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Settler

Index Settler

A settler is a person who has migrated to an area and established a permanent residence there, often to colonize the area. [1]

1218 relations: "Major" John Buchanan, A Matter of Traces, Aaron Dunn, Abidjan, Abigail Scott Duniway, Abraham Dowden, Adam Helmer, Adam Thoroughgood, Adams Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Adel, Oregon, Adelaide, Eastern Cape, Adiatorix, African-American Cemetery (Montgomery, New York), Afrikaners, Age of Empires III, Ahlen, Alabama, Alamance Battleground, Albertus Van Loon House, Alby, Öland, Alexander Brodie Spark, Alexander Moir (settler), Alexandria in Orietai, Alfred Saker, Alice Barrett Parke, Allegheny National Forest, Allenwood Farm, Alley, Alpharetta, Georgia, Alquerque, Amai Manabilang, Lanao del Sur, Ambrose A. Call State Park, Ambrose Dixon, American carpets and rugs, American Horror Story: Roanoke, American pioneer, André-Marie Mbida, Andrew Petrie, Andrew Zeller, Angelica atropurpurea, Angus McDonald (Virginia militiaman), Annapolis Royal, Anson Vasco Call II, Antônio Vicente da Fontoura, Anti-Canadianism, Antonio María Martínez, Apkar Tebir, Araquari, Archers Fork, Arctic exploration, ..., Arlington, Massachusetts, Aro people, Arochukwu, Arroyo Grande, California, Arvada, Colorado, Ash Creek (Polk County, Oregon), Ashery, Ashland, Wisconsin, Ashmyany, Asimina triloba, Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame, Australian storytelling, Avenal, California, Ñuño Fernández Lobo, Öland, Baby Head Cemetery, Bacău, Backus-Page House Museum, Badger Township, Polk County, Minnesota, Bahá'í Faith in fiction, Bakersfield, California, Barnes Branch, North Carolina, Barrera, Bartolomé Ramírez, Basalorum, Batesville High School (Arkansas), Bathurst, New Brunswick, Battle of Cookes Canyon, Battle of Fort Ridgely, Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge, Battle of Pinos Altos, Battle of Placito, Battle of the Diablo Mountains, Beagle Channel cartography since 1881, Beagle, Oregon, Bean Creek (Salt River), Bear Creek (Rogue River), Beauford H. Jester, Beer in Canada, Belden Place, Ben Lomond Mountain (Utah), Benjamin Boyd, Benjamin Crowley, Benjamin Wade, Bennett Run, Benny Hollinger, Bensville, New South Wales, Bent, St. Vrain & Company, Biblical sandals, Biddeford, Maine, Big Butte Creek, Big Spring Park (Cedartown, Georgia), Birofeld, Birtle, Manitoba, Black and White in Color, Black Hawk War (1865–72), Black Moshannon State Park, Black Mouth Cur, Blackwood Valley, Blalock, Oregon, Blantyre and East Africa Ltd, Blenheim, New Zealand, Block settlement, Blodgett, Oregon, Bob Berry (dendrologist), Boer, Boka (Sečanj), Bolama, Boomers (Oklahoma settlers), Botswana, Boyle-Workman family, Bracken County, Kentucky, Bradninch, Brandywine Village, Ohio, Brattain–Hadley House, Brazilian mythology, Brazilian real (old), Breede River, Bretton, Flintshire, Brickfields, Brigham Young, Bristol, Quebec, British Americans, Brockton Oval, Brockton Point, Brown Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, Brumado, Bual, Cotabato, Bull Run River (Oregon), Bunch Creek, Buncom, Oregon, Bush carpentry, Butler Run, California State Library, Cammal, Pennsylvania, Camp Adair, Camp Grant massacre, Camp Polk (Oregon), Canadian Broomball Federation, Canandaigua, Michigan, Cap's Place, Cape Tribulation, Queensland, Carbrook, Queensland, Carson National Forest, Cartwright, Manitoba, Casa Wiechers-Villaronga, Cascavel, Cashmere, Washington, Catawba in the American Civil War, Catawba people, Catu, Caudy's Castle, Cavitt Creek, Cavitt Creek Bridge, Córdoba, Argentina, Central City, Colorado, Certificates of Claim, Champoeg Meetings, Charity Creek, Charles Brockden Brown, Charles Rochon, Charleston, Oregon, Chatanika, Alaska, Chatham Borough, New Jersey, Chelsea, Massachusetts, Cherokee military history, Chibalo, Choctaw hog, Christianity and colonialism, Christianity in Angola, Christopher Comstock, Church Hill, Mississippi, Church of St. James (Brno), Churchville School, Circumpolar studies, Civilization II, Clarion, Utah, Clayton Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Clement Daniel Rockey, Cobb County, Georgia, Cobden, Victoria, Colon statue, Colonial, Colonial House (TV series), Colonial troops, Colonist (disambiguation), Colonization, Colonization of trans-Neptunian objects, Colorado, Colorado War, Commodore Nutt, Communities in Norfolk County, Ontario, Conestoga High School, Convict women in Australia, Convicts in Australia, Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary, Coree, Cornelius Gilliam, Corrigin, Western Australia, Cove, Oregon, Crabtree, Oregon, Craig, Alaska, Cranberry, Cretan wildcat, Crimean Tatars in Bulgaria, Cross Timbers State Park, Crown Heights, Brooklyn, Cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies, Cuisine of the United States, Culture of Oregon, Cusabo, Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, 2004, Dairy, Oregon, Dakota War of 1862, Dallos, Dalwallinu, Western Australia, Dalyston, Danford Balch, Daniel Kellogg (settler), Daniel Rhoads, Darling Scarp, David Hill (Oregon politician), David Lefkowitz, Davis Creek (Salt River), Davy Crockett, Days of '47 Parade, De Beers, De Beque, Colorado, Deadlock II: Shrine Wars, Deadlock: Planetary Conquest, Deadman's Island (Vancouver), Declaration of Rights and Grievances, Deforestation in New Zealand, Dela, Oklahoma, Demographics of Sri Lanka, Denver Pioneers, Descendants of Brigham Young, Desmundo, Dexter Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Diamond Lake (Oregon), Diamond, Oregon, Dighton Rock, Dinglishna Hills, Alaska, Dingman's Ferry Bridge, District Council of Franklin Harbour, Dixie, Mississauga, Dixon Springs State Park, Dobruja, Doeg people, Dolliver Memorial State Park, Don Luis, Draketown, Georgia, Drewsey, Oregon, Dundee, KwaZulu-Natal, Dunlap Creek (Tuscarawas River), Durham-Sud, Dutch Watch, East Northport, New York, East Norwalk Historical Cemetery, East Prussia, East Windsor, Connecticut, Economic history of South Africa, Eddies Cove East, Eden Prairie, Minnesota, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Edgerton W. Day, Edmund Burke, Edmund Durfee, Edward Wooster, Eichhornia crassipes, Elie Yossef, Elijah Bristow State Park, Elijah Martindale, Elijah Moulton, Elijah Steele, Eliza Clayland Tomlinson Foster, Eliza Forlonge, Elizabeth Caruthers, Elizabeth, West Virginia, Elizabethton, Tennessee, Elkanah Walker, Elkland, Pennsylvania, Ellen Watson, Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank building, Emma Withnell, Endersby, Oregon, English Americans, English Passengers, Eola, Oregon, Erikin, Western Australia, España y Filipinas, Espírito Santo, Estelline, Texas, Estevan, Estuary, Saskatchewan, Eugene Pioneer Cemetery, Exeter, Pennsylvania, Expanse, Saskatchewan, Expatriate, Ezekiel Polk, Fair Play Men, Fauna of Puerto Rico, Fernando Muñoz Altea, Films about race, Firefly (franchise), Firefly (TV series), Fishing net, Flagstaff, Arizona, Flamingo, Monroe County, Florida, Flathead River, Fleming County, Kentucky, Floatpoint, Flora Shaw, Lady Lugard, Florida cracker, Flying Foam massacre, Folk hero, Forbes Creek (California), Forest Lakes Estates, Arizona, Fort Boonesborough State Park, Fort Craig, Fort Ellsworth (Kansas), Fort Fillmore, Fort Griffin, Fort King George, Fort Martin Scott, Fort Rucker, Arizona, Fort Selden, Fort Sumner, Forty Thousand in Gehenna, Francis Fletcher, Francophobia, Frank Cooper Sands, Frankston, Victoria, FreeCol, Fremont, Nebraska, French Algeria, French people, French protectorate in Morocco, French Third Republic, Frenchtown (Tallahassee), Fridley, Minnesota, Frisco, Texas, Frontierland, Fruita, Colorado, Fryer House, Fula people of Sierra Leone, Gabriel Richard Catholic High School, Galvez, Louisiana, Gamay Beaujolais, Gardnertown, New York, Garrettsville, Ohio, Göcsej, Gearhart, Oregon, Geauga Lake, Geauga Lake (lake), Gem Valley, Genetic history of the British Isles, Geography of Australia, George Austin McHenry, George Charles Hawker, George Cheyne (settler), George T. Inkster, George Ura, George W. Randolph, George Washington (Washington pioneer), George William Allan, George, Western Cape, George-Étienne Cartier, Georgia cracker, Georgia Day, German military administration in occupied France during World War II, German town law, Gervais, Oregon, Gilkey Bridge, Gilliam and Bisbee Building, Gilmore College, Gilroy Yamato Hot Springs, Glen Falls (New York), Glenn Drover's Empires: The Age of Discovery, Gloucester, Massachusetts, Golden, Oregon, Google Street View in Africa, Gozo, Graham Creek, Granville P. Swift, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Great Trail, Greater Pittston, Green Mountain Boys, Green Mountain, New Brunswick, Greenbrier County, West Virginia, Greene–Jones War, Grey Beard, Großwilsdorf, Grundisburgh, Guayabo de Turrialba, Guianan Creole, Guild's Lake, Gulf Islands, Gun laws in Australia, Gwenllian ferch Gruffydd, H. L. Davis, Hackers Creek, Hannah Bridge, Hannah Run, Haplogroup Q-L275, Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Hardman IOOF Lodge Hall, Hardy Pace, Harmen Harmense Gansevoort, Harp Township, DeWitt County, Illinois, Harrison Meeting House Site and Cemetery, Harry Oliver, Harvey W. Scott, Haslam, South Australia, Hatton, Saskatchewan, Hauländer, Hawke's Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador, Hendersonville Presbyterian Church, Henry Grow, Hermannsburg School, Hernando Martel, Hieronymites, Higher education in Quebec, Hills Creek (Oregon), Hillsboro, North Dakota, Hilton Beach, Hispanics and Latinos in New Mexico, Historic Spanish Point, History of Algeria, History of Colorado, History of Cyprus, History of European research universities, History of French-era Tunisia, History of Gwynedd during the High Middle Ages, History of Jewish Americans in St. Louis, History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, History of Miami, History of Newcastle, New South Wales, History of Randolph, Tennessee, History of Richfield, Minnesota, History of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, History of slavery in Virginia, History of South Africa (1815–1910), History of Tallahassee, Florida, History of the Cape Colony from 1806 to 1870, History of the Jews in Brenham, Texas, History of the Jews in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, History of the Kansas City metropolitan area, History of the petroleum industry in Canada, History of tobacco, Hoffman Bridge, Homestead Acts, Hopkinton, New Hampshire, Horatio P. Van Cleve, Horrible Histories, Howell Prairie, Huff's Fort, Huguenot Street Historic District, Human rights in Western Sahara, Humber Summit, Huron Shores, Hyde Family of Denchworth, Hyrum State Park, Ian Evans (historian), Ileogbo, In the Presence of Mine Enemies, Independence Day (Algeria), Indian auxiliaries, Indian old field, Indian River State College, Indiana Limestone, Indigenous peoples in Brazil, Institutional racism, Ionia, Irish Canadians, Irish diaspora, Irish people, Isaac Moore (settler), Isham Randolph of Dungeness, Ishi Wilderness, Islam in Myanmar, Island Caribs, Italian colonists in Albania, J. Evetts Haley, Jackson, California, Jacksonville Beach, Florida, Jacques Archambault, James B. Stephens, James Baldwin (Los Angeles), James Harbeson, James Longmire, James McBride (pioneer), James Olmsted, James Simonds, Jamestown Wildlife Area, Jan Van Loon House, Jane McKechnie Walton, Jardim Catarina, Jathedar Bhai Tehal Singh Dhanju, Java, Jean Carmet, Jedediah Smith, Jenny Taylor, Jenny Wiley, Jersey Mills, Pennsylvania, Jesse Applegate, Jesse Creek, Jesse Smythes, Jewish Christian, João Ricardo, Joel Palmer, Johan Meyer, John Ayer, John B. Stetson, John Belding, John Bidwell, John Blair Sr., John Bond Jr., John Bowton, John Bradford (printer), John Browning, John Buchanan (settler), John Costello (pastoralist), John Cotton's Birds of the Port Phillip District of New South Wales 1843-1849, John Dooly, John Drummond (Australian settler), John Farrell Easmon, John George Gough, John Gregory (settler), John H. Jones and Carrie Otis Jones, John H. Shary, John Harris Sr., John Holliday (pioneer), John Howe (loyalist), John Ketcham (Indiana), John Minto (Oregon pioneer), John Moore Robinson, John Morphett, John Pascoe Fawkner, John Platt (settler), John Robson (politician), John Ruscoe, John Young (pioneer), Johns Valley, Oklahoma, Johnsonville, Victoria, Jojó (footballer, born 1970), Jonathan Alder, Jonathan Alder High School, Jonathan Marsh, Joseph Bailly, Joseph City, Arizona, Joseph Hawdon, Joseph Long (bishop), Joseph Montoya, Joseph Provencher, Joseph Thompson (doctor), Joseph-Geneviève de Puisaye, Josiah Belden, Josiah Charles Trent, Juan Francisco de Montemayor Cordoba and Cuenca, Judah Creek, July 5, Kanda Nissho, Karori, Kate Rice, Keating, Oregon, Kelowna, Kelso, New South Wales, Ketcham's Fort, Kiger Creek (Harney County, Oregon), King Woolsey, Kings Valley, Oregon, Kintyre, Kishon River, Kiskiack, Kolomna Municipal Okrug, Lac-des-Écorces, Quebec, Laconia, New Hampshire, Lake King, Western Australia, Lake Perris, Lake Shetek State Park, Lake Worth Historical Museum, Lake Worth, Florida, Lakeland Provincial Park and Recreation Area, Lakeport, California, Lampeter-Strasburg High School, Land Act of 1820, Langalibalele, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Le Roy Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Lemoore, California, Leninski, Belarus, Lewisburg, West Virginia, Liberia, Linda Ronstadt, List of American Indian Wars, List of colonial governors of New Jersey, List of earthquakes in California, List of feminist rhetoricians, List of indigenous languages in Argentina, List of Louisiana Creoles, List of Marvel Comics characters: T, List of massacres in Australia, List of National Historic Landmarks in Tennessee, List of National Monuments of the United States, List of New Netherland placename etymologies, List of numbered roads in Essex County, List of place names of French origin in the United States, List of rampage killers (home intruders), List of Space Runaway Ideon episodes, List of Tennessee state symbols, Little Big Man (film), Littleby Creek, Livingston County, New York, Lodi Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Logan, Utah, Lokator, Long Beach, New York, Long Prairie River, Lordship of Brecknock, Lorenzo Carter, Lovett Island, Lovoni, Loyal Company of Virginia, Loyalsock Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, Lucullus Virgil McWhorter, Luisa Cáceres de Arismendi, Luka Jantjie, Lun Bawang, Lusikisiki, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, Lyle Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Lynne Kelly (science writer), Mabie, West Virginia, Mackie River, Madagascar dry deciduous forests, Madonna of the Trail, Mahomet Weyonomon, Malmesbury, Western Cape, Malouf Abraham Jr., Malouf Abraham Sr., Manchester, Connecticut, Manchester, Maryland, Mandingo people of Sierra Leone, Manning Doherty, Mano Maritime, Manuel da Nóbrega, Mapuche military, Marano, María Lionza, Marble Canyon, Arizona, Mari Sandoz, Maria Ann Smith, Maritime history of Florida, Mark Keppel, Mark Sension, Mark West Springs, California, Mark West, California, Marquam, Oregon, Marshall Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Martha Gay Masterson, Martin DeFoor, Mary Campbell (colonial settler), Mary Draper Ingles, Mary Maverick, Mary Ramsey Wood, Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, Mashpee, Massachusetts, Masonic Order of Liberia, Mato Grosso, Matthew Canfield, Matthew Marvin Jr., Matthew Marvin Sr., Matthew Moorhouse, Matthias Sention Jr., Matthias Sention Sr., May 12, Maybutt, Alberta, McAdam, New Brunswick, McEwen, Oregon, McHenry Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, McLeod, Oregon, McPherson Museum, Medicine Mound, Texas, Melbourne Day, Memphis, Texas, Menno Colony, Merritt, British Columbia, Mesopotamia, Michael Kleiner, Michael Rush (rower), Michel-Ange Duquesne de Menneville, Miles City Waterworks Building and Pumping Plant Park, Millungera Station, Milpitas, California, Mine La Motte, Missouri, Mingenew, Western Australia, Mingo Oak, Minneopa State Park, Mintaro, South Australia, Mississippi River Delta, Molalla River, Moncton, Monmouth, Oregon, Montérégie, Montpelier, Indiana, Moon Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, Morgan Territory, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, Mormon folk music, Mormon music, Morris, Manitoba, Mosby Creek (Oregon), Moses Taft, Moshav, Mound Key Archaeological State Park, Mount Bruce (California), Mount Gilead, Ohio, Mount Hermon, Louisiana, Mount Kaputar National Park, Mount Kenya, Mountain City, Tennessee, Mountain View Cemetery (Oakland, California), Mountain View, Colorado, Mountaineering on Mount Kenya, Moyers, Oklahoma, Muddy Creek (Linn County, Oregon), Mulanje Massif, Mural Arts Program, Murray River (Western Australia), Music of Utah, Mussel Slough Tragedy, Naches River, Nachusa House, Nantucket's neutrality during the American Revolutionary War, Nathan Webb, Nathaniel Bowman, Nathaniel Ely, Nathaniel Haies, Nathaniel Richards (settler), Nathaniel Savory, National Register of Historic Places listings in Wheeler County, Oregon, National Religious Party, Native American cultures in the United States, Native Americans in the United States, Natives on Private Estates Ordinance 1928, Naukati Bay, Alaska, Naval Weapons Station Yorktown, Neils Hogenson House, Nemegos, Ontario, Neolithic Revolution, Neosho, Missouri, Neuzina, New Mexico, New South Wales General Standing Orders, New Zealand Church Missionary Society, Newcastle, New South Wales, Newstead House, Brisbane, Newstead, Queensland, Ngāi Tūhoe, Nicholas Ferrar, Nimbhi jodhan, Nonconsumption agreements, Norfolk County, Ontario, Norrköping, North Central Pennsylvania, North Georgia, North Tenmile Lake, Northern Rhodesia, Northwest Territory, Nottingham, Nuno Velho Cabral, Nyabing, Western Australia, O'Fallon, Missouri, O'Gorman Columbian manuscript, Oak Creek (Marys River), Oak Harbor, Washington, Oakland, Maine, Obed Macy and Oscar Macy, Ocala Demands, Occoquan, Virginia, Occupation of Araucanía, Oku people (Sierra Leone), Old money, Olga Kameneva, Olifantshoek, Omaha Claim Club, One Settler, One Bullet, Oregon Historic Trails Advisory Council, Oregon Lyceum, Oregon pioneer history, Oregon Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Orenco, Oregon, Oscar, Missouri, Outcasts (TV series), Outline of New Mexico, Overseas Pakistani, Oxford, Michigan, Paper Wheat, Paramount chief, Parihaka, Patrick Leslie, Paul Prudhomme, Paul Revere of Texas, Paulins Kill, Paulo Figueiredo, Pākehā Māori, Pākehā settlers, Peabody, Kansas, Penola, South Australia, Peoria, Oregon, Pergamino, Peter Whetstone, Peyton Hayslip, Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network, Philip Alston (counterfeiter), Philip Levi, Phillip Darrell Duppa, Phoenix, Arizona, Phool Bagh, Piła, Pierre Boucher, Piet Uys, Pimicikamak, Pine Creek (Pennsylvania), Pioneer Day (Utah), Pipe Spring National Monument, Platypus, Plunketts Creek (Loyalsock Creek tributary), Plush, Oregon, Podophyllum, Political development in modern Gibraltar, Pomo, Pompano Beach Mound, Portage Lakes, Portrayal of Native Americans in film, Portsea, Victoria, Portuguese Brazilians, Portuguese Mozambicans, Potano, Powhatan's Chimney, Presque Isle County, Michigan, Prilepnica, Prison religion, Prospect, New South Wales, Protectorate, Provisional Legislature of Oregon, Pushmataha District, Putaruru, Quairading, Western Australia, Quercus agrifolia, Rabun County, Georgia, Racism in Puerto Rico, Radojevo, Rainier, Washington, Ralph Hush, Ralph Keeler, Rama, Saskatchewan, Rattan, Oklahoma, Reading, Berkshire, Rebecca Boone, Red Creek, New York, Reeds Gap State Park, Reese Fork, Rehoboth, Massachusetts, Relocation (personal), Remote, Oregon, Rice, Richard Dummer, Richard Holmes (Connecticut settler), Richard Olmsted (settler), Richard Webb (settler), Richardson Bay, Richwoods, Missouri, Rickard D. Gwydir, Rideau Ferry, Ontario, Riley Bartholomew, Ritner Creek, River Torrens, Riverton, Oregon, Robert Carter I, Robert de La Berge, Robert E. Howard, Robert Edward Codrington, Robert Fortune Sanchez, Robert Giffard de Moncel, Robert Giguère, Robert Russell (architect), Robert Taft, 2nd, Robin Lawless, Robinson Creek (Shelby Creek), Robo-Hunter, Rochester, Indiana, Rollins Pass, Rollinsford, New Hampshire, Roman villas in northwestern Gaul, Rose Blanche-Harbour le Cou, Ross Creek (North Queensland), Ross Creek (Townsville, North Queensland), Ross River (Queensland), Rotterdam (town), New York, Rowdy Branch, Royal Alberta Museum, Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665, Royal Proclamation of 1763, Rum Swizzle, Rundling, Rural Municipality of Clanwilliam, Russell Cave National Monument, Rustenburg, Saint Helena, Saint Thomas Parish, Jamaica, Saint-Alphonse-de-Granby, Quebec, Saint-André-Avellin, Quebec, Sakhalin Oblast, Salt Springs State Park, Sam Brown House, Samuel Barton, Samuel Colver, Samuel Duncan Parnell, Samuel Hales, Samuel Hayes (settler), Samuel Penhallow, Samuel Smith (Connecticut politician), San Agustín culture, San Juan-Chama Project, Santa Rosa Creek, Santiam Academy, Sargeant Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Saunders Lake, Schneider's dynamic model, Scoggins Creek, Scotch-Irish Canadians, Seal of Nebraska, Seal of New Mexico, Self-governing colony, Semans, Saskatchewan, Senate, Saskatchewan, Sephardic Bnei Anusim, Seth Read, Seth Tanner, Settle, Settler (disambiguation), Settlers House, Shannon Branch, Sheboygan, Wisconsin, Shelby Farms, Shennong Stream, Shifting cultivation, Shipbuilding in the American colonies, Sidney, Montana, Siege of Dunlap's Station, Siege of Tubac, Silver Island Range, Sinai and Palestine Campaign, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Sir Valentine Browne, Slab hut, Slabcamp Run, Slate Run, Pennsylvania, Slaughter Slough, Slave narrative, Smith Creek (Santa Clara County, California), Smithfield, New South Wales, Snowshoe, Socrates Hotchkiss Tryon Sr., Sonoma County, California, Sooners, South Australian English, South Region, Brazil, South Williamsport, Pennsylvania, South-Central Colorado, Southern Ontario, Southern Rhodesia African National Congress, Sowers, Texas, Spanish Empire, Spanish missions in Baja California, Spirit of the Dead Watching, Spring Mill State Park, Springwater, Oregon, St Mabyn, St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana, St. Joseph's Basilica, Edmonton, Staats Long Morris, Stanley Park, Starozagorski bani, Starvation State Park, Ste. Genevieve, Missouri, Stephen F. Austin, Stephen Meek, Sterling, Colorado, Stockman (Australia), Stonecoal Creek, Stoop (architecture), Storm Bay (British Columbia), Storm King Mountain (New York), Streeterville, Studebaker, Sugar Bowl Ski Resort, Suggan Buggan River, Sullivans Creek, Sulphur Springs, Indian Territory, Sunday Island (Victoria), SunDog: Frozen Legacy, Survivalism, Susan Louisa Moir Allison, Sussex, New Brunswick, Swedish colonies in the Americas, Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts, Syracuse Lake, Talbot County, Maryland, Tannat, Tanner Creek, Taopi, Minnesota, Tars Tarkas, Tavern, Temescal Creek (Northern California), Tenmile Creek (Coos County, Oregon), Tenmile Lake (Oregon), Tenmile, Douglas County, Oregon, Texas, Teypana, Thane, Juneau, Thangata, ThanksKilling, The Female American, The Guardians (novel), The Land of the Settlers, The Museum at Central School, The National Society of the Colonial Dames in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, The Oregon Trail (series), The Oregon Trail (video game), The Pembroke Hill School, The Son (TV series), The Square Set, The Troubles, The West Indian, Theodore Thurston Geer, Theorosa's Bridge, Third Transjordan attack, Thomas Benton Hoover House, Thomas Creek (Linn County, Oregon), Thomas Fitch (settler), Thomas George Percy, Thomas Hales (settler), Thomas Hanford, Thomas Jefferson High School (Alexandria, Virginia), Thomas Lupton, Thomas Moore (Australian settler), Thomas Todd, Thomastown, Victoria, Thorp, Washington, Three Island Crossing, Tiaret, Timeline of İzmir, Timeline of Brazilian history, Timeline of Cardiff history, Timeline of major crimes in Australia, Timeline of Raleigh, North Carolina, Timmins, Titan (Baxter novel), Tobacco, Tolay Lake, Tolomato Cemetery, Tomás Bán Mac Aodhagáin, Tornado, West Virginia, Torrey, Utah, Towle Silversmiths, Transportation in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, Transportation in Saskatchewan, Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851), Treaty of Portsmouth (1713), Trindade and Martin Vaz, Triteleia grandiflora, True Whig Party, Truro, Massachusetts, Truth and Reconciliation Commission (Canada), Tuli, Zimbabwe, Tunnel in the Sky, Tunney, Western Australia, Tupi language, Turners Branch, Turton, Lancashire, Tusculum University, Types of tobacco, Ungarra, South Australia, Union, South Carolina, University of Denver, Unknown Horizons, Urban neighbourhoods of Sudbury, Urbanization in Africa, USS Arizona (BB-39), USS Sibley (APA-206), Valery Solomonovich Gurevich, Vandalia State House State Historic Site, Variety Unit, Vaughan, Vermilion Point, Victoria County, Ontario, Victorian masculinity, Vietnamese wine, Villa sisters, Villacorta, Vincennes University, Vojlovica, Pančevo, Waal (river), Wagons East, Walden, New York, Walgoolan, Western Australia, Wallkill River, Walpole, Western Australia, Walter Hoyt, Walter Keeler (settler), Walter M. Walker, Walter Padbury, Waltham Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Wanchese, North Carolina, Wanship, Utah, Wappinger, War crimes in occupied Poland during World War II, Water law in the United States, Waterberg Biosphere, Waterfall, Alaska, Waterways of West Virginia, Wayne County, West Virginia, Webster Sycamore, West Branch Susquehanna River, West Branch Susquehanna Valley, West Yellowstone, Montana, Western Australia Day, Western Sydney Parklands, Westlake, Texas, Westminster, Colorado, Whitbourne, Newfoundland and Labrador, White Barbadian, Whitla, Alberta, Whitney, Oregon, Who Are We? The Challenges to America's National Identity, Will S. Green, William B. Ide, William Barlow (pioneer), William Beck Ochiltree, William Byron Rumford, William Cooley, William Courten, William G. T'Vault, William H. Wharton, William Marcus West, William Paget, 4th Baron Paget, William Randolph, William Shakespeare Hall, William Tell Coleman, William Whitley, Williams, Arizona, Wilmot Brookings, Winchester, Virginia, Windidda, Windom Township, Mower County, Minnesota, Window shutter hardware, Winnifred, Alberta, Winnipeg Route 17, Winthrop, Massachusetts, Winthrop, Washington, Wolves (2014 film), Wood Mountain, Saskatchewan, Wooltana Station, World War II by country, World Without Stars, Wren, Oregon, Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park, Wungong, Western Australia, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, Yalup Brook, Western Australia, Yarmouth, Maine, Yazoo stream, Yellow Springs Township, Des Moines County, Iowa, Yevgenia Bosch, Yorkville, Illinois, Yukon wolf, Zacharie Cloutier, Zaki al-Arsuzi, 14 BC, 1608 in Quebec, 1609 in Quebec, 1610 in Quebec, 1613 in Quebec, 1615 in Quebec, 1677, 1744 in art, 1773, 1778 in Great Britain, 1813 in art, 1836, 1836 in the United States, 1845, 1913 Australia rugby union tour of New Zealand, 19th century, 2005 in Israel, 2005 in the Palestinian territories, 2005 United Kingdom snow events, 20th-century history of Kosovo, 42 BC, 443 BC, 45 BC, 5th century BC, 600s BC (decade), 96th Regiment of Foot. Expand index (1168 more) »

