
100% of the proceeds from the summer store, which features 1984 Detroit Tigers apparel, will benefit The Kirk Gibson Foundation for Parkinson's.
Rebecca B. Mellors was an educator. In 1927 she was named clerk and first secretary of the School District No. 49, Metford. [2] In 1928 the Medford Mail Tribune wrote that 80% of those who directed the destiny of the young people of Medford were women and that ranking high in the positions of responsibility was Mellors.
Mellors is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Bob Mellors (born 1950), British gay rights activist; John Mellors (1947–2021), Australian public servant; Mark Mellors (1880–1961), English footballer; Nathaniel Mellors (born 1974), British artist and musician; Ted Mellors (1907–1946), English international motorcycle road racer
MERLIN was founded in 1993 by Christopher Besse, Nicholas Mellor, and Mark Dalton [1] as a British charity dedicated to supporting and developing health services, particularly in crisis zones and following natural disasters. [5] Its first mission in 1993 was as an informally-organised effort to send £1 million worth of food rations to Bosnia. [6]