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Salvatore "Sal" Murdocca (born April 26, 1943) is an American children's book illustrator.He is best known for illustrating the Magic Tree House series written by Mary Pope Osborne (from 1992) and the nonfiction Magic Tree House Fact Checkers by Osborne and collaborators (from 2000)—about 50 and 30 volumes respectively to 2014.
His latest book, titled Be in a Treehouse, details the technical aspects of building in the trees along with showcasing treehouses from all over the world. In 1997 Nelson co-founded the Tree-House Workshop. [7] In 2006, Nelson opened Treehouse Point, a bed-and-breakfast composed entirely of treehouses, near Fall City outside of Seattle, WA. [6]
Full House; The Golden Girls; Happy Days; Hey Dad..! Just the Ten of Us; Kate & Allie; Me and My Girl; The Mommies; My Secret Identity; My Sister Sam; Parker Lewis Can't Lose; The Peter Principle; Sister, Sister; Small Wonder; Soap; That '70s Show; The Wonder Years; You Can't Take It with You
Sesame Tree; Seven Little Australians; Shakespeare: The Animated Tales; The Shari Lewis Show; Sheeep; She-Ra and the Princesses of Power; The Shiny Show; Ship to Shore; Shoebox Zoo; Short Change; Show and Spell; Show Me What You're Made Of; Sick as a Parrot; Sidekick; The Silver Brumby; Silver Surfer; Simon and the Witch; The Singing Kettle ...
The house was built in 1851 for Colonel Arnoldus Brumby, a white, male graduate of the United States Military Academy in West Point, New York. [2] During the American Civil War of 1861–1865, Brumby served as a colonel in the Confederate States Army (CSA). [2] The house was subsequently purchased by Ellan M. Bradley. [2]
Ni Ni's Treehouse is an animated preschool television series and was produced jointly by The Itsy Bitsy Entertainment Company and GMTV. It was originally aired on TLC and GMTV from 2000 until 2003. About the show
The Adventureland Treehouse originally opened at Disneyland as the Swiss Family Treehouse on November 18, 1962, based upon Walt Disney's 1960 film, Swiss Family Robinson. [1] The treehouse remained themed to Swiss Family Robinson until March 8, 1999, when it closed to begin the transformation into an attraction based on the Disney animated film ...
Brumby grew up at an outstation called Victory Downs near to Pukatja (then known as Ernabella) with his mother, father, brother and sister. Early jobs included working at a cattle station called Mount Cavanagh near Kulgera over the threshold of the Northern Territory, where he mustered bullocks, fixed fences and looked after the cows.