"Major" John Buchanan

"Major" John Buchanan (born in January 12, 1759) was an American frontiersman and one of the founders of present-day Nashville, Tennessee.

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A Matter of Traces

"A Matter of Traces" is a short story by science fiction author Frank Herbert which first appeared in Fantastic Universe magazine in November 1958 and later in Herbert’s 1985 short story collection Eye.

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Aaron Dunn

Aaron Dunn, one of the pioneers of the northwest was a prominent citizen of Deadwood.

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Abidjan

Abidjan is the economic capital of Côte d'Ivoire and is one of the most populous French-speaking cities in Africa.

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Abigail Scott Duniway

Abigail Scott Duniway (October 22, 1834 – October 11, 1915) was an American women's rights advocate, newspaper editor and writer, whose efforts were instrumental in gaining voting rights for women.

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Abraham Dowden

Abraham Rinkle Dowden (February 14, 1839 – September 18, 19071) was a minor Democratic political figure in Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana, in the late-19th and early-20th centuries.

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Adam Helmer

Adam F. Helmer (c.1754 – April 9, 1830), also known as John Adam Helmer and Hans Adam Helmer, was an American Revolutionary War hero among those of the Mohawk Valley and surrounding regions of New York State.

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Adam Thoroughgood

Adam Thoroughgood (1604–1640) was a colonist and community leader in the Virginia Colony who helped settle the area of South Hampton Roads known in contemporary times as the independent city of Virginia Beach, Virginia.

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Adams Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Adams Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Adel, Oregon

Adel is an unincorporated community in southeastern Lake County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Adelaide, Eastern Cape

Adelaide is a rural town and area in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa.

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Adiatorix

Adiatorix (Gr. Ἀδιατόριξ) was the son of the tetrarch Domneclius (or Domnilaus) in Galatia.

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African-American Cemetery (Montgomery, New York)

The African-American Cemetery, known historically as the Colored Cemetery, in the Town of Montgomery, New York, United States, holds the graves of roughly 100, mostly believed to be African slaves who were brought over by the earliest settlers of the region from the Rhenish Palatinate in the mid-18th century.

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Afrikaners

Afrikaners are a Southern African ethnic group descended from predominantly Dutch settlers first arriving in the 17th and 18th centuries.

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Age of Empires III

Age of Empires III is a real-time strategy video game developed by Microsoft Corporation's Ensemble Studios and published by Microsoft Game Studios.

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Ahlen

Ahlen is a town in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

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Alabama

Alabama is a state in the southeastern region of the United States.

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Alamance Battleground

Alamance Battleground is a North Carolina State Historic Site commemorating the Battle of Alamance.

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Albertus Van Loon House

The Albertus Van Loon House (surname is pronounced like "van loan") is one of the oldest extant buildings in New York State.

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Alby, Öland

Alby is a village on the Baltic Sea in the Hulterstad district at the western fringe of the Stora Alvaret.

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Alexander Brodie Spark

Alexander Brodie Spark (9 August 1792 – 21 October 1856), influential merchant, businessman and free settler of Australia, was born on 9 August 1792 at Elgin, Scotland.

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Alexander Moir (settler)

Alexander Moir (1 April 1826 7 January 1893) was an early settler in the Great Southern region of Western Australia.

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Alexandria in Orietai

Alexandria in Orietai was one of the seventy-plus cities founded or renamed by Alexander the Great.

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Alfred Saker

Alfred Saker (21 July 1814 in Wrotham, Kent — 12 March 1880 in Peckham) was a British missionary.

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Alice Barrett Parke

Alice Barrett Parke (November 5, 1861 – December 8, 1952) was a Canadian woman pioneer and diarist who lived for many years in Vernon, British Columbia.

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Allegheny National Forest

The Allegheny National Forest is a National Forest in northwestern Pennsylvania.

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Allenwood Farm

The Allenwood Farm is a historic farm property on United States Route 2 in Plainfield, Vermont.

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Alley

An alley or alleyway is a narrow lane, path, or passageway, often reserved for pedestrians, which usually runs between, behind, or within buildings in the older parts of towns and cities.

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Alpharetta, Georgia

Alpharetta is a city located in northern Fulton County, Georgia, United States and is a suburb of Atlanta.

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Alquerque

Alquerque (also known as Qirkat) is a strategy board game that is thought to have originated in the Middle East.

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Amai Manabilang, Lanao del Sur

, officially the, is a settlement_text in the province of,. According to the, it has a population of people.

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Ambrose A. Call State Park

Ambrose A. Call State Park is a state park of Iowa, US, that commemorates the first settler in Kossuth County.

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Ambrose Dixon

Ambrose Dixon (1619Ambrose Dixon: The Man and the Legacy, James Edward JensenApril 12, 1687) was an early American Quaker pioneer who was born in England and emigrated to the America at an early age where he lived in the Virginia Colony before moving to Maryland.

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American carpets and rugs

The American rug industry began in the second half of the 19th century.

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American Horror Story: Roanoke

American Horror Story: Roanoke is the sixth season of the FX horror anthology television series American Horror Story.

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American pioneer

American pioneers are any of the people in American history who migrated west to join in settling and developing new areas.

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André-Marie Mbida

Andre-Marie Mbida (1 January 19172 May 1980) was a Cameroonian statesman, nationalist, first Cameroonian to be elected Member of Parliament at the French National Assembly, Prime Minister of Cameroon, second African-born Prime Minister in Sub-Saharan Africa, first Head of State of French speaking autonomous Cameroon from 12 May to 16 February 1958 and first political prisoner of independent Cameroon from 29 June 1962 to 29 June 1965.

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Andrew Petrie

Andrew Petrie (1798 - 20 February 1872) was a pioneer, architect and builder in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

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Andrew Zeller

Andrew Zeller was the fifth Bishop of the Church of the United Brethren in Christ.

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Angelica atropurpurea

Angelica atropurpurea, known commonly as purplestem angelica, great angelica, American angelica, high angelica, and masterwort, The Center for New Crops & Plant Products.

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Angus McDonald (Virginia militiaman)

Angus McDonald (1727 – August 19, 1778) was a prominent Scottish American military officer, frontiersman, sheriff and landowner in Virginia.

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Annapolis Royal

Annapolis Royal, formerly known as Port Royal, is a town located in the western part of Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada.

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Anson Vasco Call II

Anson Vasco Call II played a major role in founding Afton, Wyoming.

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Antônio Vicente da Fontoura

Antônio Vicente da Fontoura (June 16, 1807 – October 20, 1860) was a Brazilian statesman.

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Anti-Canadianism

Anti-Canadianism is hostility towards the government, culture, or people of Canada.

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Antonio María Martínez

Antonio María Martínez (?–1823) was a colonel in the infantry regiment of Zamora and the last governor of Spanish Texas.

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Apkar Tebir

Apkar Tebir was an Armenian colonist and priest.

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Araquari

Araquari is a municipality in the state of Santa Catarina in the South region of Brazil.

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Archers Fork

Archers Fork is a stream located entirely within Washington County, Ohio.

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Arctic exploration

Arctic exploration is the physical exploration of the Arctic region of the Earth.

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Arlington, Massachusetts

Arlington is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States, six miles (10 km) northwest of Boston.

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Aro people

The Aro people or Aros are an Igbo subgroup mixed with Akpa and Ibibio ancestry that originated from the Arochukwu kingdom in present-day Abia state, Nigeria.

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Arochukwu

Arochukwu, sometimes referred to as Arochuku or Aro-Okigbo, (pronounced Aruchukwu) is the third largest city in Abia State (after Aba and Umuahia) in southeastern Nigeria and homeland of the Igbo subgroup, Aro people.

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Arroyo Grande, California

Arroyo Grande is a city in San Luis Obispo County, California, United States.

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Arvada, Colorado

The City of Arvada is a Home Rule Municipality in Jefferson and Adams counties, a part of the Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area of the U.S. state of Colorado.

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Ash Creek (Polk County, Oregon)

Ash Creek is a short stream in Polk County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Ashery

An ashery is a factory that converts hardwood ashes into lye, potash, or pearlash.

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Ashland, Wisconsin

Ashland is a city in Ashland and Bayfield counties in the U.S. state of Wisconsin.

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Ashmyany

Ashmyany (Ашмя́ны; Łacinka: Ašmiany; Ошмя́ны; Ašmena; Oszmiana; אָשמענע, Oshmene) is a town in Grodno Region, Belarus, located at 50 km from Vilnius, capital of the Ashmyany raion.

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Asimina triloba

Asimina triloba, the papaw, pawpaw, paw paw, paw-paw, common pawpaw, Quaker delight, or hillbilly mango is a small deciduous tree native to the eastern United States and Canada, producing a large, yellowish-green to brown fruit.

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Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame

The Australian Stockman's Hall of Fame is a museum located in Longreach, Queensland, Australia, which pays tribute to pioneers of the Australian outback.

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Australian storytelling

Australia traditional storytelling, handed down from generation to generation, has always been part of the landscape.

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Avenal, California

Avenal is a city in Kings County, California, United States.

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Ñuño Fernández Lobo

Ñuño Fernández Lobo (1590s–1650s) was a Portuguese nobleman, conquistador of Tucumán, and settler of Buenos Aires.

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Öland

Öland (known in Latin as Oelandia, and sometimes written Øland in other Scandinavian languages, and Oland internationally) is the second largest Swedish island and the smallest of the traditional provinces of Sweden.

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Baby Head Cemetery

Baby Head Cemetery is a cemetery located on Highway 16, approximately 9 miles north of the city of Llano, Texas.

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Bacău

Bacău (Barchau, Bákó) is the main city in Bacău County, Romania.

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Backus-Page House Museum

The Backus-Page House Museum is a living history museum located in the heart of the Talbot Settlement in Wallacetown, Ontario Canada.

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Badger Township, Polk County, Minnesota

Badger Township is a township in Polk County, Minnesota, United States.

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Bahá'í Faith in fiction

The Bahá'í Faith and related topics have appeared in fiction in multiple forms.

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Bakersfield, California

Bakersfield is a city in and the county seat of Kern County, California, United States.

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Barnes Branch, North Carolina

Barnes Branch is an unincorporated community in Madison County, North Carolina.

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Barrera

Barrera is a Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and surname, meaning "barrier".

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Bartolomé Ramírez

Bartolomé Ramírez (15-16?) was a Spanish Military, was one of the neighbors of Buenos Aires, who were commissioned to make a request to the king of Spain about the desperate state of the settlers.

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Basalorum

Basalorum is a former village in Jörns socken in the north-west part of Skellefteå Municipality, Västerbotten County, Sweden.

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Batesville High School (Arkansas)

Batesville High School is a public secondary school that is located in the city of Batesville, Arkansas, in Independence County.

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Bathurst, New Brunswick

Bathurst (2011 population; UA 12,275; CA population 13,424) is the county seat for Gloucester County, New Brunswick, and is at the estuary of the Nepisiguit River.

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Battle of Cookes Canyon

The Battle of Cookes Canyon was a military engagement fought between settlers from Confederate Arizona and Chiricahua Apaches in August 1861.

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Battle of Fort Ridgely

The Battle of Fort Ridgely was an early battle in the Dakota War of 1862.

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Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge

The Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge was a battle of the American Revolutionary War fought near Wilmington in present-day Pender County, North Carolina, on February 27, 1776.

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Battle of Pinos Altos

The Battle of Pinos Altos was a military action of the Apache Wars.

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Battle of Placito

The Battle of Placito or Battle of the Placito was an engagement between ethnic Mexican settlers, Confederate soldiers and Apache warriors.

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Battle of the Diablo Mountains

The Battle of the Diablo Mountains was an October 1854 engagement between the U.S. Army and the Lipan Apache.

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Beagle Channel cartography since 1881

The region of the Beagle Channel, explored by Robert FitzRoy in the 1830s, was one of the last to be colonized by Chile and Argentina.

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Beagle, Oregon

Beagle is an unincorporated community in Jackson County, Oregon, United States.

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Bean Creek (Salt River)

Bean Creek is a stream in Audrain County in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Bear Creek (Rogue River)

Bear Creek is the name of a stream located entirely within Jackson County, Oregon.

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Beauford H. Jester

Beauford Halbert Jester (January 12, 1893 – July 11, 1949) was the 36th Governor of Texas, serving from 1947 until 1949, until his death in office.

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Beer in Canada

Beer in Canada was introduced by European settlers in the seventeenth century.

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Belden Place

Belden Place is a narrow alley in the Financial District of San Francisco, California that serves as the hub of the city's small French American community.

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Ben Lomond Mountain (Utah)

Ben Lomond, just north of Ogden, Utah, is a peak in the northern portion of the Wasatch Mountains.

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Benjamin Boyd

Benjamin Boyd (21 August 180115 October 1851) was a Scottish-born Australian pioneer and entrepreneur, and briefly, a politician.

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Benjamin Crowley

Benjamin Crowley II (17581842) was an early settler of Arkansas.

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Benjamin Wade

Benjamin Franklin "Bluff" Wade (October 27, 1800March 2, 1878) was an American politician who served as one of the two United States Senators from Ohio from 1851 to 1869.

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Bennett Run

Bennett Run is a stream located entirely within Lewis County, West Virginia.

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Benny Hollinger

Benjamin "Benny" Hollinger (1885 - 1919) was a Canadian barber turned prospector from Haileybury, Ontario, now considered one of the Founding Fathers of Timmins, Ontario, Canada.

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Bensville, New South Wales

Bensville is a suburb of the Central Coast region of New South Wales, Australia.

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Bent, St. Vrain & Company

Bent, St.

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Biblical sandals

The Biblical sandals or Triped sandals are sandals with a simple structure: A sole with two leather ligaments that pass across the foot, and one around the heel.

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Biddeford, Maine

Biddeford is a city in York County, Maine, United States.

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Big Butte Creek

Big Butte Creek is a tributary of the Rogue River in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Big Spring Park (Cedartown, Georgia)

Big Spring Park in Cedartown,Georgia contains a large limestone spring producing up to four million gallons of water per day providing water to 10,000 people in the area.

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Birofeld

Birofeld (Бирофельд) is a village (selo) in Birobidzhansky District of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, Russia.

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Birtle, Manitoba

Birtle is an unincorporated urban community in the Prairie View Municipality within the Canadian province of Manitoba that held town status prior to January 1, 2015.

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Black and White in Color

Black and White in Color (La Victoire en chantant, then Noirs et Blancs en couleur for the 1977 re-issue) is an Ivorian 1976 war film and black comedy directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud in his directorial debut.

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Black Hawk War (1865–72)

The Black Hawk War, or Black Hawk's War, from 1865 to 1872, is the name of the estimated 150 battles, skirmishes, raids, and military engagements between primarily Mormon settlers in Sanpete County, Sevier County and other parts of central and southern Utah, and members of 16 Ute, Southern Paiute, Apache and Navajo tribes, led by a local Ute war chief, Antonga Black Hawk.

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Black Moshannon State Park

Black Moshannon State Park is a Pennsylvania state park in Rush Township, Centre County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Black Mouth Cur

The Black Mouth Cur is a hunting and cattle dog that has its origins in Southern United States.

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Blackwood Valley

Blackwood Valley is a wine region in the south-west of Western Australia, approximately 260 km (160 mi) south-south-east of Perth.

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Blalock, Oregon

Blalock was an unincorporated community located in the Columbia River Gorge in Gilliam County, Oregon, United States.

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Blantyre and East Africa Ltd

Blantyre and East Africa Ltd is a company that was incorporated in Scotland in 1898 and is still in existence.

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Blenheim, New Zealand

Blenheim (Waiharakeke) is the most populous town in the region of Marlborough, in the north east of the South Island of New Zealand.

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Block settlement

A block settlement (or bloc settlement) is a particular type of land distribution which allows settlers with the same ethnicity to form small colonies.

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Blodgett, Oregon

Blodgett is a census-designated place (CDP) and unincorporated community in Benton County, Oregon, United States, where Oregon Route 180 meets U.S. Route 20 in the Central Oregon Coast Range west of Corvallis.

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Bob Berry (dendrologist)

Robert James (Bob) Berry (born 11 June 1916) is a New Zealand dendrologist who founded Hackfalls Arboretum at his farm in Tiniroto, Gisborne.

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Boer

Boer is the Dutch and Afrikaans noun for "farmer".

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Boka (Sečanj)

Boka is a village located in the Sečanj municipality, in the Central Banat District of Serbia.

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Bolama

Bolama is the closest of the Bijagós Islands to the mainland of Guinea-Bissau, and is also the name of the island's main town, the capital of the Bolama Region.

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Boomers (Oklahoma settlers)

Boomers is the name given to settlers in the Southern United States who attempted to enter the Unassigned Lands in what is now the state of Oklahoma in 1879, prior to President Grover Cleveland opening them to settlement by signing the Indian Appropriations Act of 1889 on March 2, 1889.

