Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Lord Cullen has conducted inquiries into three major British disasters, all of which are known as the Cullen Inquiry: The Piper Alpha oil platform disaster, 6 July 1988. The Dunblane Massacre of schoolchildren, 13 March 1996. The Ladbroke Grove rail crash, west London of 5 October 1999.
The first Cullen Report was prompted by Occidental Petroleum's Piper Alpha disaster on 6 July 1988, [1] in which gas condensate ignited, killing 167 of the 229 people on board the oil platform in only 22 minutes. [2]
The Ladbroke Grove rail crash (also known as the Paddington rail crash) was a rail accident which occurred on 5 October 1999 at Ladbroke Grove in London, England, when a Thames Trains-operated passenger train passed a signal at danger, colliding almost head-on with a First Great Western-operated passenger train. With 31 people killed and 417 ...
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties on the National Register of Historic Places in Delaware County, Oklahoma, United States. The locations of National Register properties for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map. [1]
Lord Cullen: May 2000 September 2001 Part 1 Part 2: To investigate the crash at Ladbroke Grove Junction on 5 October 1999 between trains operated by Thames Trains and First Great Western, which caused considerable loss of life and injuries. The Southall and Ladbroke Grove Joint Inquiry into Train Protection Systems etc.
Grove is a city in Delaware County, Oklahoma, United States. The population was 6,623 at the 2010 census , an increase of 27.6 percent over the figure of 5,131 recorded in 2000. [ 4 ] Grove is surrounded by Grand Lake o’ the Cherokees , a professional bass fishing tournament lake and recreational hotspot during the travel season of Memorial ...
The town was named for a local landmark, a plank cabin, that existed near the place where the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway built a switch in 1871–2. The first post office in this part of Indian Territory opened in 1872. (though it was not named Big Cabin until 1892). Some entrepreneurs built a stockyard in the town in 1888.
Hughes County is a county located in south central U.S. state of Oklahoma. As of the 2020 census, the population was 13,367. [1] Its county seat is Holdenville. [2] The county was named for W. C. Hughes, an Oklahoma City lawyer who was a member of the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention. [3]