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Botswana

Botswana, officially the Republic of Botswana (Lefatshe la Botswana), is a landlocked country located in Southern Africa.

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Boyle-Workman family

The Boyle-Workman family relates to the pioneer interconnected Boyle and Workman families that were prominent in: the history of colonial Pueblo de Los Angeles and American Los Angeles; the Los Angeles Basin and San Gabriel Valley regions; and Southern California — from 1830 to 1930 in Mexican Alta California and the subsequent state of California.

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Bracken County, Kentucky

Bracken County is a county located in the U.S. state of Kentucky.

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Bradninch

Bradninch is a small town and former manor in Devon, England, lying about three miles south of Cullompton.

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Brandywine Village, Ohio

Brandywine Village, Ohio is a former settlement located near Brandywine Falls in Summit County, Ohio, USA.

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Brattain–Hadley House

The Brattain–Hadley House was located in Springfield, Oregon and was formerly listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

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Brazilian mythology

Brazilian mythology is the subset of Brazilian folklore with cultural elements of diverse origin found in Brazil, comprising folk tales, traditions, characters and beliefs regarding places, peoples, and entities.

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Brazilian real (old)

The first official currency of Brazil was the real (pronounced; pl. réis).

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Breede River

The Breede River (Breederivier), also known as Breë River, is a river in the Western Cape Province of South Africa.

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Bretton, Flintshire

Bretton is a village in Flintshire, Wales.

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Brickfields

Brickfields is a neighbourhood (as well as an administrative zone) located on the western flank central Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

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Brigham Young

Brigham Young (June 1, 1801August 29, 1877) was an American religious leader, politician, and settler.

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Bristol, Quebec

Bristol is a municipality in the Outaouais region, part of the Pontiac Regional County Municipality, Quebec, Canada.

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British Americans

British Americans usually refers to Americans whose ancestry originates wholly or partly in the United Kingdom (England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland).

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Brockton Oval

Brockton Oval is a playing area near the Brockton Point located on the north side of Coal Harbour in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

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Brockton Point

Brockton Point is a point and attached peninsula in Vancouver on the north side of Coal Harbour.

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Brown Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania

Brown Township is a township in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Brumado

Brumado is a Brazilian municipality in the interior of Bahia, in the Northeast region of the country, precisely in the mesoregion of the Center-South of the State, in the homonymous microregion, 555 kilometers from the state capital, Salvador.

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Bual, Cotabato

Bual is a Barangay in Midsayap, North Cotabato.

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Bull Run River (Oregon)

The Bull Run River is a tributary of the Sandy River in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Bunch Creek

Bunch Creek is a stream in Placer County, California, United States.

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Buncom, Oregon

Buncom (also spelled Bunkum or Buncombe) is an abandoned mining town at the confluence of the Little Applegate River and Sterling Creek in Jackson County, Oregon, United States.

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Bush carpentry

Bush carpentry is an expression used in Australia and New Zealand that refers to improvised methods of building or repair, using available materials and an ad hoc design, usually in a pioneering or rural context.

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Butler Run

Butler Run is a stream located entirely within Delaware County, Ohio.

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California State Library

The California State Library collects, preserves, generates and disseminates a wide array of information.

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Cammal, Pennsylvania

Cammal is an unincorporated community in McHenry Township, Lycoming County, in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

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Camp Adair

Camp Adair was a United States Army division training facility established north of Corvallis, Oregon, operating from 1942 to 1946.

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Camp Grant massacre

The Camp Grant massacre, on April 30, 1871, was an attack on Pinal and Aravaipa Apaches who surrendered to the United States Army at Camp Grant, Arizona, along the San Pedro River.

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Camp Polk (Oregon)

Camp Polk was a former army camp in the U.S. state of Oregon that was established in Deschutes County in 1865.

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Canadian Broomball Federation

The Canadian Broomball Federation (CBF) is the official governing body of the sport of broomball in Canada.

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Canandaigua, Michigan

Canandaigua is a populated place in Lenawee County, Michigan.

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Cap's Place

Cap's Place originally named Club Unique is a historic site in Lighthouse Point, Florida.

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Cape Tribulation, Queensland

Cape Tribulation is a headland and locality in the Shire of Douglas in northern Queensland, Australia.

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Carbrook, Queensland

Carbrook is a suburb in the City of Logan, Queensland, Australia.

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Carson National Forest

Carson National Forest is a national forest in northern New Mexico, United States.

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Cartwright, Manitoba

Cartwright is an unincorporated urban community in the Cartwright – Roblin Municipality within the Canadian province of Manitoba that held village status prior to January 1, 2015.

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Casa Wiechers-Villaronga

The Casa Wiechers-Villaronga is a Neo-classical style mansion in Ponce, Puerto Rico designed and built in the early twentieth century.

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Cascavel

Cascavel is a municipality located in the western region of the state of Paraná, Brazil.

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Cashmere, Washington

Cashmere is a city in Chelan County, Washington, United States.

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Catawba in the American Civil War

The Catawba in the American Civil War participated in the Eastern Theater.

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Catawba people

The Catawba, also known as Issa or Essa or Iswä but most commonly Iswa (Catawba: iswa - "people of the river"), are a federally recognized tribe of Native Americans, known as the Catawba Indian Nation. They live in the Southeast United States, along the border of North Carolina near the city of Rock Hill, South Carolina.

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Catu

Catu is a city in Bahia, Brazil.

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Caudy's Castle

Caudy's Castle is a rock pinnacle of Ridgeley (Oriskany) sandstone that stands 1,070 feet (326 m) above sea level over the Cacapon River near the Bloomery Pike (West Virginia Route 127) south of Forks of Cacapon in Hampshire County, West Virginia.

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Cavitt Creek

Cavitt Creek is a tributary of the Little River in Douglas County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Cavitt Creek Bridge

Cavitt Creek Bridge is a covered bridge in Douglas County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Córdoba, Argentina

Córdoba is a city in the geographical center of Argentina, in the foothills of the Sierras Chicas on the Suquía River, about northwest of the Buenos Aires.

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Central City, Colorado

The City of Central, commonly known as Central City, is the Home Rule Municipality in Gilpin and Clear Creek counties that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Gilpin County, Colorado, United States.

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Certificates of Claim

Certificates of Claim were a form of legal instrument by which the colonial administration of the British Central Africa Protectorate granted title to individuals, companies and others who claimed to have acquired land within the protectorate by grant or purchase.

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Champoeg Meetings

The Champoeg Meetings were the first attempts at formal governance by European-American and French Canadian pioneers in the Oregon Country on the Pacific Northwest coast of North America.

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Charity Creek

Charity Creek, a northern tributary of the Parramatta River, is a creek west of Sydney Harbour, located in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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Charles Brockden Brown

Charles Brockden Brown (January 17, 1771 – February 22, 1810) was an American novelist, historian, and editor of the Early National period.

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Charles Rochon

Charles Rochon (1673–1733) was a French colonist and was one of the four founders of modern-day Mobile, Alabama.

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Charleston, Oregon

Charleston (Coos language: Milukwich) is an unincorporated community in Coos County, Oregon, United States.

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Chatanika, Alaska

Chatanika is a small unincorporated community located in the Fairbanks North Star Borough, Alaska, United States, north-northeast of the city of Fairbanks.

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Chatham Borough, New Jersey

Chatham is a borough in Morris County, New Jersey, United States.

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Chelsea, Massachusetts

Chelsea is a city in Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States, directly across the Mystic River from the city of Boston.

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Cherokee military history

The Cherokee people of the southeastern United States, and later Oklahoma and surrounding areas, have a long military history.

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Chibalo

Chibalo is the concept of debt bondage or forced labour in the Ultramar Português (the Portuguese overseas provinces in Africa and Asia), most notably in Portuguese Angola and Portuguese Mozambique (unlike the other European empires of the 20th century, the Portuguese possessions were not considered colonies, but full-fledged provinces of the Portuguese state).

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Choctaw hog

The Choctaw Hog is a breed of domestic pig historically used by Native Americans.

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Christianity and colonialism

Christianity and colonialism are often closely associated because Catholicism and Protestantism were the religions of the European colonial powers and acted in many ways as the "religious arm" of those powers.

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Christianity in Angola

Christianity in Angola has existed since 1491.

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Christopher Comstock

Christopher Comstock (October 7, 1635 – December 8, 1702) was an early settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Church Hill, Mississippi

Church Hill is a small unincorporated community in Jefferson County, Mississippi, United States.

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Church of St. James (Brno)

Saint James` church is a late Gothic three-nave church situated in James' square (Jakubské náměstí) in the centre of Brno, in Czech Republic.

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Churchville School

Churchville School, also known as Fischer School, is a former school building located in unincorporated Bensenville, Illinois.

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Circumpolar studies

Circumpolar studies (also Northern studies) is an interdisciplinary field of study combining social sciences and geosciences and working with topics like land, environment, peoples, cultures, and politics in Arctic and Subarctic states, namely the United States (Alaska), Canada, Denmark (Greenland), Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia.

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Civilization II

Sid Meier's Civilization II is a turn-based strategy video game in the ''Civilization'' series, developed and published by MicroProse.

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Clarion, Utah

Clarion is a ghost town in Sanpete County, Utah southwest of Gunnison.

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Clayton Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Clayton Township (formerly Providence Township) is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Clement Daniel Rockey

Clement Daniel Rockey (4 September 1889 – 15 August 1975) was a Bishop of the Methodist Church, elected in 1941.

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Cobb County, Georgia

Cobb County is a suburban county in the U.S. state of Georgia.

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Cobden, Victoria

Cobden is a town located 200 kilometres southwest of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia named in honour of Richard Cobden.

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Colon statue

Colon statues, a term derived from the French statues colon ("colon" is the French noun for a colonist), are a genre of wooden figurative sculpture within African art which originated during the colonial period.

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Colonial

Colonial or The Colonial may refer to.

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Colonial House (TV series)

Colonial House is an American reality series produced by Thirteen/WNET New York and Wall to Wall Television in the United Kingdom, following the success of The 1900 House, an exercise in vicarious "experiential history" that is characteristic of an attempt to provide an educational version of popular reality television.

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Colonial troops

Colonial troops or colonial army refers to various military units recruited from, or used as garrison troops in, colonial territories.

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Colonist (disambiguation)

A colonist is a settler, a person who has migrated to an area and established a permanent residence there, often to colonize the area.

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Colonization

Colonization (or colonisation) is a process by which a central system of power dominates the surrounding land and its components.

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Colonization of trans-Neptunian objects

Freeman Dyson has proposed that trans-Neptunian objects, rather than planets, are the major potential habitat of life in space.

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Colorado

Colorado is a state of the United States encompassing most of the southern Rocky Mountains as well as the northeastern portion of the Colorado Plateau and the western edge of the Great Plains.

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Colorado War

The Colorado War was an Indian War fought from 1863 to 1865 between the Cheyenne and Arapaho Nations and white settlers and militia in the Colorado Territory and adjacent regions.

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Commodore Nutt

Commodore Nutt (George Washington Morrison Nutt; April 1, 1848 – May 25, 1881) was an American entertainer.

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Communities in Norfolk County, Ontario

Norfolk County in the Canadian province of Ontario consists of a long list of communities.

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Conestoga High School

Conestoga High School, located in Tredyffrin Township, Pennsylvania, United States, is the only upper secondary school in the Tredyffrin/Easttown School District.

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Convict women in Australia

Convict women in Australia were British prisoners whom the government increasingly sent out during the era of transportation (1787-1868) in order to develop the penal outpost of New South Wales (now a state of Australia) into a viable colony.

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Convicts in Australia

Between 1788 and 1868, about 162,000 convicts were transported by the British government to various penal colonies in Australia.

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Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary

Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary is a marine sanctuary located off the coast of California.

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Coree

The Coree (also Connamox, Cores, Corennines, Connamocksocks, Coranine Indians, Neuse River Indians) were a very small Native American tribe, who once occupied a coastal area south of the Neuse River in southeastern North Carolina in the area now covered by Carteret and Craven counties.

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Cornelius Gilliam

Cornelius Gilliam (April 13, 1798 – March 24, 1848) was a pioneer of the U.S. state of Oregon who was best known as the commander of the volunteer forces against the Cayuse in the Cayuse War.

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Corrigin, Western Australia

Corrigin is a town in the central Wheatbelt region of Western Australia, east-southeast of the state capital, Perth, Western Australia, along State Route 40.

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Cove, Oregon

Cove is a city in Union County, Oregon, United States.

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Crabtree, Oregon

Crabtree is an unincorporated community in Linn County, Oregon, United States.

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Craig, Alaska

Craig (Tlingit: Sháan Séet) is a first-class city in the Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area in the Unorganized Borough in the U.S. state of Alaska.

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Cranberry

Cranberries are a group of evergreen dwarf shrubs or trailing vines in the subgenus Oxycoccus of the genus Vaccinium.

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Cretan wildcat

The Cretan wildcat (Felis silvestris cretensis; φουρόγατος, fourógatos) is a European wildcat subspecies that inhabits the Greek island of Crete and was first described in 1953.

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Crimean Tatars in Bulgaria

After 1241, the year of the earliest recorded Tatar invasion of Bulgaria, the Second Bulgarian Empire maintained constant political contacts with the Tatars.

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Cross Timbers State Park

Cross Timbers State Park is a state park in Woodson County, Kansas, United States.

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Crown Heights, Brooklyn

Crown Heights is a neighborhood in the central portion of the New York City borough of Brooklyn.

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Cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies

The cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies includes the foods, eating habits, and cooking methods of the Colonial United States.

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Cuisine of the United States

The cuisine of the United States reflects its history.

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Culture of Oregon

The culture of Oregon has had a diverse and distinct character from before European settlement until the modern day.

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Cusabo

The Cusabo or Corsaboy were a group of historic Native American tribes who lived along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean in what is now South Carolina, approximately between present-day Charleston and south to the Savannah River, at the time of European encounter.

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Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, 2004

A referendum on the Annan Plan was held in the Republic of Cyprus and the breakaway Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus on 24 April 2004.

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Dairy, Oregon

Dairy is an unincorporated community in Klamath County, Oregon, United States.

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Dakota War of 1862

The Dakota War of 1862, also known as the Sioux Uprising, Dakota Uprising, the Sioux Outbreak of 1862, the Dakota Conflict, the U.S.–Dakota War of 1862 or Little Crow's War, was an armed conflict between the United States and several bands of Dakota (also known as the eastern 'Sioux').

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Dallos

is a science fiction OVA series released in 1983.

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Dalwallinu, Western Australia

Dalwallinu is a town in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia, located 248 km from Perth via the Great Northern Highway.

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Dalyston

Dalyston is a seaside town located south east of Melbourne via the South Gippsland and Bass Highways, in the Bass Coast Shire of Gippsland, Victoria, Australia.

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Danford Balch

Danford Balch (November 29, 1811 – October 17, 1859) (alternate spelling Danforth) was a mid-19th-century settler in what later became the Willamette Heights neighborhood of Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Daniel Kellogg (settler)

Daniel Kellogg (also Daniel Kellogge) (February 1630 – December 1688) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Daniel Rhoads

Daniel Rhoads (December 7, 1821, Paris, Illinois – December 4, 1895, San Francisco) was an American pioneer and rancher who helped rescue the Donner Party.

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Darling Scarp

The Darling Scarp, also referred to as the Darling Range or Darling Ranges, is a low escarpment running north-south to the east of the Swan Coastal Plain and Perth, Western Australia.

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David Hill (Oregon politician)

David Hill (1809 – May 9, 1850), was an American pioneer and settler of what became Hillsboro, Oregon, United States.

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David Lefkowitz

David Lefkowitz (April 11, 1875 – June 5, 1955), a rabbi, led Temple Emanu-El in Dallas, Texas from 1920 to 1949, after having worked at Temple Israel in Dayton, Ohio.

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Davis Creek (Salt River)

Davis Creek is a stream in Audrain County in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Davy Crockett

David "Davy" Crockett (August 17, 1786 – March 6, 1836) was a 19th-century American folk hero, frontiersman, soldier, and politician.

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Days of '47 Parade

The Days of '47 Parade is an annual parade presented by The Days of '47, Inc.

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De Beers

The De Beers Group of Companies is an international corporation that specialises in diamond exploration, diamond mining, diamond retail, diamond trading and industrial diamond manufacturing sectors.

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De Beque, Colorado

The Town of De Beque is a Statutory Town in Mesa County, Colorado, United States.

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Deadlock II: Shrine Wars

Deadlock II: Shrine Wars is a sci-fi turn-based strategy computer game developed by Cyberlore Studios and published by Accolade, released on February 28, 1998 as a sequel to Deadlock: Planetary Conquest.

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Deadlock: Planetary Conquest

Deadlock: Planetary Conquest is a turn-based strategy computer game by Accolade.

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Deadman's Island (Vancouver)

Deadman Island is a 3.8 ha island to the south of Stanley Park in Coal Harbour in Vancouver, British Columbia.

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Declaration of Rights and Grievances

The Declaration of Rights and Grievances was a document written by the Stamp Act Congress and passed on October 14, 1765.

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Deforestation in New Zealand

Deforestation in New Zealand has been a contentious environmental issue in the past, but now native forests, colloquially called "the bush", now have legal protection, and are not allowed to be tampered with by humans.

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Dela, Oklahoma

Dela is an unincorporated community in Pushmataha County, Oklahoma six miles southeast of Antlers.

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Demographics of Sri Lanka

This article is about the demographic features of the population of Sri Lanka, including population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

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Denver Pioneers

The Denver Pioneers are the sports teams of the University of Denver (DU).

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Descendants of Brigham Young

Brigham Young (June 1, 1801 – August 29, 1877) was an American leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and a settler of the Western United States.

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Desmundo

Desmundo is a 2002 Brazilian drama film by Alain Fresnot, based on the novel of the same name by Ana Miranda.

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Dexter Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Dexter Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Diamond Lake (Oregon)

Diamond Lake is a natural body of water in the southern part of the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Diamond, Oregon

Diamond is an unincorporated community in Harney County, Oregon, United States.

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Dighton Rock

The Dighton Rock is a 40-ton boulder, originally located in the riverbed of the Taunton River at Berkley, Massachusetts (formerly part of the town of Dighton).

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Dinglishna Hills, Alaska

Dinglishna Hills is an unincorporated community in Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska, USA.

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Dingman's Ferry Bridge

The Dingman's Ferry Bridge is the last privately owned toll bridge on the Delaware River and one of the last few in the United States.

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District Council of Franklin Harbour

The District Council of Franklin Harbour is a local government area in South Australia on the Eyre Peninsula.

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Dixie, Mississauga

Dixie is a neighbourhood in the city of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.

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Dixon Springs State Park

Dixon Springs State Park is an Illinois state park in Pope County, Illinois, United States, and is one of several state parks in the Illinois Shawnee Hills.

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Dobruja

Dobruja or Dobrudja (Добруджа, transliterated: Dobrudzha or Dobrudža; Dobrogea or; Dobruca) is a historical region in Eastern Europe that has been divided since the 19th century between the territories of Bulgaria and Romania.

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Doeg people

The Doeg (also spelled Doages, Dogues, Taux, Dogi, Tacci, etc.) were a Native American people who lived in Virginia.

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Dolliver Memorial State Park

Dolliver Memorial State Park is a state park of Iowa, US, featuring high bluffs and deep ravines on the Des Moines River.

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Don Luis

Don Luís de Velasco (flourished 1561-1571), also known as Paquiquino, was a Native American, possibly of the Kiskiack or Paspahegh tribe, from Tidewater, Virginia.

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Draketown, Georgia

Draketown is an unincorporated community in Haralson County, Georgia, United States.

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Drewsey, Oregon

Drewsey is an unincorporated community in Harney County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Dundee, KwaZulu-Natal

The coal mining town of Dundee is situated in a valley of the Biggarsberg mountains in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

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Dunlap Creek (Tuscarawas River)

Dunlap Creek is a stream located entirely within Tuscarawas County, Ohio.

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Durham-Sud

Durham-Sud, also known as South Durham, is a small farming community in the Eastern Townships of Quebec, west of Richmond and south of Drummondville.

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Dutch Watch

Dutch Watch (Dutch: Burgerwacht) was a paramilitary organization formed by settlers in the Cape in 1655, initially to protect civilians against attack and later to maintain law and order.

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East Northport, New York

East Northport is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in the town of Huntington in Suffolk County, New York, United States.

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East Norwalk Historical Cemetery

Established in 1655, the East Norwalk Historical Cemetery is Norwalk's oldest cemetery, and many of the area's first settlers are buried there.

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East Prussia

East Prussia (Ostpreußen,; Prusy Wschodnie; Rytų Prūsija; Borussia orientalis; Восточная Пруссия) was a province of the Kingdom of Prussia from 1773 to 1829 and again from 1878 (with the Kingdom itself being part of the German Empire from 1871); following World War I it formed part of the Weimar Republic's Free State of Prussia, until 1945.

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East Windsor, Connecticut

East Windsor is a town in Hartford County, Connecticut, United States.

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Economic history of South Africa

Prior to the arrival of European settlers in the 15th century the economy of what was to become South Africa was dominated by subsistence agriculture and hunting.

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Eddies Cove East

Eddies Cove East is an unincorporated fishing community located northeast of Anchor Point in the Strait of Belle Isle of Newfoundland, Canada.

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Eden Prairie, Minnesota

Eden Prairie is an edge city southwest of downtown Minneapolis in Hennepin County, and the 12th-largest city in the State of Minnesota.

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Edgar Rice Burroughs

Edgar Rice Burroughs (September 1, 1875 – March 19, 1950) was an American fiction writer best known for his celebrated and prolific output in the adventure and science-fiction genres.

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Edgerton W. Day

Edgerton Winnett Day (November 26, 1863 – February 11, 1919) was a Canadian politician and pioneer settler in the area that became the Canadian province of Alberta.

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Edmund Burke

Edmund Burke (12 January 17309 July 1797) was an Anglo-Irish statesman born in Dublin, as well as an author, orator, political theorist and philosopher, who after moving to London in 1750 served as a member of parliament (MP) between 1766 and 1794 in the House of Commons with the Whig Party.

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Edmund Durfee

Edmund Durfee (Durfy) Sr. (October 3, 1788 – November 15, 1845) was an American settler and early member of the Latter Day Saint movement who is remembered as a martyr by Latter-day Saints.

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Edward Wooster

Edward Wooster (1622 in England – July 8, 1689) was an English early settler of Colonial America, and "the first permanent settler in Derby", Connecticut.

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Eichhornia crassipes

Eichhornia crassipes, commonly known as common water hyacinth, is an aquatic plant native to the Amazon basin, and is often a highly problematic invasive species outside its native range.

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Elie Yossef

Elie Yossef (also Eli Joseph, אֵלִי יוֹסֵף) is a London-born Israeli educator and political activist.

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Elijah Bristow State Park

Elijah Bristow State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of Oregon, administered by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department.

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Elijah Martindale

Elijah Martindale (November 10, 1793-July 21, 1874) was an Indiana pioneer and a leader of the Restoration Movement in that state.

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Elijah Moulton

Elijah Moulton (1820–1902) was a pioneer settler in Los Angeles, California, after the Mexican-American War, and became one of its wealthiest citizens.

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Elijah Steele

Elijah Steele (November 13, 1817 – June 27, 1883) was an early Northern California pioneer, jurist, legislator and Indian agent.

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Eliza Clayland Tomlinson Foster

Eliza Clayland Tomlinson Foster was born in Wilmington, Delaware and raised by her deceased mother's family-the Claylands in Baltimore.

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Eliza Forlonge

Eliza Forlong (1784–1859) was an Australian pioneer who played a large part in introducing Merino sheep to south-east Australia.

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Elizabeth Caruthers

Elizabeth Caruthers was a pioneer settler in Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Elizabeth, West Virginia

Elizabeth is a town in, and the county seat of Wirt County, West Virginia along the Little Kanawha River.

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Elizabethton, Tennessee

Elizabethton is a city in, and the county seat of Carter County, Tennessee, United States.

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Elkanah Walker

Elkanah Walker (1805-1877) was an American pioneer settler in the Oregon Country in what is now the states of Oregon and Washington.

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Elkland, Pennsylvania

Elkland is a borough in Tioga County, Pennsylvania, in the United States.

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Ellen Watson

Ellen Liddy Watson (July 2, 1860Van Pelt, p. 157. – July 20, 1889) was a pioneer of Wyoming who became known as Cattle Kate, an alleged outlaw of the Old West.

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Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank building

The Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank building at 51 Chambers Street between Broadway and Centre Street in the Civic Center neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, was built in 1909-1912 and was designed by Raymond F. Almirall in the Beaux-Arts style.

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Emma Withnell

Emma Mary Withnell, née Hancock, (1842–1928), was the first white, female settler in north west Western Australia; a pioneering pastoralist and businessperson.

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Endersby, Oregon

Endersby is an unincorporated community in Wasco County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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English Americans

English Americans, also referred to as Anglo-Americans, are Americans whose ancestry originates wholly or partly in England, a country that is part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

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English Passengers

English Passengers is a 2000 historical novel written by Matthew Kneale, which won that year's Whitbread Book Award and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Miles Franklin Award.

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Eola, Oregon

Eola is an unincorporated community in Polk County, Oregon, United States four miles west of Salem on Oregon Route 22 at the confluence of Rickreall Creek and the Willamette River.

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Erikin, Western Australia

Erikin is a small town located in the Eastern Wheatbelt region of Western Australia.

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España y Filipinas

España y Filipinas, meaning “Spain and the Philippines” in translation, is an 1886 oil on woodHonasan, Alya B., Into the 21st Century, lopezmuseum.org.ph by Filipino painter, ilustrado, and revolutionary activist, Juan Luna.

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Espírito Santo

Espírito Santo (meaning "Holy Spirit") is a state in southeastern Brazil.

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Estelline, Texas

Estelline is a town located in Hall County, Texas, United States.

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Estevan

Estevan is the eighth-largest city in Saskatchewan, Canada.

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Estuary, Saskatchewan

Estuary is a hamlet in Deer Forks Rural Municipality No. 232, Saskatchewan, Canada.

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Eugene Pioneer Cemetery

Eugene Pioneer Cemetery (also Pioneer Memorial Cemetery and Independent Order of Odd Fellows (I.O.O.F.) Cemetery) is a pioneer cemetery in Eugene, Oregon, United States.

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Exeter, Pennsylvania

Exeter is a borough in the Greater Pittston-Wilkes-Barre area of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, United States, about west of Scranton and a few miles north of Wilkes-Barre.

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Expanse, Saskatchewan

Expanse, Saskatchewan is an unincorporated area in the rural municipality of Lake Johnston No. 102, in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.

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Expatriate

An expatriate (often shortened to expat) is a person temporarily or permanently residing in a country other than their native country.

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Ezekiel Polk

Ezekiel Polk (December 7, 1747 – August 31, 1824), American soldier, pioneer and grandfather of President James Knox Polk, was the next youngest of five boys and three girls born to William Polk and Margaret Taylor Polk of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, near present-day Carlisle.

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Fair Play Men

The Fair Play Men were illegal settlers (squatters) who established their own system of self-rule from 1773 to 1785 in the West Branch Susquehanna River valley of Pennsylvania in what is now the United States.

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Fauna of Puerto Rico

The fauna of Puerto Rico is similar to other island archipelago faunas, with high endemism, and low, skewed taxonomic diversity.

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Fernando Muñoz Altea

Fernando Muñoz Altea was the King of Arms of the Royal House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies.

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Films about race

A great number of movies have been made about race relations, or with a strong racial theme over the last century, from D. W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation (1915) to Marvel Studios' Black Panther (2018).

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Firefly (franchise)

The Firefly media franchise is an American space Western media franchise created by Joss Whedon and produced by Mutant Enemy Productions.

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Firefly (TV series)

Firefly is an American space Western drama television series which ran from 2002–2003, created by writer and director Joss Whedon, under his Mutant Enemy Productions label.

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Fishing net

A fishing net is a net used for fishing.

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Flagstaff, Arizona

Flagstaff is a city in and the county seat of Coconino County in northern Arizona, in the southwestern United States.

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Flamingo, Monroe County, Florida

Flamingo is the southernmost headquarters of Everglades National Park, in Monroe County, Florida, United States, located at the end of the 99-mile (159-km) Wilderness Waterway known as the Ten Thousand Islands, and the southern end of the only road (running) through the park from Florida City.

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Flathead River

The Flathead River (Salish: ntx̣ʷetkʷ, ntx̣ʷe), in the northwestern part of the U.S. state of Montana, originates in the Canadian Rockies to the north of Glacier National Park and flows southwest into Flathead Lake, then after a journey of, empties into the Clark Fork.

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Fleming County, Kentucky

Fleming County is a county located in the U.S. state of Kentucky.

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Floatpoint

Floatpoint is a 2006 work of interactive fiction written by Emily Short about a diplomat sent to an endangered colony to discuss evacuation options and terms of cohabitation.

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Flora Shaw, Lady Lugard

Flora Louise Shaw, (born 19 December 1852 – 25 January 1929), was a British journalist and writer.

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Florida cracker

Florida cracker refers to colonial-era English and American pioneer settlers and their descendants in what is now the U.S. state of Florida.

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Flying Foam massacre

The Flying Foam massacre was a series of confrontations between white settlers and Aboriginal people around Flying Foam Passage on Murujuga Burrup Peninsula, Western Australia.

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Folk hero

A folk hero or national hero is a type of hero – real, fictional or mythological – with the sole salient characteristic being the imprinting of his or her name, personality and deeds in the popular consciousness of a people.

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Forbes Creek (California)

Forbes Creek is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Forest Lakes Estates, Arizona

Forest Lakes is a small unincorporated community in Coconino County in the northern part of the U.S. state of Arizona.

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Fort Boonesborough State Park

Fort Boonesborough was a frontier fort in Kentucky, founded by Daniel Boone and his men following their crossing of the Kentucky River on April 1, 1775.

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Fort Craig

Fort Craig was a U.S. Army fort located along El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro, near Elephant Butte Lake State Park and the Rio Grande in Socorro County, New Mexico.

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Fort Ellsworth (Kansas)

In 1864 Gen.

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Fort Fillmore

Fort Fillmore, located at 32°13′30″N 106°42′52″W, was a United States military fortification established by Colonel Edwin Vose Sumner in September 1851 near Mesilla in what is now New Mexico, primarily for the purpose of protecting settlers and traders traveling to California.

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Fort Griffin

Fort Griffin, now a Texas State Historic Site, was a US Cavalry fort established 31 July 1867 by four companies of the Sixth Cavalry, U.S. ArmyCarter, R.G., On the Border with Mackenzie, 1935, Washington D.C.: Enyon Printing Co., p. 49 under the command of Lt.

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Fort King George

Fort King George State Historic Site is a fort located in the U.S. state of Georgia in McIntosh County, adjacent to Darien.

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Fort Martin Scott

Fort Martin Scott is a restored United States Army outpost near Fredericksburg in the Texas Hill Country, United States, that was active from December 5, 1848 until April, 1853.

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Fort Rucker, Arizona

Fort Rucker, or Camp Rucker, is a former United States Army post in Cochise County, Arizona.

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Fort Selden

Fort Selden was a United States Army post, occupying the area in what is now Radium Springs, New Mexico.

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Fort Sumner

Fort Sumner was a military fort in New Mexico Territory charged with the internment of Navajo and Mescalero Apache populations from 1863-1868 at nearby Bosque Redondo.

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Forty Thousand in Gehenna

Forty Thousand in Gehenna, alternately 40,000 in Gehenna, is a 1983 science fiction novel by American writer C. J. Cherryh.

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Francis Fletcher

Francis Fletcher (March 1, 1814 – October 7, 1871) was a prominent pioneer of the U.S. state of Oregon and a member of the Peoria Party.

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Francophobia

Anti-French sentiment (Francophobia) refers to an extreme or irrational fear of France, the French people, the French government or the Francophonie (set of political entities that use French as an official language or whose French-speaking population is numerically or proportionally large).

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Frank Cooper Sands

Frank Cooper Sands was a Scoutmaster from Nottingham, England.

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Frankston, Victoria

Frankston is an outer-suburb of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia, in the local government area of the City of Frankston.

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FreeCol

FreeCol is a 4X video game, a clone of Sid Meier's Colonization.

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Fremont, Nebraska

Fremont is a city in Dodge County in the eastern portion of the state of Nebraska in the Midwestern United States.

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French Algeria

French Algeria (Alger to 1839, then Algérie afterwards; unofficially Algérie française, االجزائر المستعمرة), also known as Colonial Algeria, began in 1830 with the invasion of Algiers and lasted until 1962, under a variety of governmental systems.

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French people

The French (Français) are a Latin European ethnic group and nation who are identified with the country of France.

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French protectorate in Morocco

The French protectorate in Morocco (Protectorat français au Maroc; حماية فرنسا في المغرب Ḥimāyat Faransā fi-l-Maḡrib) was established by the Treaty of Fez.

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French Third Republic

The French Third Republic (La Troisième République, sometimes written as La IIIe République) was the system of government adopted in France from 1870 when the Second French Empire collapsed during the Franco-Prussian War until 1940 when France's defeat by Nazi Germany in World War II led to the formation of the Vichy government in France.

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Frenchtown (Tallahassee)

Frenchtown is a historical, primarily black neighborhood in Tallahassee, Florida.

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Fridley, Minnesota

Fridley is a city in Anoka County, Minnesota, United States.

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Frisco, Texas

Frisco is a city in Collin and Denton counties in Texas.

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Frontierland

Frontierland is one of the "themed lands" at the many Disneyland-style parks run by Disney around the world.

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Fruita, Colorado

The City of Fruita (pronounced /ˈfruːtə/) is a Home Rule Municipality located in western Mesa County, Colorado, United States.

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Fryer House

The Fryer House is located in Butler, Kentucky.

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Fula people of Sierra Leone

Fula people of Sierra Leone is the third major ethnic group in Sierra Leone and a branch of the Fula people of West Africa.

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Gabriel Richard Catholic High School

Gabriel Richard Catholic High School, usually referred to as Gabriel Richard or simply GR, is a Catholic, coed high school in Riverview, Michigan, United States, south of Detroit.

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Galvez, Louisiana

Galvez is an unincorporated community in Ascension Parish, Louisiana, United States, ten miles (16 km) southeast of Baton Rouge.

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Gamay Beaujolais

Gamay Beaujolais is a varietal designation for a Californian grape variety, an early ripening clone of Pinot noir.

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Gardnertown, New York

Gardnertown is a hamlet (and census-designated place) in Orange County, New York, United States.

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Garrettsville, Ohio

Garrettsville is a village in Portage County, Ohio, United States.

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Göcsej

Göcsej is a geographic and ethnic region within Zala County, Hungary.

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Gearhart, Oregon

Gearhart is a city in Clatsop County, Oregon, United States.

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Geauga Lake

Geauga Lake was a theme park in Bainbridge Township and Aurora, Ohio, United States.

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Geauga Lake (lake)

Geauga Lake, first known as Picnic Lake, is a natural lake located in Northeast Ohio, in the United States, on the border between the city of Aurora in Portage County and Bainbridge Township in Geauga County, near Cleveland.

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Gem Valley

Gem Valley is a rural valley in southeast Idaho, in the United States, so named for its local gemstones which can be found throughout the valley.

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Genetic history of the British Isles

The genetic history of the British Isles is the subject of research within the larger field of human population genetics.

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Geography of Australia

The geography of Australia encompasses a wide variety of biogeographic regions being the world's smallest continent but the sixth-largest country in the world.

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George Austin McHenry

George Austin McHenry (April 30, 1858 – October 11, 1931) was an American military officer, Mississippi pioneer, physician, and entrepreneur.

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George Charles Hawker

Sir George Charles Hawker (21 September 1818 – 21 May 1895) was a South Australian settler and politician.

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George Cheyne (settler)

George Cheyne (8 April 1790 5 June 1869) was an early settler in the Great Southern region of Western Australia.

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George T. Inkster

George T. Inkster (1848–1901) was a Canadian-born American pioneer in the Red River Valley of what's now North Dakota, and a participant in the Klondike Gold Rush.

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George Ura

George Aura or George Ura geologist and explorer French origin Portuguese.

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George W. Randolph

George Wythe Randolph (March 10, 1818 – April 3, 1867) was a lawyer, planter, and Confederate general.

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George Washington (Washington pioneer)

George Washington (August 15, 1817 – August 26, 1905) was the founder of the town of Centralia, Washington.

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George William Allan

George William Allan,, (January 9, 1822 – July 24, 1901), was a Canadian lawyer and politician.

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George, Western Cape

George is a city in the Western Cape province of South Africa.

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George-Étienne Cartier

Sir George-Étienne Cartier, 1st Baronet, (pronounced; September 6, 1814May 20, 1873) was a Canadian statesman and Father of Confederation.

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Georgia cracker

Georgia Cracker refers to the original American pioneer settlers of the Province of Georgia (later, the State of Georgia), and their descendants.

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Georgia Day

Georgia Day is the holiday which the U.S. state of Georgia recognizes in honor of its colonial founding as the Province of Georgia.

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German military administration in occupied France during World War II

The Military Administration in France (Militärverwaltung in Frankreich; Occupation de la France par l'Allemagne) was an interim occupation authority established by Nazi Germany during World War II to administer the occupied zone in areas of northern and western France.

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German town law

The German town law (Deutsches Stadtrecht) or German municipal concerns (Deutsches Städtewesen) was a set of early town privileges based on the Magdeburg rights developed by Otto I. The Magdeburg Law became the inspiration for regional town charters not only in Germany, but also in Central and Eastern Europe who modified it during the Middle Ages.

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Gervais, Oregon

Gervais is a city in Marion County, Oregon, United States.

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Gilkey Bridge

The Gilkey Bridge is a covered bridge in Linn County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Gilliam and Bisbee Building

The Gilliam and Bisbee Building is an historic commercial structure in Heppner in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Gilmore College

Gilmore College is an independent public mixed-sex educational high school (IPS) in Western Australia that is approx.

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Gilroy Yamato Hot Springs

Gilroy Yamato Hot Springs, a California Historical Landmark and on the list of National Register of Historical Places, is a property near Gilroy, California famed for its mineral hot springs and historic development by early settlers and Japanese immigrants.

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Glen Falls (New York)

Glen Falls is a small waterfall located on Ellicott Creek in the village of Williamsville, New York.

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Glenn Drover's Empires: The Age of Discovery

Glenn Drover's Empires: The Age of Discovery is a board game created by Glenn Drover based on the video game Age of Empires III, and was originally titled Age of Empires III: The Age of Discovery before being renamed in 2011 following the loss of the naming rights to the Age of Empires series.

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Gloucester, Massachusetts

Gloucester is a city on Cape Ann in Essex County, Massachusetts, in the United States.

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Golden, Oregon

Golden is an abandoned mining town located at Coyote Creek in Josephine County, Oregon, United States.

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Google Street View in Africa

Presently, in Africa, Google Street View can be seen in parts of Botswana, Uganda, South Africa, Swaziland, Lesotho, Senegal, Ghana, the Canary Islands of Spain, and Egypt's landmarks.

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Gozo

Gozo (Għawdex,, formerly Gaulos) is an island of the Maltese archipelago in the Mediterranean Sea.

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Graham Creek

Graham Creek is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Granville P. Swift

Granville Perry Swift (May 1, 1821 in Lexington, Kentucky – April 21, 1875) was a California pioneer who participated in the Bear Flag Revolt in 1846 and who was highly successful at gold mining.

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Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Great Smoky Mountains National Park is an American national park and UNESCO World Heritage Site that straddles the ridgeline of the Great Smoky Mountains, part of the Blue Ridge Mountains, which are a division of the larger Appalachian Mountain chain.

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Great Trail

The Great Trail (also called the Great Path) was a network of footpaths created by Algonquian and Iroquoian-speaking indigenous peoples prior to the arrival of European colonists in North America.

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Greater Pittston

Greater Pittston is a 65.35 sq mi (169.25 km²) region in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, in reference to the area in and around Pittston.

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Green Mountain Boys

The Green Mountain Boys was a militia organization first established in the late 1760s in the territory between the British provinces of New York and New Hampshire, known as the New Hampshire Grants and later in 1775 as the Vermont Republic (which later became the state of Vermont).

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Green Mountain, New Brunswick

Green Mountain is a Canadian rural community in York County, New Brunswick.

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Greenbrier County, West Virginia

Greenbrier County is a county in the U.S. state of West Virginia.

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Greene–Jones War

The Greene–Jones War was an ongoing Appalachian Mountain clan feud in the United States reputed to be second only to that of the Hatfield-McCoy feud in scale, duration, and number of persons killed.

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Grey Beard

Grey Beard (died 1875) was a Southern Cheyenne medicine man and chief.

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Großwilsdorf

The villages of Großwilsdorf and the Rödel Plateau are situated in Saxony-Anhalt in the middle of Germany.

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Grundisburgh

Grundisburgh is a village of 1,584 residents situated in the English county of Suffolk.

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Guayabo de Turrialba

Guayabo de Turrialba is an archeological site located in Turrialba, within the Central Volcanic Conservation Area in the Cartago Province, Costa Rica.

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Guianan Creole

French Guianan Creole or Guianan Creole is a French-based creole language spoken in French Guiana, and to a lesser degree, in Suriname and Guyana.

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Guild's Lake

Guild's Lake (also Guild Lake) was historically a flood-prone lowland near the confluence of Balch Creek with the Willamette River in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Gulf Islands

The Gulf Islands are the islands in the Strait of Georgia (also known as the Salish Sea or the Gulf of Georgia), between Vancouver Island and the mainland of British Columbia, Canada.

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Gun laws in Australia

Gun laws in Australia are mainly the jurisdiction of Australian states and territories, with the importation of guns regulated by the federal government.

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Gwenllian ferch Gruffydd

Gwenllian ferch Gruffydd (Gwenllian, daughter of Gruffydd, 1100 – 1136) was Princess consort of Deheubarth in Wales, and married to Gruffydd ap Rhys, Prince of Deheubarth.

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H. L. Davis

Harold Lenoir Davis (October 18, 1894–October 31, 1960), also known as H. L. Davis, was an American novelist and poet.

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Hackers Creek

Hackers Creek is a tributary of the West Fork River, long, in north-central West Virginia in the United States.

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Hannah Bridge

The Hannah Bridge is a covered bridge in Linn County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Hannah Run

Hannah Run is a stream in Adams County, Ohio.

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Haplogroup Q-L275

Haplogroup Q-L275 or Haplogroup Q2 (formerly Haplogroup Q1b) is a human Y-chromosome DNA haplogroup believed to have originated in Eurasia.

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Happy Valley-Goose Bay

Happy Valley-Goose Bay (Inuit: Vâli) is a town in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

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Hardman IOOF Lodge Hall

The Hardman IOOF Lodge Hall (also known as the Hardman Community Center and the Lone Balm Lodge #82) is a meeting hall in the ghost town of Hardman in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Hardy Pace

Hardy Pace (July 10, 1785 – December 5, 1864) was an American ferryman, miller, and early settler of Atlanta, Georgia.

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Harmen Harmense Gansevoort

Harmen Harmense Gansevoort (ca. 1634 – July 23, 1709) was an early American settler, beer brewer, landowner and patriarch of the Gansevoort family.

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Harp Township, DeWitt County, Illinois

Harp Township is one of thirteen townships in DeWitt County, Illinois, USA.

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Harrison Meeting House Site and Cemetery

The Harrison Meeting House Site and Cemetery, also known as the Germantown Church Site and Cemetery, is located on NY 416 right at its northern terminus with NY 211, across from Orange County Airport just outside the village of Montgomery, New York.

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Harry Oliver

Harry Oliver (April 4, 1888 – July 4, 1973) was an American humorist, artist, and Academy Award nominated art director of films from the 1920s and 1930s.

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Harvey W. Scott

Harvey Whitefield Scott (1838–1910) was an American pioneer, newspaper editor, and historian.

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Haslam, South Australia

Haslam is a town and a locality in the Australian state of South Australia located on the Eyre Peninsula on the coastline of Streaky Bay about north-west of the state capital of Adelaide and about north of the municipal seat of Streaky Bay.

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Hatton, Saskatchewan

Hatton, also known as Forres, is an unincorporated community in Maple Creek Rural Municipality No. 111, Saskatchewan, Canada.

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Hauländer

Hauländer is a German-language term for German settlers in Prussia and in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

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Hawke's Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador

Hawke's Bay is a town at the mouth of Torrent River southeast of Point Riche in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

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Hendersonville Presbyterian Church

Hendersonville Presbyterian Church (originally Beech Cumberland Presbyterian Church) is a church located in Hendersonville, Sumner County, Tennessee.

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Henry Grow

Henry Grow, Jr. (October 1, 1817 – November 4, 1891) was a Latter-day Saint ("Mormon") builder and civil engineer in pioneer-era Utah.

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Hermannsburg School

The Hermannsburg School is an art movement, or art style, which began at the Hermannsburg Mission in the 1930s.

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Hernando Martel

Hernando Martel (fl. 16th century) was a Spanish conquistador, judge, politician and military officer, born in Seville, Spain.

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Hieronymites

The Order of Saint Jerome or Hieronymites (Ordo Sancti Hieronymi, abbreviated O.S.H.) is a Catholic enclosed religious order and a common name for several congregations of hermit monks living according to the Rule of Saint Augustine, though the inspiration and model of their lives is the 5th-century hermit and biblical scholar, Saint Jerome.

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Higher education in Quebec

Higher education in Quebec differs from the education system of other provinces in Canada.

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Hills Creek (Oregon)

Hills Creek is a tributary, about long, of the Middle Fork Willamette River in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Hillsboro, North Dakota

Hillsboro is a city in Traill County, North Dakota, United States.

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Hilton Beach

Hilton Beach is a village located in Algoma District, Ontario, Canada.

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Hispanics and Latinos in New Mexico

Hispanic and Latino New Mexicans are residents of the state of New Mexico who are of Hispanic or Latino ancestry.

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Historic Spanish Point

Historic Spanish Point is a museum and environmental complex located in Osprey, Florida.

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History of Algeria

Much of the history of Algeria has taken place on the fertile coastal plain of North Africa, which is often called the Maghreb (or Maghrib).

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History of Colorado

The human history of Colorado extends back more than 14,000 years.

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History of Cyprus

Human habitation of Cyprus dates back to the Paleolithic era.

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History of European research universities

European research universities date from the founding of the University of Bologna in 1088 or the University of Paris (c. 1160–70).

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History of French-era Tunisia

The History of French-era Tunisia commenced in 1881 with the French protectorate and ended in 1956 with Tunisian independence.

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History of Gwynedd during the High Middle Ages

The history of Gwynedd in the High Middle Ages is a period in the History of Wales spanning the 11th through the 13th centuries.

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History of Jewish Americans in St. Louis

The history of Jews in St Louis goes back to at least 1807.

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History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania

This article details a history of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania.

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History of Miami

Thousands of years before Europeans arrived, a large portion of south east Florida, including the area where Miami, Florida exists today, was inhabited by Tequestas.

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History of Newcastle, New South Wales

This article details the history of Newcastle, New South Wales from the first human activity in the region to the 20th century.

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History of Randolph, Tennessee

Randolph is an unincorporated rural community in Tipton County, Tennessee, United States, located on the banks of the Mississippi River.

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History of Richfield, Minnesota

Richfield, is a city in eastern Minnesota.

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History of Sioux Falls, South Dakota

This article deals with the history of Sioux Falls, South Dakota Sioux Falls is the largest city in the U.S. state of South Dakota.

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History of slavery in Virginia

Slavery in Virginia dates to 1619, soon after the founding of Virginia as an English colony by the London Virginia Company.

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History of South Africa (1815–1910)

During the Napoleonic Wars, the Cape Colony was annexed by the British and officially became their colony in 1815.

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History of Tallahassee, Florida

The history of Tallahassee, like the history of Leon County, begins with the Native American population and its interaction with British and Spanish colonists as well as colonial Americans and fugitive slaves, as the Florida Territory moved toward statehood.

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History of the Cape Colony from 1806 to 1870

The history of the Cape Colony from 1806 to 1870 spans the period of the history of the Cape Colony during the Cape Frontier Wars, also called the Kaffir Wars, which lasted from 1811 to 1858.

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History of the Jews in Brenham, Texas

The history of the Jews in Brenham, Texas, covers a period of over 140 years.

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History of the Jews in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast

The history of the Jews in the Jewish Autonomous Oblast (JAO), Russia, began with the early settlements of 1928.

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History of the Kansas City metropolitan area

The history of the Kansas City metropolitan area started in the 19th century as Frenchmen from St. Louis, Missouri moved up the Missouri River to trap for furs and trade with the Native Americans.

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History of the petroleum industry in Canada

The Canadian petroleum industry arose in parallel with that of the United States.

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History of tobacco

Tobacco has a long history from its usages in the early Americas.

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Hoffman Bridge

The Hoffman Bridge is a covered bridge near Crabtree in Linn County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Homestead Acts

The Homestead Acts were several United States federal laws under which an applicant, upon the satisfaction of certain conditions, could acquire ownership of land, typically called a "homestead.” In all, more than 270 million acres of public land, or nearly 10% of the total area of the U.S., was transferred to 1.6 million homesteaders; most of the homesteads were west of the Mississippi River.

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Hopkinton, New Hampshire

Hopkinton is a town in Merrimack County, New Hampshire, United States.

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Horatio P. Van Cleve

Horatio Phillips Van Cleve (November 23, 1809 – August 24, 1891) was a general in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

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Horrible Histories

Horrible Histories is an educational entertainment franchise encompassing many media including books, magazines, audio books, stage shows, TV shows, and more.

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Howell Prairie

Howell Prairie is an area west of Silverton, Oregon, United States, between the Little Pudding River and the Pudding River.

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Huff's Fort

Huff's fort was established around 1811 or 1812 northeast of Fort Vallonia in present-day Jackson County, Indiana, United States.

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Huguenot Street Historic District

Historic Huguenot Street is located in New Paltz, New York, approximately north of New York City.

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Human rights in Western Sahara

The Government of Morocco sees Western Sahara as its Southern Provinces.

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Humber Summit

Humber Summit is a neighbourhood in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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Huron Shores

Huron Shores is a township in the Canadian province of Ontario, located along the North Channel of Lake Huron in the Algoma District.

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Hyde Family of Denchworth

The Hyde family of Denchworth in the English county of Berkshire (now Oxfordshire) were a landed family from at least the Norman period to the late modern era.

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Hyrum State Park

Hyrum State Park is a state park and reservoir in Cache County, Utah, United States.

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Ian Evans (historian)

Ian Joseph Evans OAM, PhD (born Parkes, New South Wales, 1940) is an Australian author, publisher and historian.

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Ileogbo

Ileogbo is the headquarters of Aiyedire Local Government in Osun State, Nigeria.

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In the Presence of Mine Enemies

In the Presence of Mine Enemies (2003) is an alternate history novel by American author Harry Turtledove, expanded from the eponymous short story.

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Independence Day (Algeria)

Independence Day, observed annually on 5 July every year, is a National Holiday in Algeria commemorating Algeria's independence from France on 5 July 1962.

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Indian auxiliaries

Indian auxiliaries or indios auxiliares is the term used in old Spanish chronicles and historical texts for the indigenous peoples who were integrated into the armies of the Spanish conquistadors with the purpose of supporting their advance and combat operations during the Conquest of America.

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Indian old field

Indian Old Field, or simply Old Field, was a common term used in Colonial American times and up until the early nineteenth century United States, by American explorers, surveyors, cartographers and settlers, in reference to land formerly cleared and utilized by Indians for farming (corn fields or vegetable patches) or occupation.

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Indian River State College

Indian River State College (IRSC) is a state college based in Fort Pierce, Florida, which serves the counties of Indian River, Martin, Okeechobee and St. Lucie.

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Indiana Limestone

Indiana limestone — also known as Bedford limestone — is a common regional term for Salem limestone, a geological formation primarily quarried in south central Indiana, USA, between the cities of Bloomington and Bedford.

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Indigenous peoples in Brazil

Indigenous peoples in Brazil (povos indígenas no Brasil), or Indigenous Brazilians (indígenas brasileiros), comprise a large number of distinct ethnic groups who have inhabited what is now the country of Brazil since prior to the European contact around 1500.

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Institutional racism

Institutional racism (also known as institutionalized racism) is a form of racism expressed in the practice of social and political institutions.

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Ionia

Ionia (Ancient Greek: Ἰωνία, Ionía or Ἰωνίη, Ioníe) was an ancient region on the central part of the western coast of Anatolia in present-day Turkey, the region nearest İzmir, which was historically Smyrna.

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Irish Canadians

Irish Canadians (Gaedheal-Cheanadaigh) are Canadian citizens who have full or partial Irish heritage including descendants who trace their ancestry to immigrants who originated in Ireland.

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Irish diaspora

The Irish diaspora (Diaspóra na nGael) refers to Irish people and their descendants who live outside Ireland.

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Irish people

The Irish people (Muintir na hÉireann or Na hÉireannaigh) are a nation and ethnic group native to the island of Ireland, who share a common Irish ancestry, identity and culture.

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Isaac Moore (settler)

Isaac Moore (also Isacke More) (1622 – 1705) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Isham Randolph of Dungeness

Isham Randolph (December 1684 – November 1742), sometimes referred to as Isham Randolph of Dungeness, was the maternal grandfather of United States President Thomas Jefferson.

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Ishi Wilderness

The Ishi Wilderness is a 41,339 acre (167 km2) wilderness area located on the Lassen National Forest in the Shasta Cascade foothills of northern California, United States.

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Islam in Myanmar

Islam is a religion in Myanmar, practiced by about 4% of the population, according to the 2008 Myanmar official statistics.

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Island Caribs

The Island Caribs, also known as the Kalinago or simply Caribs, are an indigenous Caribbean people of the Lesser Antilles.

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Italian colonists in Albania

The Italian colonists in Albania were Italians who, between the two world wars, moved to Albania to colonize the Balkan country for the Kingdom of Italy.

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J. Evetts Haley

James Evetts Haley Sr. (July 5, 1901 – October 9, 1995), usually known as J. Evetts Haley, was a Texas-born political activist and historian who wrote multiple works on the American West, including an enduring biography of cattleman Charles Goodnight.

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Jackson, California

Jackson (formerly, Botilleas, Botilleas Spring, Bottileas, Bottle Spring, and Botellas) is the county seat of Amador County, California.

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Jacksonville Beach, Florida

Jacksonville Beach is a coastal resort city in Duval County, Florida, United States.

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Jacques Archambault

Jacques Archambault (c. 1604 – February 15, 1688) was a French colonist in Montreal.

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James B. Stephens

James B. Stephens (November 9, 1806 – March 22, 1889) was a pioneer of the U.S. state of Oregon.

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James Baldwin (Los Angeles)

James Baldwin was an early settler and blacksmith in Los Angeles, California, arriving some time after 1858.

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James Harbeson

James Harbeson was an early American settler and founder of Harbeson's Station, now Perryville, Kentucky.

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James Longmire

James Longmire (1820 – 1897) was an American explorer and settler.

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James McBride (pioneer)

James McBride (1788–1859) was a prominent pioneer statesman in Butler County, Ohio.

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James Olmsted

James Olmsted (April 17, 1645 – April 28, 1731) was an early settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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James Simonds

James Simonds (December 10, 1735 – February 20, 1831) was a merchant, judge and political figure in New Brunswick.

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Jamestown Wildlife Area

Jamestown Wildlife Area consist of in Northern Kansas.

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Jan Van Loon House

The Jan Van Loon House (surname is pronounced like "van loan") is one of the oldest extant buildings in New York State.

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Jane McKechnie Walton

Jane McKechnie Walton was born on July 16, 1847 in Edinburgh, Scotland.

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Jardim Catarina

Jardim Catarina is a district of São Gonçalo in Rio de Janeiro that belongs to the third district of the city called Monjolos.

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Jathedar Bhai Tehal Singh Dhanju

Jathedar Bhai Tehal Singh Dhanju (1875 – 20 February 1921) played an important role in awakening the Sikh masses during Gurdwara Reform Movement in the early quarter of the 20th century as also for the liberation of Sikh Gurdwaras from the corrupt Mohants.

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Java

Java (Indonesian: Jawa; Javanese: ꦗꦮ; Sundanese) is an island of Indonesia.

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Jean Carmet

Jean Carmet (25 April 1920 – 20 April 1994) was a French actor.

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Jedediah Smith

Jedediah Strong Smith (January 6, 1799 – May 27, 1831), was a clerk, frontiersman, hunter, trapper, author, cartographer, and explorer of the Rocky Mountains, the North American West, and the Southwest during the early 19th century.

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Jenny Taylor

Jenny Taylor (born 22 October 1955) is a cultural analyst and journalist and founder of Lapido Media, a consultancy specialising in religious literacy in world affairs.

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Jenny Wiley

Jenny Wiley (born Jean "Jenny" Sellards in 1760 in Pennsylvania – 1831) was a legendary pioneer woman who was taken captive by Native Americans in 1789.

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Jersey Mills, Pennsylvania

Jersey Mills is an unincorporated community in McHenry Township, Lycoming County, in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

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Jesse Applegate

Jesse Applegate (July 5, 1811 – April 22, 1888) was an American pioneer who led a large group of settlers along the Oregon Trail to the Oregon Country.

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Jesse Creek

Jesse Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Jesse Smythes

Jesse (or Jessua) Smythes (died 1594) was an English born judge and colonist in Elizabethan Ireland.

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Jewish Christian

Jewish Christians, also Hebrew Christians or Judeo-Christians, are the original members of the Jewish movement that later became Christianity.

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João Ricardo

João Ricardo Pereira Batalha dos Santos Ferreira (born 7 January 1970 in Sá da Bandeira, Portuguese Angola), known as João Ricardo, is an Angolan retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper.

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Joel Palmer

General Joel Palmer (October 4, 1810 – June 9, 1881) was an American pioneer of the Oregon Territory in the Pacific Northwest region of North America.

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Johan Meyer

Johann Heinrich Casper Meyer (also known as Johan and John Henry Casper Meyer) (??-1901) was a German immigrant to Queensland and a pioneer of the Gold Coast region.

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John Ayer

John Ayer (1582–1657) was one of the original European settlers to Massachusetts, settling in Ipswich, Haverhill, and Salisbury.

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John B. Stetson

John Batterson Stetson (May 5, 1830 – February 18, 1906) was an American hatter, hat manufacturer, and, in the 1860s, the inventor of the cowboy hat.

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John Belding

John Belding (also recorded as John Beldon or John Belden) (January 9, 1650 – November 26, 1713) was an early settler of Norwalk, Connecticut. He was a member of the General Assembly of the Colony of Connecticut from Norwalk in the sessions of October 1691 and May 1705. He was most likely the son of William Belding and Thomasine Sherwood, although at least one record shows his father as John Belding of Wethersfield. He was the brother of Daniel Belden, the early settler of Deerfield, Massachusetts. He is recorded as living in Norwalk as early as 1673. On April 30, 1690, he was appointed to a committee to fortify the meeting house. On January 16, 1694, he was appointed to a committee to replace the deceased Reverend Thomas Hanford as minister for the town. In 1708, he was one of the purchasers of Ridgefield, along with Matthew Seymour, Matthias St. John, and Samuel Keeler. He died in 1713, and his widow, Ruth married John Copp, the town clerk.

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John Bidwell

John Bidwell (August 5, 1819 – April 4, 1900) was known throughout California and across the nation as an important pioneer, farmer, soldier, statesman, politician, prohibitionist and philanthropist.

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John Blair Sr.

John Blair (c. 1687 – November 5, 1771) was an American merchant and politician, a member of the House of Burgesses representing Jamestown and Williamsburg and four-time acting governor of the colony of Virginia.

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John Bond Jr.

Lt.

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John Bowton

John Bowton (also John Bouton, John Boughton) (October 1636 – January 1707) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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John Bradford (printer)

John Bradford (1749–1830) was an early American settler in Kentucky, where he established himself as one of the territory's leading printers.

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John Browning

John Moses Browning (January 23, 1855 – November 26, 1926) was an American firearms designer who developed many varieties of military and civilian firearms, cartridges, and gun mechanisms, many of which are still in use around the world.

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John Buchanan (settler)

John Buchanan (1855–1896), was a Scottish horticulturist who went to Central Africa, now Malawi, in 1876 as a lay member of the missionary party that established Blantyre Mission.

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John Costello (pastoralist)

John Costello (31 March 1838 – 25 February 1923) was a pioneer and pastoralist in outback Queensland.

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John Cotton's Birds of the Port Phillip District of New South Wales 1843-1849

John Cotton's Birds of the Port Phillip District of New South Wales 1843-1849 is a book published by William Collins (Australia), in a limited edition of 850 copies.

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John Dooly

Colonel John Dooly (1740–1780), born in Wilkes County, North Carolina, was an American Revolutionary war hero.

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John Drummond (Australian settler)

John Nicol Drummond (1816–1906) was an early settler in Western Australia.

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John Farrell Easmon

John Farrell Easmon, MRCS, LM, LKQCP, MD, CMO (30 June 1856 – 9 June 1900), was a prominent Sierra Leonean Creole doctor in the British Gold Coast who served as Chief Medical Officer during the 1890s.

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John George Gough

John George Gough (5 November 1848 – 15 November 1907), was one of the founders of the New South Wales Labour Party, initially the Labour Electoral League, the first political Labour movement in Australia.

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John Gregory (settler)

John Gregory (also John Griggorie) (1612 – August 15, 1689) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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John H. Jones and Carrie Otis Jones

John H. Jones (ca. 1834–1902) and Carolyn or Carrie Otis Jones (died 1909) were a pioneer husband and wife in Los Angeles, California, whose real estate holdings became worth millions of dollars by the beginning of the 20th century.

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John H. Shary

John H. Shary (March 2, 1872 – 1945) was an American farmer and entrepreneur.

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John Harris Sr.

John Harris Sr. (1673 – December 1748) emigrated from Britain to America late in the 17th century.

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John Holliday (pioneer)

John Holliday was an early American pioneer who was the first white settler to build a cabin along a cove on Harmon Creek in what was once Hancock County, West Virginia (formerly western Virginia).

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John Howe (loyalist)

John Howe (October 14, 1754 – December 27, 1835) was a loyalist printer during the American Revolution, a printer and Postmaster in Halifax, the father of the famous Joseph Howe, a spy prior to the War of 1812, and eventually a Magistrate of the Colony of Nova Scotia.

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John Ketcham (Indiana)

John Ketcham (September 10, 1782 – February 5, 1865) was a self-taught surveyor, building contractor, and judge.

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John Minto (Oregon pioneer)

John Minto IV (October 10, 1822 – February 25, 1915) was an American pioneer born in Wylam, England.

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John Moore Robinson

John Moore Robinson, (born in Hustonville, Wellington County, Ontario, Canada in December 1855 – died February 23, 1934) was a pioneer, rancher, prospector, politician and orchardist who helped shape British Columbia's Okanagan Valley region through, among other things, the establishment of such communities as Naramata, Summerland, and Peachland.

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John Morphett

Sir John Morphett (4 May 1809 – 7 November 1892) was a South Australian pioneer, landowner and politician.

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John Pascoe Fawkner

John Pascoe Fawkner (20 October 1792 – 4 September 1869) was an early pioneer, businessman and politician of Melbourne, Australia.

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John Platt (settler)

For other people named John Platt, see John Platt. John Platt (January 11, 1632 – November 6, 1705) was an early settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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John Robson (politician)

John Robson (14 March 1824 – 29 June 1892) was a Canadian journalist and politician, who served as the ninth Premier of the Province of British Columbia.

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John Ruscoe

John Ruscoe (also Ruskoe) (1623 – 1702) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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John Young (pioneer)

John Young (March 8, 1764 – 1825) was an American surveyor and pioneer.

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Johns Valley, Oklahoma

Johns Valley is a geographic feature and place name located in the Kiamichi Mountains in northwestern Pushmataha County, Oklahoma.

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Johnsonville, Victoria

Johnsonville is a town in the East Gippsland region of Victoria, Australia.

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Jojó (footballer, born 1970)

Jorge Miguel Moreira Larrouy Fernandes (born 6 September 1970), commonly known as Jojó, is a Mozambican retired footballer who played as a right back and also as a right midfielder.

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Jonathan Alder

Jonathan Alder (September 17, 1773 – January 30, 1849) was an American pioneer, and the first white settler in Madison County, Ohio.

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Jonathan Alder High School

Jonathan Alder High School is an NCA accredited public high school located in Plain City, Ohio.

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Jonathan Marsh

Jonathan Marsh (1621–1672) was a founding settler of the New Haven Colony, and of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Joseph Bailly

Joseph Bailly (7 April 1774 – 21 December 1835) was a fur trader and a member of an important French Canadian family that included his uncle, Charles-François Bailly de Messein.

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Joseph City, Arizona

Joseph City (elevation 5,000 ft) is an unincorporated community located in Navajo County, Arizona, United States.

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Joseph Hawdon

Joseph Hawdon (14 November 1813 – 12 April 1871) was a pioneer settler and overlander of Australia, and pioneer and politician of New Zealand.

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Joseph Long (bishop)

Joseph Long (1800–1869) was the third Bishop of the Evangelical Association, elected at the General Conference of 1843.

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Joseph Montoya

Joseph Manuel Montoya (September 24, 1915June 5, 1978) was an American politician and member of the Democratic Party who served as the Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico (1947–1951 and 1955–1957), in the U.S. House of Representatives (1957–1964) and as a U.S. Senator for New Mexico (1964–1977).

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Joseph Provencher

Joseph Alfred Norbert Provencher (1843–1887) was a Canadian pioneer, politician and newspaper editor.

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Joseph Thompson (doctor)

Dr.

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Joseph-Geneviève de Puisaye

Joseph-Geneviève, comte de Puisaye (6 March 1755 – 13 September 1827) was a minor French nobleman who fought as a counter-revolutionary during the French Revolution, leading two unsuccessful invasions from England.

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Josiah Belden

Josiah Belden (May 4, 1815 – April 23, 1892) was an American pioneer and politician.

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Josiah Charles Trent

Josiah Charles Trent (7 August 191410 December 1948) was an American surgeon and a historian of medicine.

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Juan Francisco de Montemayor Cordoba and Cuenca

Juan Francisco de Montemayor Cordoba and Cuenca (1618-1685) was a Spanish lawyer and judge, who served as captain general and governor of Santo Domingo from 1660 to 1662, and as judge of the Real Chancellery of Mexico between 1667 and 1682.

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Judah Creek

Judah Creek is a stream in Audrain and Monroe County in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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July 5

No description.

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Kanda Nissho

Kanda Nisshō (神田 日勝; 1937–1970) was a Japanese artist and farmer.

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Karori

Karori is a suburb located at the western edge of the urban area of Wellington, New Zealand, 4 km from the city centre and is one of New Zealand's biggest suburbs having a population of over 14,000 at the time of the 2013 census.

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Kate Rice

Kate Rice (December 22, 1882 – January 3, 1963) was a Canadian prospector, adventurer, and writer from Ontario who homesteaded, prospected and mined in northern Manitoba.

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Keating, Oregon

Keating is an unincorporated community in Baker County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Kelowna

Kelowna is a city on Okanagan Lake in the Okanagan Valley in the southern interior of British Columbia, Canada.

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Kelso, New South Wales

Kelso is a suburb of Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia, in the Bathurst Regional Council area.

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Ketcham's Fort

Ketcham's fort was a 19th-century fort northeast of Fort Vallonia in Jackson County, Indiana.

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Kiger Creek (Harney County, Oregon)

Kiger Creek is a tributary of Swamp Creek in Harney County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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King Woolsey

King S. Woolsey (ca. 1832 - June 30, 1879) was an American pioneer rancher, Indian-fighter, prospector and politician in 19th century Arizona.

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Kings Valley, Oregon

Kings Valley is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Benton County, Oregon, United States.

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Kintyre

Kintyre (Cinn Tìre) is a peninsula in western Scotland, in the southwest of Argyll and Bute.

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Kishon River

The Kishon River (נחל הקישון,; نهر المقطع,, or, – the river of slaughter or dismemberment; alternative Arabic, الكيشون) is a river in Israel that flows into the Mediterranean Sea near the city of Haifa.

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Kiskiack

Kiskiack (or Chisiack or Chiskiack) was a Native American tribal group of the Powhatan Confederacy in what is present-day York County, Virginia.

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Kolomna Municipal Okrug

Kolomna Municipal Okrug (муниципа́льный о́круг Коло́мна) is a municipal okrug of Admiralteysky District of the federal city of St. Petersburg, Russia.

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Lac-des-Écorces, Quebec

Lac-des-Écorces is a municipality and village in the Laurentides region of Quebec, Canada, part of the Antoine-Labelle Regional County Municipality.

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Laconia, New Hampshire

Laconia is a city in Belknap County, New Hampshire, United States.

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Lake King, Western Australia

Lake King is a town in the Eastern Wheatbelt region of Western Australia, from Perth along State Route 107 between Wagin and Ravensthorpe.

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Lake Perris

Lake Perris is an artificial lake completed in 1973.

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Lake Shetek State Park

Lake Shetek State Park is a state park of Minnesota, United States, on Lake Shetek, which is the largest lake in southwestern Minnesota and the headwaters of the Des Moines River.

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Lake Worth Historical Museum

The Lake Worth Historical Museum was established to serve as the repository to preserve the history and culture of the city of Lake Worth, Florida by collecting, organizing and exhibiting artifacts, books, photographs, and other materials which record the development of Lake Worth and the cultural history of the immediate surrounding area.

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Lake Worth, Florida

Lake Worth is a city in Palm Beach County, Florida, United States, which takes its name from the body of water along its eastern border known as the Lake Worth Lagoon.

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Lakeland Provincial Park and Recreation Area

Lakeland Provincial Park and Lakeland Provincial Recreation Area are located east of Lac La Biche, Alberta, Canada, in Lac La Biche County.

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Lakeport, California

Lakeport is an incorporated city and county seat of Lake County, California.

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Lampeter-Strasburg High School

Lampeter-Strasburg High School is a public secondary school in the Lampeter-Strasburg School District, located in Lampeter, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Land Act of 1820

The Land Act of 1820 (ch. 51), enacted April 24, 1820, is the United States federal law that ended the ability to purchase the United States' public domain lands on a credit or installment system over four years, as previously established.

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Langalibalele

Langalibalele (isiHlubi: The sun is boiling hot), also known as Mtetwa (c1814 – 1889), was king of the amaHlubi, a Bantu tribe in what is the modern-day province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

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Laura Ingalls Wilder

Laura Ingalls Wilder (February 7, 1867 – February 10, 1957) was an American writer known for the Little House on the Prairie series of children's books, published between 1932 and 1943, which were based on her childhood in a settler and pioneer family.

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Le Roy Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Le Roy Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Lemoore, California

Lemoore (formerly, La Tache and Lee Moore's) is a city in Kings County, California, United States.

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Leninski, Belarus

Leninski (Ле́нінскі, Leninski), formerly also Аciačyzna, Hatečyzna and Hataŭščyzna-Ździtaviec, is an agro-town in Zhabinka District of Brest Region, Belarus, located close to the Belarusian–Polish border.

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Lewisburg, West Virginia

Lewisburg is a city in Greenbrier County, West Virginia, United States.

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Liberia

Liberia, officially the Republic of Liberia, is a country on the West African coast.

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Linda Ronstadt

Linda Maria Ronstadt (born July 15, 1946) is an American retired popular music singer known for singing in a wide range of genres including rock, country, jazz, light opera, and Latin.

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List of American Indian Wars

American Indian Wars are the numerous armed conflicts between European empires or colonists, and later by the American settlers or government, and the indigenous peoples of North America.

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List of colonial governors of New Jersey

The territory which would later become the state of New Jersey was settled by Dutch and Swedish colonists in the early seventeenth century.

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List of earthquakes in California

Although the written history of California is not long, records of earthquakes exist that affected the Spanish missions that were constructed beginning in the late 18th century.

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List of feminist rhetoricians

This is a list of the major works of feminist women who have made considerable contributions to and shaped the rhetorical discourse about women.

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List of indigenous languages in Argentina

This is a list of Indigenous languages that are or were spoken in the present territory of Argentina.

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List of Louisiana Creoles

This is a list of notable Louisiana Creole people.

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List of Marvel Comics characters: T

T-Ray is a villain in the Marvel Comics Universe.

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List of massacres in Australia

The following is a list of massacres and mass murders that have occurred in Australia and its predecessors (numbers may be approximate).

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List of National Historic Landmarks in Tennessee

Following is a list of sites and structures in Tennessee that have been designated National Historic Landmarks.

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List of National Monuments of the United States

There are 129 protected areas in the United States known as national monuments.

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List of New Netherland placename etymologies

Nieuw-Nederland, or New Netherland, was the seventeenth-century colonial province of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands on northeastern coast of North America.

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List of numbered roads in Essex County

In Essex County, Ontario, odd-numbered county roads are north-south, the numbers increasing from west to east.

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List of place names of French origin in the United States

Several thousand place names in the United States have names of French origin, some a legacy of past French exploration and rule over much of the land and some in honor of French help during the American Revolution and the founding of the country (see also: New France and French in the United States).

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List of rampage killers (home intruders)

This section of the list of rampage killers contains those cases that either occurred mostly within a single household, or where most of the victims were members of a single family not related to the perpetrator.

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List of Space Runaway Ideon episodes

This is a list of episodes for the anime Space Runaway Ideon.

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List of Tennessee state symbols

Tennessee, the Volunteer State, has many symbols.

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Little Big Man (film)

Little Big Man is a 1970 American western film directed by Arthur Penn and based on the novel Little Big Man by Thomas Berger.

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Littleby Creek

Littleby Creek is a stream in Audrain County in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Livingston County, New York

Livingston County is a county in the U.S. state of New York.

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Lodi Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Lodi Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, in the United States.

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Logan, Utah

Logan is a city in Cache County, Utah, United States.

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Lokator

The lokator (lat. locator: landlord, land allocator, from lat. (col)locare to allocate, rent, establish, settle or locate; also magister incolarum; in Mecklenburg and Pomerania also posessor or cultor, similar to the Reutemeister in South Germany) was a medieval sub-contractor, who was responsible to a territorial lord or landlord for the clearing, survey and apportionment of land that was to be settled.

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Long Beach, New York

Long Beach is a city in Nassau County, New York, United States.

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Long Prairie River

The Long Prairie River is a tributary of the Crow Wing River, long, in central Minnesota in the United States.

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Lordship of Brecknock

The Lordship of Brecknock was an Anglo-Norman marcher lordship located in southern central Wales.

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Lorenzo Carter

Major Lorenzo Carter was the first permanent settler in Cleveland, Ohio.

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Lovett Island

Lovett Island is an island in Hickman County, Tennessee on the Duck River.

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Lovoni

The Tikina of Lovoni is made up of the Fijian villages of Lovoni, Nasaumatua, Vuni-ivi-savu, Visoto, Nukutocia and Nacobo.

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Loyal Company of Virginia

Loyal Company of Virginia or Loyal Land Company was a land speculation company formed in Virginia in 1749 for the purpose of recruiting settlers to western Virginia.

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Loyalsock Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania

Loyalsock Township is a township in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Lucullus Virgil McWhorter

Lucullus Virgil McWhorter (January 29, 1860 – October 10, 1944) was an American farmer and frontiersman who documented the historical Native American tribes in West Virginia and the modern-day Plateau Native Americans in Washington state.

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Luisa Cáceres de Arismendi

María Luisa Cáceres Díaz de Arismendi (September 25, 1799 – June 28, 1866) was a heroine of the Venezuelan War of Independence.

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Luka Jantjie

Kgosi (Chief) Luka Jantjie was a hunter, trader, diamond prospector, and farmer.

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Lun Bawang

The Lun Bawang (formerly known as Trusan Murut or Southern Murut) is an ethnic group found in Central Northern Borneo.

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Lusikisiki

Lusikisiki is a town in the Ingquza Hill Local Municipality in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa.

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Luzerne County, Pennsylvania

Luzerne County is a county in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

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Lyle Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Lyle Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Lynne Kelly (science writer)

Lynne Kelly (born 1951) is an Australian writer, researcher and science educator.

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Mabie, West Virginia

Mabie is an unincorporated community in Randolph County, West Virginia, United States.

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Mackie River

The Mackie River is a river in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia.

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Madagascar dry deciduous forests

The Madagascar dry deciduous forests represent a tropical dry forest ecoregion situated in the western and northern part of Madagascar.

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Madonna of the Trail

Madonna of the Trail is a series of 12 monuments dedicated to the spirit of pioneer women in the United States.

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Mahomet Weyonomon

Mahomet Weyonomon was a Native American tribal chieftain (or "sachem") of the Mohegan tribe from Connecticut, who travelled to England in 1735 to petition King George II for better treatment of his people.

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Malmesbury, Western Cape

Malmesbury is a town of approximately 36,000 inhabitants in the Western Cape province of South Africa, about 65 km north of Cape Town.

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Malouf Abraham Jr.

Malouf Abraham Jr. (born March 29, 1939), is a Lebanese-American retired physician and active art collector from Canadian, a community in the Texas Panhandle and the county seat of Hemphill County.

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Malouf Abraham Sr.

Malouf Abraham, Sr., also known as Oofie Abraham (July 26, 1915 – May 30, 1994), was a Lebanese-American businessman who made a fortune in oil and natural gas in the Texas Panhandle and served two terms from 1967 to 1971 in the Texas House of Representatives as a Republican at a time when the chamber had a heavily Democratic majority.

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Manchester, Connecticut

Manchester is a town in Hartford County, Connecticut, United States.

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Manchester, Maryland

Manchester is a small incorporated town in northeastern Carroll County, Maryland, United States, located just south of the Pennsylvania state line and north of Baltimore.

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Mandingo people of Sierra Leone

The Mandinka people of Sierra Leone (commonly referred to as the Mandingo, Mandinka or Malinke) is a major ethnic group in Sierra Leone and a branch of the Mandinka people of West Africa.

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Manning Doherty

Manning William Doherty (September 27, 1875 - September 26, 1938) was a farmer, businessman and politician serving as Ontario's Minister of Agriculture during the United Farmers of Ontario-Labour government of 1919 to 1923 and as leader of the Progressives (as the UFO had become known) in Opposition before leaving provincial politics.

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Mano Maritime

Mano Maritime (Hebrew: מנו ספנות, Mano Sapanut) is a shipping company founded by the Israeli entrepreneur Moshe Mano, and is a subsidiary of the Mano Holdings Group.

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Manuel da Nóbrega

Manuel da Nóbrega (old spelling Manoel da Nóbrega) (18 October 1517 – 18 October 1570) was a Portuguese Jesuit priest and first Provincial of the Society of Jesus in colonial Brazil.

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Mapuche military

The Mapuche were a bellic culture, and their history has been plagued by wars and conflicts since they began to settle in the Araucanía, they believed that history was created through warfare, and thus engaged in many military conflicts.

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Marano

Marano as a surname has noble Italian origin, derives from last name Marani of Vicenza that came to Naples in the 16th century with Francesco Antonio buried in the church of Sant'Antonelli to Caponapoli in the ancient center of Naples city.

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María Lionza

María Lionza is the central figure in one of the most widespread indigenous religions in Venezuela.

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Marble Canyon, Arizona

Marble Canyon is a populated place in Coconino County, Arizona, United States.

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Mari Sandoz

Mari Susette Sandoz (May 11, 1896 – March 10, 1966) was a Nebraska novelist, biographer, lecturer, and teacher.

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Maria Ann Smith

Maria Ann "Granny" Smith (1799 – 9 March 1870) was a British-Australian orchardist responsible for the cultivation of the Granny Smith apple.

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Maritime history of Florida

The maritime history of Florida describes significant past events relating to the U.S. state of Florida in areas concerning shipping, shipwrecks, and military installations and lighthouses constructed to protect or aid navigation and development of the Florida peninsula.

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Mark Keppel

Dr.

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Mark Sension

Mark Sension (also Mark St. John) (1630 – August 12, 1693) was an early settler of Norwalk, Connecticut, deputy of the Connecticut General Assembly of the Colony of Connecticut from Norwalk in the sessions of October 1672, October 1676, October 1678, and May and October 1684.

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Mark West Springs, California

Mark West Springs is an unincorporated community in eastern Santa Rosa, California.

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Mark West, California

Mark West is an unincorporated community immediately north of Santa Rosa, California in Sonoma County, California, United States.

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Marquam, Oregon

Marquam is an unincorporated community in Clackamas County, Oregon, United States.

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Marshall Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Marshall Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Martha Gay Masterson

Martha Gay Masterson (November 8, 1837 – December 12, 1916) was an American settler who kept a diary throughout her life, beginning with her family's journey west on the Oregon Trail when she was just 13.

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Martin DeFoor

Martin DeFoor (September 17, 1805 – July 25, 1879) was an early Atlanta settler.

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Mary Campbell (colonial settler)

Mary Campbell (later Mary Campbell Willford) was an American colonial settler, taken captive as a child by Native Americans during the French and Indian War.

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Mary Draper Ingles

Mary Draper Ingles (1732 – February 1815), also known in records as Mary Inglis or Mary English, was an American pioneer and early settler of western Virginia.

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Mary Maverick

Mary Ann Adams Maverick (March 16, 1818 – February 24, 1898), was an early Texas pioneer and author of memoirs which form an important source of information about daily life in and around San Antonio during the Republic of Texas period through the American Civil War.

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Mary Ramsey Wood

Mary Ramsey Wood aka Mary Ramsey Lemons Wood (May 20, 1787/circa 1810 (disputed) – January 1, 1908) was an American pioneer known as the "Mother Queen of Oregon".

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Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe

The Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Tribal Council, Inc., formerly known as the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, is one of two federally recognized tribes of Wampanoag people in Massachusetts.

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Mashpee, Massachusetts

Mashpee is a town in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, United States, on Cape Cod.

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Masonic Order of Liberia

The Grand Lodge of the Republic of Liberia is a fraternal organization based on the principles of Prince Hall Freemasonry.

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Mato Grosso

Mato Grosso (– lit. "Thick Bushes") is one of the states of Brazil, the third-largest by area, located in the western part of the country.

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Matthew Canfield

Matthew Canfield (also seen as Matthew Campfield) (1604 – 1673) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut and Newark, New Jersey.

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Matthew Marvin Jr.

Matthew Marvin Jr. (November 8, 1626 – 1712) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Matthew Marvin Sr.

Matthew Marvin Sr. (March 26, 1600 – December 20, 1678) was a founding settler of Hartford and Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Matthew Moorhouse

Matthew Moorhouse (1813 – 29 March 1876) was an English pioneer in Australia, pastoralist, politician, and Protector of Aborigines in South Australia.

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Matthias Sention Jr.

Matthias Sention Jr. (also spelled Sension, and later as St. John) (November 20, 1628 – December 1728) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Matthias Sention Sr.

Matthias Sention Sr. (also spelled Sangins,Sension, Senchion, and later as St. John) (August 9, 1601 – October 19, 1669) was a founding settler of Dorchester, Massachusetts, of Windsor, Connecticut, of Wethersfield, Connecticut and of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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May 12

No description.

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Maybutt, Alberta

Maybutt, also known as "New Stirling" or "New Town", is a former locality in the County of Warner No. 5, Alberta, Canada.

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McAdam, New Brunswick

McAdam is a village located in the southwestern corner of York County, New Brunswick, Canada.

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McEwen, Oregon

McEwen is an unincorporated community in Baker County, Oregon, United States.

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McHenry Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania

McHenry Township is a township in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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McLeod, Oregon

McLeod is an unincorporated community in Jackson County, Oregon, United States.

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McPherson Museum

The McPherson Museum of McPherson, Kansas, is a local history museum that preserves the historical and cultural heritage of the McPherson community.

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Medicine Mound, Texas

Medicine Mound is a ghost town in southeastern Hardeman County in West Texas.

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Melbourne Day

Melbourne Day is an annual celebration to mark the founding of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia, on 30 August 1835.

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Memphis, Texas

Memphis is a city and the county seat of Hall County, Texas, United States.

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Menno Colony

Menno Colony is a settlement founded by German speaking Russian Mennonites from the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan in 1926 in the central Chaco of northwest Paraguay occupying an area of 7500 km² (2900 mi²).

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Merritt, British Columbia

Merritt is a city in the Nicola Valley of the south-central Interior of British Columbia, Canada.

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Mesopotamia

Mesopotamia is a historical region in West Asia situated within the Tigris–Euphrates river system, in modern days roughly corresponding to most of Iraq, Kuwait, parts of Northern Saudi Arabia, the eastern parts of Syria, Southeastern Turkey, and regions along the Turkish–Syrian and Iran–Iraq borders.

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Michael Kleiner

Michael Kleiner (מיכאל קליינר; born 4 April 1948) is an Israeli politician and leader of Herut – The National Movement.

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Michael Rush (rower)

Michael Rush (3 January 1844 – 17 December 1922) was an Irish Australian sculler noted for his one-on-one competitions against champion opponents, which drew vast crowds of spectators.

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Michel-Ange Duquesne de Menneville

Marquis Duquesne redirects here.

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Miles City Waterworks Building and Pumping Plant Park

The Miles City Waterworks Building and Pumping Plant Park is a National Registered Historic Place located in Miles City, Montana.

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Millungera Station

Millungera Station is a pastoral lease that operates as a cattle station.

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Milpitas, California

Milpitas is a city in Santa Clara County, California.

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Mine La Motte, Missouri

Mine La Motte is an unincorporated community in Madison County, Missouri, United States.

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Mingenew, Western Australia

Mingenew is a town in Western Australia, located north of the state capital, Perth.

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Mingo Oak

The Mingo Oak (also known as the Mingo White Oak) was a white oak (Quercus alba) in the U.S. state of West Virginia.

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Minneopa State Park

Minneopa State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of Minnesota.

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Mintaro, South Australia

Mintaro is a historic town in the eastern Clare Valley, east of the Horrocks Highway, about north of Adelaide, South Australia.

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Mississippi River Delta

The Mississippi River Delta region is a 3-million-acre (12,000 km2) area of land that stretches from Vermilion Bay on the west, to the Chandeleur Islands in the Gulf of Mexico on the southeastern coast of Louisiana.

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Molalla River

The Molalla River is a tributary of the Willamette River in the northwestern part of Oregon in the United States.

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Moncton

Moncton is the largest city in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.

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Monmouth, Oregon

Monmouth (is a city in Polk County in the U.S. state of Oregon. It was named for Monmouth, Illinois, the origin of its earliest settlers. The population is 10,174 (2016 est.) and it is part of the Salem Metropolitan Statistical Area.

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Montérégie

Montérégie is an administrative region in the southwest part of the Canadian province of Quebec.

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Montpelier, Indiana

Montpelier is a city in Blackford County, Indiana, United States.

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Moon Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania

Moon Township is a township along the Ohio River in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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Morgan Territory

Morgan Territory is a region in California on the east side of Mount Diablo in the San Francisco East Bay's Contra Costa County.

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Morgan, Lewis & Bockius

Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP (MLB) is a global law firm with approximately 2000 attorneys in 30 offices across North America, Europe and Asia.

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Mormon folk music

Mormon folk music was folk music sung by Mormon pioneers in present-day Utah from the mid-19th century through the early 20th century.

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Mormon music

Music has had a long history in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, from the days in Kirtland, Nauvoo, and the settlement of the West, to the present day.

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Morris, Manitoba

Morris is a small town in the Pembina Valley region of Manitoba, Canada, located 51 km south of Winnipeg and 42 km north of Emerson.

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Mosby Creek (Oregon)

Mosby Creek is a tributary of the Row River in Lane County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Moses Taft

Moses Taft 2nd (January 16, 1812 – April 2, 1893) was born at Uxbridge, Massachusetts.

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Moshav

Moshav (מוֹשָׁב, plural, lit. settlement, village) is a type of Israeli town or settlement, in particular a type of cooperative agricultural community of individual farms pioneered by the Labour Zionists during the second wave of ''aliyah''.

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Mound Key Archaeological State Park

Mound Key Archaeological State Park is a Florida State Park, located in Estero Bay, near the mouth of the Estero River.

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Mount Bruce (California)

Mount Bruce is a summit in Yosemite National Park, United States.

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Mount Gilead, Ohio

Mount Gilead is a village in Morrow County, Ohio, United States.

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Mount Hermon, Louisiana

Mount Hermon is an unincorporated community in northwestern Washington Parish, Louisiana, United States.

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Mount Kaputar National Park

The Mount Kaputar National Park is a national park located in New South Wales, Australia, surrounding the proximities of Mount Kaputar, a volcano active between 17 and 21 million years ago.

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Mount Kenya

Mount Kenya is the highest mountain in Kenya and the second-highest in Africa, after Kilimanjaro.

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Mountain City, Tennessee

Mountain City is a town in, and the county seat of Johnson County, Tennessee, United States.

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Mountain View Cemetery (Oakland, California)

The Mountain View Cemetery is a cemetery in Oakland, Alameda County, California.

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Mountain View, Colorado

The Town of Mountain View is a home rule municipality located in Jefferson County, Colorado, United States.

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Mountaineering on Mount Kenya

Most of the peaks on Mount Kenya have been summited.

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Moyers, Oklahoma

Moyers is a small unincorporated community located in Pushmataha County, Oklahoma, United States.

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Muddy Creek (Linn County, Oregon)

Muddy Creek is a tributary of the Willamette River that flows through parts of Lane and Linn counties in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Mulanje Massif

The Mulanje Massif, also known as Mount Mulanje, is a large monadnock in southern Malawi only 65 km east of Blantyre, rising sharply from the surrounding plains of Chiradzulu, and the tea-growing Mulanje district.

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Mural Arts Program

The City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program is an anti-graffiti mural program in Philadelphia and Pennsylvania, in the United States.

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Murray River (Western Australia)

The Murray River is a river in the southwest of Western Australia.

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Music of Utah

Utah music has long been influenced culturally by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).

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Mussel Slough Tragedy

The Mussel Slough Tragedy was a dispute over land titles between settlers and the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP) that took place on May 11, 1880, on a farm located northwest of Hanford, California, in the central San Joaquin Valley, leaving seven people dead.

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Naches River

The Naches River is a tributary of the Yakima River in central Washington in the United States.

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Nachusa House

The Nachusa House is a former hotel building in Dixon, Illinois, United States along Galena Avenue (Illinois Route 26).

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Nantucket's neutrality during the American Revolutionary War

Nantucket is an island located 14 miles (20 km) south of Cape Cod in the State of Massachusetts. When the British explorer Bartholomew Gosnold first sighted Nantucket in 1602 on his way to the New World, it was already home to some 3,000 indigenous Native Americans who were living there.

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Nathan Webb

Nathan Webb (April 9, 1705 March 17, 1772), an early-American Congregational Church minister.

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Nathaniel Bowman

Nathaniel Bowman (1608–1682) was the first Bowman immigrant to be among the earliest settlers of the Massachusetts Bay colony.

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Nathaniel Ely

Nathaniel Ely (also Nathaniel Eli) (1605 – December 25, 1675) was a founding settler of Hartford and Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Nathaniel Haies

Nathaniel Haies (also Nathaniel Hayes) (1634died before March 12, 1706) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Nathaniel Richards (settler)

Nathaniel Richards (1604–1681) was a founding settler of Hartford and Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Nathaniel Savory

Nathaniel Savory (1794 - 1874) was one of the first American colonists who is said to have settled on the Bonin Islands.

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National Register of Historic Places listings in Wheeler County, Oregon

Wheeler County.

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National Religious Party

The National Religious Party (מִפְלָגָה דָּתִית לְאֻומִּית, Miflaga Datit Leumit, commonly known in Israel by its Hebrew acronym Mafdal, was a political party in Israel representing the religious Zionist movement. Formed in 1956, at the time of its dissolution in 2008, it was the second-oldest surviving party in the country after Agudat Yisrael, and was part of every government coalition until 1992. Traditionally a practical centrist party, in its later years, it drifted to the right, becoming increasingly associated with Israeli settlers, and towards the end of its existence, it was part of a political alliance with the strongly right-wing National Union. The 2006 elections saw the party slump to just three seats, the worst electoral performance in its history. In November 2008, party members voted to disband the party in order to join the new Jewish Home party created by a merger of the NRP and most of the National Union factions. However, most of the National Union left the merger shortly after its implementation.

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Native American cultures in the United States

Native Americans in the United States fall into a number of distinct ethno-linguistic and territorial phyla, whose only uniting characteristic is that they were in a stage of either Mesolithic (hunter-gatherer) or Neolithic (subsistence farming) culture at the time of European contact.

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Native Americans in the United States

Native Americans, also known as American Indians, Indians, Indigenous Americans and other terms, are the indigenous peoples of the United States.

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Natives on Private Estates Ordinance 1928

Natives on Private Estates Ordinance, 1928 was a colonial ordinance passed by the Legislative council of the Nyasaland protectorate, now Malawi, (a body mainly of senior colonial officials, with a minority of nominated members representing European residents) to regulate the conditions under which African tenants who farmed land on estates owned by European settlers within that protectorate.

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Naukati Bay, Alaska

Naukati Bay is a census-designated place (CDP) in the Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area of the Unorganized Borough of the U.S. state of Alaska.

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Naval Weapons Station Yorktown

Naval Weapons Station Yorktown is a United States Navy base in York County, James City County, and Newport News in the Hampton Roads region of Virginia.

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Neils Hogenson House

The Neils Hogenson home is an original catalogue order house purchased through the T. Eaton’s Co. Catalogue and built by Mr.

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Nemegos, Ontario

Nemegos is an unincorporated place and community in geographic Halsey Township in the Unorganized North Part of Sudbury District in Northeastern Ontario, Canada.

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Neolithic Revolution

The Neolithic Revolution, Neolithic Demographic Transition, Agricultural Revolution, or First Agricultural Revolution, was the wide-scale transition of many human cultures during the Neolithic period from a lifestyle of hunting and gathering to one of agriculture and settlement, making an increasingly larger population possible.

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Neosho, Missouri

Neosho (originally or) is the most populous city in Newton County, Missouri, United States, which it serves as the county seat.

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Neuzina

Neuzina is a village in Serbia.

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New Mexico

New Mexico (Nuevo México, Yootó Hahoodzo) is a state in the Southwestern Region of the United States of America.

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New South Wales General Standing Orders

The New South Wales General Standing Orders was the first compilation of government orders and notices intended to inform colonists of the law as it stood in 1802 after the arrival of the First Fleet.

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New Zealand Church Missionary Society

The New Zealand Church Missionary Society is a mission society working within the Anglican Communion and Protestant, Evangelical Anglicanism.

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Newcastle, New South Wales

The Newcastle metropolitan area is the second most populated area in the Australian state of New South Wales and includes most of the Newcastle and Lake Macquarie local government areas.

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Newstead House, Brisbane

Newstead House is Brisbane's oldest surviving residence and is located on the Breakfast Creek bank of the Brisbane River, in the northern Brisbane suburb of Newstead, in Queensland, Australia.

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Newstead, Queensland

Newstead is a riverside suburb of the city of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

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Ngāi Tūhoe

Ngāi Tūhoe, often known simply as Tūhoe, is a Māori iwi ("tribe") of New Zealand.

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Nicholas Ferrar

Nicholas Ferrar (22 February 1592 – 4 December 1637) was an English scholar, courtier, businessman and man of religion.

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Nimbhi jodhan

Nimbhi Jodha is a village in Ladnu tehsil, Nagaur District of Rajasthan State, India.

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Nonconsumption agreements

The Non-consumption agreements were a part of a family of agreements, including the non-importation and non-exportation agreements, which were addressed by American colonists in the 1774 Declarations and Resolves of the First Continental Congress.

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Norfolk County, Ontario

Norfolk County is a rural single-tier municipality on the north shore of Lake Erie in Southwestern Ontario, Canada with a 2016 population of 64,044.

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Norrköping

Norrköping is a city in the province of Östergötland in eastern Sweden and the seat of Norrköping Municipality, Östergötland County, about 160 km southwest of the national capital Stockholm.

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North Central Pennsylvania

North Central Pennsylvania, parts of which are sometimes referred to as the Northern Tier, is a region in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania which consists of sixteen counties.

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North Georgia

North Georgia is the hilly to mountainous northern region of the U.S. state of Georgia.

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North Tenmile Lake

North Tenmile Lake is one of a chain of lakes along the Oregon Coast south of the Umpqua River in the United States.

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Northern Rhodesia

Northern Rhodesia was a protectorate in south central Africa, formed in 1911 by amalgamating the two earlier protectorates of Barotziland-North-Western Rhodesia and North-Eastern Rhodesia.

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Northwest Territory

The Northwest Territory in the United States was formed after the American Revolutionary War (1775-1783), and was known formally as the Territory Northwest of the River Ohio.

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Nottingham

Nottingham is a city and unitary authority area in Nottinghamshire, England, north of London, in the East Midlands.

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Nuno Velho Cabral

Nuno Velho Cabral or Travassos, (15th Century) was a Portuguese nobleman, who served to the Kingdom of Portugal as conquistador and explorer.

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Nyabing, Western Australia

Nyabing is a small town in the Great Southern region of Western Australia.

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O'Fallon, Missouri

O'Fallon is a city along Interstate 70 and Interstate 64 between Lake St. Louis and St. Peters in St. Charles County, Missouri. It is part of the St. Louis Metropolitan Statistical Area. As of the 2010 census O'Fallon had a population of 79,329, making it the largest municipality in St. Charles County and seventh largest in the state of Missouri. In 2006 Money Magazine named O'Fallon 39th in its "Best 100 Places to Live." Money Magazine also ranked O'Fallon 68th out of 100 in 2008 and 26th out of 100 in 2010. O'Fallon's namesake in St. Clair County, Illinois is also part of the St. Louis Metropolitan Statistical Area. The two O'Fallons are one of the few pairs of same-named municipalities to be part of the same MSA.

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O'Gorman Columbian manuscript

The O'Gorman Columbian manuscript (also known in Spanish as Ordenanza. Manuscrito Colombino O'Gorman Condumex) is a document written and signed by Christopher Columbus in the city of Cadiz, Spain, on February 20, 1493.

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Oak Creek (Marys River)

Oak Creek is a tributary, about long, of Marys River in Benton County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Oak Harbor, Washington

Oak Harbor is a city located on Whidbey Island in Island County, Washington.

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Oakland, Maine

Oakland is a town in Kennebec County in the U.S. state of Maine.

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Obed Macy and Oscar Macy

Obed Macy (1801–1857) and his son, Oscar Macy (ca. 1821–1910).

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Ocala Demands

The Ocala Demands was a platform for economic and political reform that was later adopted by the People's Party.

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Occoquan, Virginia

Occoquan is a town in Prince William County, Virginia.

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Occupation of Araucanía

The Occupation of Araucanía or Pacification of Araucanía (1861–1883) was a series of military campaigns, agreements and penetrations by the Chilean army and settlers into Mapuche territory which led to the incorporation of Araucanía into Chilean national territory.

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Oku people (Sierra Leone)

The Oku people of Sierra Leone is an ethnic group of Sierra Leone and according to some scholars is a sub ethnic group of the Krio people. The Oku people are the descendants of educated liberated Yoruba Muslims from Southwest Nigeria who came to Sierra Leone as settlers in the mid 19th century; and many intermarriage with the Krios, the descendants of freed African American and West Indian slaves. The Oku are virtually all Muslims at 99%, of the Sunni tradition of Islam, and are known for their deeply conservative Muslim tradition. The Oku traditions and culture are a combination of primarily Islamic and Western tradition. The Oku are famously known as the Krio Muslim. The British colonial government provided official recognition to the Oku community as a distinctive community in Sierra Leone. Although the Sierra Leone government officially classified the Oku people as members of the Creole ethnic group. The Oku people in Sierra Leone are mainly found in the capital Freetown, particularly in the Freetown neighborhood of Aberdeen Village, Fourah Bay and Fula Town. Most Oku people have Islamic first names and English last names. Most Oku people also have Yoruba middle names.

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Old money

Old money is "the inherited wealth of established upper-class families (i.e. gentry, patriciate)" or "a person, family, or lineage possessing inherited wealth".

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Olga Kameneva

Olga Davidovna Kameneva (Ольга Давыдовна Каменева, Ольга Давидiвна Каменева; 1883 – 11 September 1941) (née Bronstein — Бронштейн) was a Russian Bolshevik revolutionary and a Soviet politician.

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Olifantshoek

Olifantshoek is a town in John Taolo Gaetsewe District Municipality in the Northern Cape Province of South Africa.

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Omaha Claim Club

The Omaha Claim Club, also called the Omaha Township Claim Association(1954) Omaha's First Century.

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One Settler, One Bullet

One Settler, One Bullet was a rallying cry and slogan originated by the Azanian People's Liberation Army (APLA), the armed wing of the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC), during the struggle of the 1980s against apartheid in South Africa.

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Oregon Historic Trails Advisory Council

The Oregon Historic Trails Advisory Council is an agency of the U.S. state of Oregon that oversees and provides advice on Oregon's sixteen historic trails, which include trails used in the 19th century by explorers and pioneer emigrants to the region as well as trails associated with the original Native American inhabitants.

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Oregon Lyceum

The Oregon Lyceum or Pioneer Lyceum and Literary Club was founded in Oregon City, Oregon Country around 1840.

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Oregon pioneer history

Oregon pioneer history (1806—1890) is the period in the history of Oregon Country and Oregon Territory, in the present day state of Oregon and Northwestern United States.

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Oregon Superintendent of Indian Affairs

The Oregon Superintendent of Indian Affairs was an official position of the U.S. state of Oregon, and previously of the Oregon Territory, that existed from 1848–1873.

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Orenco, Oregon

Orenco (or en koh) is a former company town in Washington County, Oregon, United States, located between Hillsboro and Aloha.

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Oscar, Missouri

Oscar is an unincorporated community within Jackson Township in Texas County, in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Outcasts (TV series)

Outcasts is a 2011 British television science-fiction drama serial, starring Liam Cunningham, Hermione Norris, Amy Manson, Daniel Mays, Eric Mabius and Ashley Walters.

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Outline of New Mexico

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the U.S. state of New Mexico: New Mexico – U.S. state located in the southwest region of the United States.

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Overseas Pakistani

Overseas Pakistanis (بیرون ملک مقیم پاکستانی) refers to Pakistani people who live outside of Pakistan.

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Oxford, Michigan

Oxford is a village in Oakland County in the U.S. state of Michigan.

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Paper Wheat

Paper Wheat is a play by the 25th Street House Theatre about the hard lives of early Saskatchewan settlers and the foundation of the wheat pools and the Co-op movement on the Canadian Prairies.

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Paramount chief

A paramount chief is the English-language designation for the highest-level political leader in a regional or local polity or country administered politically with a chief-based system.

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Parihaka

Parihaka is a small community in the Taranaki region of New Zealand, located between Mount Taranaki and the Tasman Sea.

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Patrick Leslie

Patrick Leslie (25 September 1815 – 12 August 1881) was a Scottish settler in Australia.

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Paul Prudhomme

Paul Prudhomme (July 13, 1940 – October 8, 2015), also known as Gene Autry Prudhomme, was an American celebrity chef whose specialties were Creole and Cajun cuisines, which he was also credited with popularizing.

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Paul Revere of Texas

Paul Revere of Texas is a sobriquet given to people during the Texas Revolution for alerting settlers about Mexican troop movements.

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Paulins Kill

The Paulinskill (also known as Lake Paulinskill or Paulinskill River) is a tributary of the Delaware River in northwestern New Jersey in the United States.

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Paulo Figueiredo

Paulo José Lopes de Figueiredo (born 28 November 1972) is an Angolan retired footballer who played as a central midfielder.

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Pākehā Māori

Pākehā Māori were early European settlers (known as Pākehā in the Māori language) who lived among the Māori in New Zealand.

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Pākehā settlers

Pākehā settlers were European emigrants who journeyed to New Zealand, and more specifically to Auckland, the Wellington/Hawkes Bay region, Canterbury and Otago during the 19th century.

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Peabody, Kansas

Peabody is a city in Marion County, Kansas, United States.

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Penola, South Australia

Penola is a town in the Australian state of South Australia located about southeast of the state capital of Adelaide in the wine growing area known as the Coonawarra.

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Peoria, Oregon

Peoria is an unincorporated community in Linn County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Pergamino

Pergamino is an Argentine city in the Province of Buenos Aires.

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Peter Whetstone

Peter Whetstone (c. late 18th century—1843) was an early pioneer leader in the Republic of Texas most remembered for founding the city of Marshall, Texas with Isaac Van Zandt.

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Peyton Hayslip

Peyton Hayslip (born January 7, 1966) is an American actress.

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Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network

The Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network (PAGN) was founded in January 1984 by former Philadelphia Mayor Wilson Goode.

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Philip Alston (counterfeiter)

Philip Alston (Feb. 18, 1740 or 1741 – after 1799) was an 18th-century counterfeiter, both before and after the American Revolution, in Virginia and the Carolinas before the war, and later, in Kentucky and Illinois afterwards.

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Philip Levi

Philip Levi (1 February 1822 – 13 May 1898) was an early settler and pastoralist of South Australia.

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Phillip Darrell Duppa

Phillip Darrell Duppa (October 9, 1832 – January 30, 1892) was a pioneer in the settlement of Arizona prior to its statehood.

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Phoenix, Arizona

Phoenix is the capital and most populous city of the U.S. state of Arizona.

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Phool Bagh

Ganesh Shankar Vidyarthi Udyan / Phool Bagh (Hindi: गणेश शंकर विद्यार्थी उद्यान / फूल बाग़, कानपुर) is an urban city park in Kanpur city, the industrial hub of Uttar Pradesh in North India.

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Piła

Piła (Schneidemühl) is a town in northwestern Poland.

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Pierre Boucher

Pierre Boucher de Boucherville (born Pierre Boucher; 1 August 162219 April 1717) was a French settler, soldier, officer, naturalist, official, governor, and ennobled aristocrat in Nouvelle-France or New France (in what is now Canada).

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Piet Uys

Petrus Lafras Uys (more commonly known as Piet Uys) (1797–1838) was a Voortrekker leader during the Great Trek.

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Pimicikamak

Pimicikamak is the namethe Anglicized version of its collective name.

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Pine Creek (Pennsylvania)

Pine Creek is a tributary of the West Branch Susquehanna River in Potter, Tioga, Lycoming, and Clinton counties in Pennsylvania in the United States.

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Pioneer Day (Utah)

Pioneer Day is an official holiday celebrated on July 24 in the U.S. state of Utah, with some celebrations in regions of surrounding states originally settled by Mormon pioneers.

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Pipe Spring National Monument

Pipe Spring National Monument is a United States National Monument located in the U.S. state of Arizona, rich with American Indian, early explorer, and Mormon pioneer history.

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Platypus

The platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus), sometimes referred to as the duck-billed platypus, is a semiaquatic egg-laying mammal endemic to eastern Australia, including Tasmania.

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Plunketts Creek (Loyalsock Creek tributary)

Plunketts Creek is an approximately tributary of Loyalsock Creek in Lycoming and Sullivan counties in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

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Plush, Oregon

Plush is an unincorporated rural community in the Warner Valley of Lake County, in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Podophyllum

Podophyllum is an herbaceous perennial plant in the family Berberidaceae, described as a genus by Linnaeus in 1753.

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Political development in modern Gibraltar

Gibraltar is a British Overseas Territory located on the southern end of the Iberian Peninsula at the entrance of the Mediterranean Sea.

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Pomo

The Pomo are an indigenous people of California.

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Pompano Beach Mound

The Pompano Beach Mound, located at Indian Mound Park in Pompano Beach, Florida in Broward County, is a wide, tall oval Tequesta burial mound.

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Portage Lakes

The Portage Lakes are a group of glacial kettle lakes and reservoirs in Northeast Ohio.

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Portrayal of Native Americans in film

The portrayal of Native Americans in film has been fed by stereotypes, which has raised allegations of racism.

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Portsea, Victoria

Portsea is a town in the outer south-east of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

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Portuguese Brazilians

Portuguese Brazilians (luso-brasileiros) are Brazilian citizens whose ancestry originates wholly or partly in Portugal.

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Portuguese Mozambicans

Portuguese Mozambicans (luso-moçambicanos) are Mozambican-born descendants of Portuguese settlers.

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Potano

The Potano (also Potanou or Potavou) tribe lived in north-central Florida at the time of first European contact.

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Powhatan's Chimney

Powhatan's Chimney is located at present day Wicomico, in Gloucester County, Virginia, United States.

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Presque Isle County, Michigan

Presque Isle County is a county in the Lower peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan.

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Prilepnica

Prilepnica (Прилепница) or Përlepnica (Përlepnicë), is a village in the Kosovo Pomoravlje region of eastern Kosovo.

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Prison religion

Prison religion includes the religious beliefs and practices of prison inmates, usually stemming from or including concepts surrounding their imprisonment and accompanying lifestyle.

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Prospect, New South Wales

Prospect is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia.

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Protectorate

A protectorate, in its inception adopted by modern international law, is a dependent territory that has been granted local autonomy and some independence while still retaining the suzerainty of a greater sovereign state.

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Provisional Legislature of Oregon

The Provisional Legislature of Oregon was the single-chamber legislative body of the Provisional Government of Oregon.

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Pushmataha District

Pushmataha District was one of three administrative super-regions comprising the former Choctaw Nation in the Indian Territory.

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Putaruru

Putaruru (Māori: "Putāruru") is a small town in the Waikato region of New Zealand's North Island.

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Quairading, Western Australia

Quairading is a Western Australian town located in the Wheatbelt region.

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Quercus agrifolia

Quercus agrifolia, the California live oak or coast live oak, is a highly variable, often shrubby evergreen oak tree, a type of live oak, native to the California Floristic Province.

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Rabun County, Georgia

Rabun County is the northeasternmost county in the U.S. state of Georgia.

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Racism in Puerto Rico

Racism in Puerto Rico can be traced as far back as the arrival from the Spanish in 1493 Historically, the island which is a U.S. territory, has been dominated by a settler society of religiously and ethnically diverse Europeans, primarily Spanish, and Sub-Saharan Africans.

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Radojevo

Radojevo is a village in Serbia.

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Rainier, Washington

Rainier is a city in Thurston County, Washington, United States.

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Ralph Hush

Ralph Hush (1779 – 2 June 1860) was a convict sent from Northumberland to Australia in 1820.

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Ralph Keeler

Ralph Keeler (also Keiler) (1613 – September 10, 1672) was a founding settler of both Hartford, and Norwalk, Connecticut, United States.

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Rama, Saskatchewan

Rama is a village in the east-central region of Saskatchewan.

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Rattan, Oklahoma

Rattan is a town in Pushmataha County, Oklahoma, United States.

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Reading, Berkshire

Reading is a large, historically important minster town in Berkshire, England, of which it is the county town.

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Rebecca Boone

Rebecca Ann (Bryan) Boone (January 9, 1739 – March 18, 1813) was an American pioneer and the wife of famed frontiersman Daniel Boone.

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Red Creek, New York

Red Creek is a village in Wayne County, New York, United States.

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Reeds Gap State Park

Reeds Gap State Park is a Pennsylvania state park in Armagh Township, Mifflin County, Pennsylvania in the United States.

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Reese Fork

Reese Fork is a stream in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Rehoboth, Massachusetts

Rehoboth is a historic town in Bristol County, Massachusetts, United States.

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Relocation (personal)

Relocation, also known as moving, is the process of one or more individuals leaving one dwelling and settling in another.

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Remote, Oregon

Remote is an unincorporated hamlet in Coos County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Rice

Rice is the seed of the grass species Oryza sativa (Asian rice) or Oryza glaberrima (African rice).

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Richard Dummer

Richard Dummer (158914 December 1679) was an early settler in New England who has been described as "one of the fathers of Massachusetts".

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Richard Holmes (Connecticut settler)

Richard Holmes (earlier spelled Richard Homes) (b. ca. 1633–1704) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Richard Olmsted (settler)

Richard Olmsted (February 20, 1612 – April 20, 1687) was a founding settler of both Hartford and Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Richard Webb (settler)

Richard Webb (May 5, 1580 – July 1665) was a founding settler of Hartford and Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Richardson Bay

Richardson Bay (originally Richardson's Bay) is a shallow, ecologically rich arm of San Francisco Bay, managed under a Joint Powers Agency of four northern California cities.

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Richwoods, Missouri

Richwoods is an unincorporated community in northern Washington County, Missouri, United States founded in 1830.

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Rickard D. Gwydir

Major Rickard Daniel Gwydir (November 7, 1844–November 7, 1925) was a Confederate soldier, Indian agent, and early Washington pioneer.

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Rideau Ferry, Ontario

Rideau Ferry is a small community in Eastern Ontario, Canada, along the Rideau Waterway.

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Riley Bartholomew

Riley Lucas Bartholomew (1807–1894) was a Minnesota pioneer and politician who served as state senator from 1859 to 1860.

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Ritner Creek

Ritner Creek is a tributary of the Luckiamute River in Polk County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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River Torrens

The River Torrens is the most significant river of the Adelaide Plains and was one of the reasons for the siting of the city of Adelaide, capital of South Australia.

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Riverton, Oregon

Riverton is an unincorporated community in Coos County, Oregon, United States, on Oregon Route 42S, about up the Coquille River from Bandon.

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Robert Carter I

Robert "King" Carter (1662/63 – 4 August 1732), of Lancaster County, was an American businessman and colonist in Virginia and became one of the wealthiest men in the colonies.

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Robert de La Berge

Robert de La Berge (1638–1712) was one of the original colonists to settle in New France in 1658, and became one of the early industrialists in the area.

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Robert E. Howard

Robert Ervin Howard (January 22, 1906 – June 11, 1936) was an American author who wrote pulp fiction in a diverse range of genres.

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Robert Edward Codrington

Sir Robert Edward Codrington (6 January 1869 – 16 December 1908) was the colonial Administrator of the two territories ruled by the British South Africa Company (BSAC) which became present-day Zambia.

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Robert Fortune Sanchez

Robert Fortune Sanchez (20 March 1934 – 20 January 2012) was the Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Santa Fe, New Mexico, in the United States.

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Robert Giffard de Moncel

Robert Giffard de Moncel (~1587 Autheuil, France – June 14, 1668 Beauport, New France) was a Perche-based surgeon and apothecary who became New France's first colonizing seigneur.

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Robert Giguère

Robert Giguère dit Despins (March 9, 1616 – August 1709) was an early pioneer in New France, one of the founders of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré, Quebec and the progenitor of virtually all the Giguères in North America.

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Robert Russell (architect)

Robert Russell (13 February 1808 – 10 April 1900) was an architect and surveyor, active in Australia.

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Robert Taft, 2nd

Robert Taft Jr. (1674–1748), also known as Robert Taft II, was a Massachusetts politician.

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Robin Lawless

Robin Lawless, Anglo-Norman settler in Connacht, fl.

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Robinson Creek (Shelby Creek)

Robinson Creek is a stream located within Pike County, Kentucky.

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Robo-Hunter

Robo-Hunter is a recurring strip in the British Comic 2000 AD, initially written by John Wagner and illustrated by Ian Gibson.

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Rochester, Indiana

Rochester is a city in, and the county seat of, Fulton County, Indiana, United States.

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Rollins Pass

Rollins Pass, elevation, is a mountain pass and active archaeological siteLaBelle, Jason M. & Pelton, Spencer R. "Communal hunting along the Continental Divide of Northern Colorado: Results from the Olson game drive (5BL147)", 2013 in the Southern Rocky Mountains of north-central Colorado in the United States.

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Rollinsford, New Hampshire

Rollinsford is a town in Strafford County, New Hampshire, United States.

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Roman villas in northwestern Gaul

Roman villas in northwestern Gaul (modern France) functioned as colonial economic centers.

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Rose Blanche-Harbour le Cou

Rose Blanche – Harbour le Cou is a small town on Newfoundland's southwest shore, about 45 km at the end of Route 470 from Port aux Basques.

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Ross Creek (North Queensland)

The Ross Creek, part of the Ross River catchment, is a minor creek in the upper reaches of the river catchment, located southwest of Townsville, in North Queensland, Australia.

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Ross Creek (Townsville, North Queensland)

The Ross Creek, part of the Ross River catchment, is the small estuarine portion of the Ross River, as it serves as a bay inlet that separates the Townsville central business district from Ross Island.

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Ross River (Queensland)

The Ross River is a river located in northern Queensland, Australia.

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Rotterdam (town), New York

Rotterdam is a town in Schenectady County, New York, United States.

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Rowdy Branch

Rowdy Branch is a stream located entirely within Perry County, Kentucky.

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Royal Alberta Museum

The Royal Alberta Museum (RAM) is a museum of human and natural history in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

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Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665

The Royal Colonial Boundary of 1665 marked the border between the Colony of Virginia and the Province of Carolina from the Atlantic Ocean westward across North America.

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Royal Proclamation of 1763

The Royal Proclamation of 1763 was issued October 7, 1763, by King George III following Great Britain's acquisition of French territory in North America after the end of the French and Indian War/Seven Years' War.

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Rum Swizzle

A Rum Swizzle is a rum-based cocktail often called "Bermuda's national drink".

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Rundling

A Rundling is a form of circular village, mainly in Germany, typical of settlements in the Germanic-Slav contact zone in the Early Medieval period.

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Rural Municipality of Clanwilliam

For the small community located in the Rural Municipality of Minto, see Clanwilliam, Manitoba. The Rural Municipality of Clanwilliam is a former rural municipality (RM) in the Canadian province of Manitoba.

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Russell Cave National Monument

The Russell Cave National Monument is a U.S. National Monument in northeastern Alabama, United States, close to the town of Bridgeport.

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Rustenburg

Rustenburg (Afrikaans and Dutch: Town of Rest) is a city at the foot of the Magaliesberg mountain range in North West Province of South Africa.

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Saint Helena

Saint Helena is a volcanic tropical island in the South Atlantic Ocean, east of Rio de Janeiro and 1,950 kilometres (1,210 mi) west of the Cunene River, which marks the border between Namibia and Angola in southwestern Africa.

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Saint Thomas Parish, Jamaica

Saint Thomas, once known as Saint Thomas in the East, is a suburban parish situated at the south eastern end of Jamaica, within the county of Surrey.

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Saint-Alphonse-de-Granby, Quebec

Saint-Alphonse-de-Granby is a municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec, located within La Haute-Yamaska Regional County Municipality.

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Saint-André-Avellin, Quebec

Saint-André-Avellin is a municipality located within the Papineau Regional County Municipality in the Outaouais region in western Quebec, Canada.

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Sakhalin Oblast

Sakhalin Oblast (p) is a federal subject of Russia (an oblast) comprising the island of Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands in the Russian Far East.

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Salt Springs State Park

Salt Springs State Park is a Pennsylvania state park in Franklin Township, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, in the United States.

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Sam Brown House

Sam Brown House (or Samuel Brown House) is a historic house in Gervais, Oregon, United States built in 1857 by Oregon pioneer and state senator Samuel Brown (1821-1886).

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Samuel Barton

Colonel Samuel Barton (May 1749 – January 1810) was a pioneer and Patriot of the American Revolution (1775–1783) but is remembered more for the exploration and settlement of what was to become Nashville, Tennessee.

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Samuel Colver

Samuel Colver (September 10, 1817 – February 15, 1891) was one of the pioneers of Southern Oregon, where he co-founded (along with his brother, Hiram) the town of Phoenix.

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Samuel Duncan Parnell

Samuel Duncan Parnell (19 February 1810 – 17 December 1890) was an early New Zealand settler often credited with the establishment of the eight-hour day in New Zealand.

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Samuel Hales

Samuel Hale (July 1, 1615 – November 9, 1693) was a founding settler of Hartford and Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Samuel Hayes (settler)

Samuel Hayes (1641 – April 7, 1712) was an early settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Samuel Penhallow

Samuel Penhallow (July 2, 1665 – December 2, 1726) was a Cornish colonist and historian and militia leader in present-day Maine during Queen Anne's War and Father Rale's War.

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Samuel Smith (Connecticut politician)

Samuel Smith (ca. 1646 – ca. 1735) was an early settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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San Agustín culture

The San Agustín culture is an archaeological culture of present-day Colombia from which several hundreds of monolithic sculptures have been found dating from the 33rd century BCE to the 7th century BCE.

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San Juan-Chama Project

The San Juan-Chama Project is a U.S. Bureau of Reclamation interbasin water transfer project located in the states of New Mexico and Colorado in the United States.

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Santa Rosa Creek

Santa Rosa Creek is a 22-mile-long (35 km) stream in Sonoma County, California which rises on Hood Mountain and discharges to the Laguna de Santa Rosa by way of the Santa Rosa Flood Control Channel.

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Santiam Academy

Santiam Academy was an early primary and secondary school in Lebanon, Oregon, United States, run by the Methodist Episcopal Church.

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Sargeant Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Sargeant Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Saunders Lake

Saunders Lake is located in the United States state of Minnesota.

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Schneider's dynamic model

Edgar Schneider's dynamic model of postcolonial Englishes adopts an evolutionary perspective emphasizing language ecologies.

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Scoggins Creek

Scoggins Creek, formerly known as "Scoggin Creek", is a tributary of the Tualatin River in Tillamook and Washington counties in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Scotch-Irish Canadians

Scotch-Irish Canadians are those who are Ulster Scots or those who have Ulster Scots ancestry who live in or were born in Canada.

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Seal of Nebraska

The Great Seal of the State of Nebraska was adopted in 1867.

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Seal of New Mexico

The Great Seal of the State of New Mexico is the official seal of the U.S. State of New Mexico and was adopted in 1913.

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Self-governing colony

In the British Empire, a self-governing colony was a colony with an elected government in which elected rulers were able to make most decisions without referring to the colonial power with nominal control of the colony.

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Semans, Saskatchewan

Semans is a small agricultural village in Mount Hope No. 279, Saskatchewan, Canada.

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Senate, Saskatchewan

Senate is an unincorporated community within the Rural Municipality of Reno No. 51, Saskatchewan, Canada. The village had a population of 63 around 1940 and has since declined to 0 residents. The town-site is located along Hwy 21 & the historic Red Coat Trail (also known as Hwy 13), about 20 km east of the Alberta-Saskatchewan border and is about 200 km southwest of the city of Swift Current.

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Sephardic Bnei Anusim

Sephardic Bnei Anusim (בני אנוסים ספרדיים,, lit. "Children coerced Spanish) is a modern term used to define the contemporary Christian descendants of estimated quarter of a million 15th-century Sephardic Jewish which were coerced or forced to convert to Catholicism during the 14th and 15th century in Spain.

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Seth Read

Seth Read (March 6, 1746 – March 19, 1797) was born in Uxbridge, Worcester County, Massachusetts, and died at Erie, Erie County, Pennsylvania, as "Seth Reed", at age 51.

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Seth Tanner

Seth Benjamin Tanner (March 6 1828 – December 3, 1918) was a Mormon pioneer, miner, and early settler of Arizona.

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Settle

Settle or SETTLE may refer to.

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Settler (disambiguation)

A settler is a person who has migrated from the land of his or her birth, or who takes up residence on land and cultivates it, as opposed to a nomad.

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Settlers House

Settlers' House was built in 1845 in East Charlotte, Vermont.

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Shannon Branch

Shannon Branch is a stream in Audrain County in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Sheboygan, Wisconsin

Sheboygan is a city in and the county seat of Sheboygan County, Wisconsin, United States.

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Shelby Farms

Shelby Farms, located in Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, is one of the twenty largest urban parks in the United States.

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Shennong Stream

Shennong Stream (Shennong Xi) is a left tributary of the Yangtze River, located in the Hubei Province of central China.

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Shifting cultivation

Shifting cultivation is an agricultural system in which plots of land are cultivated temporarily, then abandoned and allowed to revert to their natural vegetation while the cultivator moves on to another plot.

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Shipbuilding in the American colonies

Between America’s vast natural resources, excellent location in relation to the world market, capital flow and plentiful skilled labor; the American colonies had a comparative advantage in shipbuilding.

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Sidney, Montana

Sidney is a city in and the county seat of Richland County, Montana, United States, less than away from the North Dakota border.

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Siege of Dunlap's Station

The Siege of Dunlap's Station was a battle that took place on January 10–11, 1791, during the Northwest Indian War between the Western Confederacy of American Indians and European-American settlers in what became the southwestern region of the U.S. state of Ohio.

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Siege of Tubac

The Siege of Tubac was a siege of the Apache Wars, between settlers and militia of Confederate Arizona and Chiricahua Apaches.

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Silver Island Range

The Silver Island Range, also called the Silver Island Mountains, is a mountain range in Utah, United States, situated the northwest corner of Tooele County and the southwest corner of Box Elder County, about northeast of Wendover.

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Sinai and Palestine Campaign

The Sinai and Palestine Campaign of the Middle Eastern theatre of World War I was fought between the British Empire and the Ottoman Empire, supported by the German Empire.

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Sioux Falls, South Dakota

Sioux Falls (Lakota: Íŋyaŋ Okábleča Otȟúŋwahe; "Stone Shatter City") is the most populous city in the U.S. state of South Dakota and the 145th-most populous city in the United States.

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Sir Valentine Browne

Sir Valentine Browne, of Croft, Lincolnshire, later of Ross Castle, Killarney, was an English pay official, victualler and treasurer of Berwick, and politician.

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Slab hut

A slab hut is a kind of dwelling or shed made from slabs of split or sawn timber.

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Slabcamp Run

Slabcamp Run is a stream in Brown County, Ohio.

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Slate Run, Pennsylvania

Slate Run is an unincorporated community in Brown Township, Lycoming County, in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

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Slaughter Slough

Slaughter Slough is a wetland in southwestern Minnesota, United States, so named for being the site of the Lake Shetek Massacre during the Dakota War of 1862.

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Slave narrative

The slave narrative is a type of literary work that is made up of the written accounts of enslaved Africans in Great Britain and its colonies, including the later United States, Canada, and Caribbean nations.

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Smith Creek (Santa Clara County, California)

Smith Creek is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Smithfield, New South Wales

Smithfield is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia.

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Snowshoe

A snowshoe is footwear for walking over snow.

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Socrates Hotchkiss Tryon Sr.

Socrates Hotchkiss Tryon Sr. (January 24, 1816 – May 15, 1855) was a pioneer physician in what became the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Sonoma County, California

Sonoma County is a county in the U.S. state of California.

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Sooners

Sooners is the name given to settlers who entered the Unassigned Lands in what is now the state of Oklahoma before the official start of the Land Rush of 1889.

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South Australian English

South Australian English is the variety of English spoken in the Australian state of South Australia.

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South Region, Brazil

The South Region of Brazil (Região Sul do Brasil) is one of the five regions of Brazil.

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South Williamsport, Pennsylvania

South Williamsport is a borough in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania, United States.

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South-Central Colorado

South-Central Colorado is a region of the U.S. state of Colorado.

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Southern Ontario

Southern Ontario is a primary region of the province of Ontario, Canada, the other primary region being Northern Ontario.

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Southern Rhodesia African National Congress

The Southern Rhodesia African National Congress (SRANC) was a political party active between 1957–1959 in Southern Rhodesia (now modern-day Zimbabwe).

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Sowers, Texas

Sowers is a ghost town located approximately 11 miles northwest of Dallas, Texas in Dallas County.

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Spanish Empire

The Spanish Empire (Imperio Español; Imperium Hispanicum), historically known as the Hispanic Monarchy (Monarquía Hispánica) and as the Catholic Monarchy (Monarquía Católica) was one of the largest empires in history.

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Spanish missions in Baja California

The Spanish missions in Baja California were a large number of religious outposts established by Catholic religious orders, the Jesuits, the Franciscans and the Dominicans, between 1683 and 1834 to spread the Christian doctrine among the Native Americans or Indians living on the Baja California peninsula.

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Spirit of the Dead Watching

Spirit of the Dead Watching (Manao tupapau) is an 1892 oil on burlap canvas painting by Paul Gauguin, depicting a naked Tahitian girl lying on her stomach.

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Spring Mill State Park

Spring Mill State Park is a state park in the state of Indiana.

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Springwater, Oregon

Springwater is an unincorporated rural community in Clackamas County, Oregon, United States, about three miles south of Estacada on Oregon Route 211.

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St Mabyn

St Mabyn (S.) is a civil parish and village in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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St. John the Baptist Parish, Louisiana

St.

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St. Joseph's Basilica, Edmonton

St.

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Staats Long Morris

Staats Long Morris (27 August 1728 Morrisiana, New York – 28 January 1800 Quebec, Canada) was an American colonist who served as a major-general in the British army during the American Revolution.

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Stanley Park

Stanley Park is a public park that borders the downtown of Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada and is almost entirely surrounded by waters of Vancouver Harbour and English Bay.

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Starozagorski bani

Starozagorski bani (Старозагорски бани, literally translated as Stara Zagora Baths, sometimes referred to as Stara Zagora Spa) is a village and a mineral spring spa resort in central Bulgaria.

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Starvation State Park

Starvation State Park is a state park in northeastern Utah, United States, featuring the Starvation Reservoir.

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Ste. Genevieve, Missouri

Ste.

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Stephen F. Austin

Stephen Fuller Austin (November 3, 1793 – December 27, 1836) was an American empresario.

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Stephen Meek

Stephen Hall Meek (July 4, 1807– January 8, 1889) was a fur trapper and guide in the American west, most notably a guide on a large wagon train known as the Meek Cutoff.

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Sterling, Colorado

Sterling is a Home Rule Municipality that is the county seat and the most populous city of Logan County, Colorado, United States.

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Stockman (Australia)

In Australia a stockman (plural stockmen) is a person who looks after the livestock on a large property known as a station, which is owned by a grazier or a grazing company.

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Stonecoal Creek

Stonecoal Creek is a tributary of the West Fork River, long, in north-central West Virginia in the United States.

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Stoop (architecture)

In urban architecture, a stoop is a small staircase ending in a platform and leading to the entrance of an apartment building or other building.

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Storm Bay (British Columbia)

Storm Bay through a smokey haze Storm Bay is a bay in Sechelt Inlet of the Pacific Ocean.

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Storm King Mountain (New York)

Storm King Mountain is a mountain on the west bank of the Hudson River just south of Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York.

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Streeterville

Streeterville is a neighborhood in the Near North Side community area of Chicago, Illinois, United States, north of the Chicago River.

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Studebaker

Studebaker was an American wagon and automobile manufacturer based in South Bend, Indiana.

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Sugar Bowl Ski Resort

Sugar Bowl is a ski and snowboard area in northern Placer County near Norden, California along the Donner Pass of the Sierra Nevada, approximately west of Reno, Nevada on Interstate 80, that opened on December 15, 1939. Sugar Bowl is a medium sized ski area in the Lake Tahoe region, and is well known for its long history, significant advanced terrain, high annual snowfall and being one of the closest ski areas to the San Francisco Bay Area. Sugar Bowl's terrain is 17% Beginner, 45% Intermediate and 38% Advanced. Sugar Bowl was founded by Hannes Schroll and a group of individual investors and is one of the few remaining privately owned resorts in the Lake Tahoe area. Sugar Bowl was the first ski area in California to install a chairlift and the first on the west coast to install a gondola lift.

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Suggan Buggan River

The Suggan Buggan River is a perennial river of the Snowy River catchment, located in the Alpine region of the Australian state of Victoria.

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Sullivans Creek

Sullivans Creek, a partly perennial stream of the Murrumbidgee catchment within the Murray-Darling basin, is located in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.

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Sulphur Springs, Indian Territory

Sulphur Springs was a Choctaw Indian community formerly existing in the Choctaw Nation of Indian Territory.

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Sunday Island (Victoria)

Sunday Island is a low-lying, sandy, 16.2 km2 barrier island on the coast of Victoria, Australia.

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SunDog: Frozen Legacy

SunDog: Frozen Legacy is a space trading and combat simulator video game.

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Survivalism

Survivalism is a primarily American movement of individuals or groups (called survivalists or preppers) who are actively preparing for emergencies, including possible disruptions in social or political order, on scales from local to international.

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Susan Louisa Moir Allison

Susan Louisa Moir Allison (August 18, 1845 – February 1, 1937) was a Canadian author and pioneer.

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Sussex, New Brunswick

Sussex (2016 population: 5,298) is a Canadian town in Kings County, New Brunswick.

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Swedish colonies in the Americas

Sweden established colonies in the Americas in the mid-17th century, including the colony of New Sweden (1638–1655) on the Delaware River in what is now Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Maryland, as well as two possessions in the Caribbean during the 18th and 19th centuries.

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Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts

The Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts (SMSA) is the longest running School of Arts (also known as a "Mechanics' Institute") and the oldest continuous lending library in Australia.

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Syracuse Lake

Syracuse Lake is a natural lake bordering Syracuse in Kosciusko County, Indiana, United States.

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Talbot County, Maryland

Talbot County is a county located in the heart of the Eastern Shore of Maryland in the U.S. state of Maryland.

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Tannat

Tannat is a red wine grape, historically grown in South West France in the Madiran AOC, and is now one of the most prominent grapes in Uruguay, where it is considered the "national grape".

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Tanner Creek

Tanner Creek is a small tributary of the Willamette River in Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Taopi, Minnesota

Taopi is a city in Lodi Township, Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Tars Tarkas

Tars Tarkas is a fictional character in Edgar Rice Burroughs' Barsoom series.

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Tavern

A tavern is a place of business where people gather to drink alcoholic beverages and be served food, and in most cases, where travelers receive lodging.

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Temescal Creek (Northern California)

Temescal Creek is one of the principal watercourses in the city of Oakland, California, United States.

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Tenmile Creek (Coos County, Oregon)

Tenmile Creek is the outlet for a chain of lakes ending at Tenmile Lake near Lakeside in Coos County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Tenmile Lake (Oregon)

Tenmile Lake is the largest and southernmost of a chain of lakes along the Oregon Coast south of the Umpqua River in the United States.

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Tenmile, Douglas County, Oregon

Tenmile is an unincorporated community in Douglas County, Oregon, United States.

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Texas

Texas (Texas or Tejas) is the second largest state in the United States by both area and population.

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Teypana

Teypana (alternate spelling “Teypama”) was the first pueblo to be called Socorro.

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Thane, Juneau

Thane is a neighborhood in the City and Borough of Juneau in the U.S. state of Alaska.

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Thangata

"Thangata" is a word deriving from the Chewa language of Malawi which has changed its meaning several times, although all meanings relate to agriculture.

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ThanksKilling

ThanksKilling is a 2008 horror black comedy film written and directed by Jordan Downey, and co-written by Brad Schulz, Tony Wilson, Grant Yaffee, and Kevin Stewart.

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The Female American

The Female American; or, The Adventures of Unca Eliza Winkfield, is a novel, originally published in 1767, under the pseudonym of the main character/narrator, Unca Eliza Winkfield and edited in recent editions by Michelle Burnham.

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The Guardians (novel)

The Guardians is a young-adult science fiction novel written by John Christopher and published by Hamilton in 1970.

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The Land of the Settlers

The Land of the Settlers is a five-part documentary series created by Chaim Yavin, who was described by the Arab News as "the Israeli version of America’s Walter Cronkite".

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The Museum at Central School

The Museum at Central School, at the restored Central School building in Kalispell, Montana, United States, is a history museum featuring exhibits that illuminate the history of Northwest Montana.

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The National Society of the Colonial Dames in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

The National Society of Colonial Dames of America (NSCDA) is an organization devoted to furthering the appreciation of their national heritage through historic preservation, patriotic service and educational projects.

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The Oregon Trail (series)

The Oregon Trail is a series of educational computer games that began with the very first edition originally developed by Don Rawitsch, Bill Heinemann, and Paul Dillenberger in 1971 and produced by the Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium (MECC) in 1974.

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The Oregon Trail (video game)

The Oregon Trail is a computer game originally developed by Don Rawitsch, Bill Heinemann, and Paul Dillenberger in 1971 and produced by the Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium (MECC) in 1974.

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The Pembroke Hill School

The Pembroke Hill School (usually referred to as Pembroke Hill) is a secular, coeducational, independent preparatory school for about 1,200 students in early years (age 2 years) through 12th grade, separated into four sections: early years-prekindergarten (early childhood school), kindergarten-5th grade (lower school), 6th-8th grade (middle school), and 9th-12th grade (upper school).

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The Son (TV series)

The Son is an American western drama television series based on the 2013 book of the same name by Philipp Meyer.

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The Square Set

The Square Set was a 1960s rock band from Cape Town South Africa, known for their songs Silence is Golden (SA number 1 Hit (1967)) "Carol Corina" (SA number 10 hit (1968)), and "That's What I Want" (international number 1 hit in Brazil, Argentina, and Portugal (1971-1972)).

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The Troubles

The Troubles (Na Trioblóidí) was an ethno-nationalist conflict in Northern Ireland during the late 20th century.

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The West Indian

The West Indian is a play by Richard Cumberland first staged at the Drury Lane Theatre in 1771.

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Theodore Thurston Geer

Theodore Thurston Geer (March 12, 1851February 21, 1924) was the tenth Governor of Oregon (the first born in the territory of the state), serving from January 9, 1899 to January 14, 1903.

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Theorosa's Bridge

Theorosa's Bridge is located just outside the town of Valley Center in Kansas, United States.

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Third Transjordan attack

The Third Transjordan attack by Chaytor's Force, part of the British Empire's Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF), took place between 21 and 25 September 1918, against the Ottoman Empire's Fourth Army and other Yildirim Army Group units.

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Thomas Benton Hoover House

The Thomas Benton Hoover House is a historic house located in Fossil, Oregon, United States.

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Thomas Creek (Linn County, Oregon)

Thomas Creek is a stream, about long, in Linn County in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Thomas Fitch (settler)

Thomas Fitch, Jr. (October 14, 1612 – April 14, 1704) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Thomas George Percy

Thomas George Percy, Sr. was a 19th-century wealthy American cotton planter and settler of Alabama.

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Thomas Hales (settler)

Thomas Hales (24 June 1610 – February 19, 1679) was a founding settler of Hartford, and Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Thomas Hanford

Thomas Hanford (July 22, 1621 – 1693) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Thomas Jefferson High School (Alexandria, Virginia)

Thomas Jefferson High School was a public high school in Fairfax County, Virginia, United States.

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Thomas Lupton

Thomas Lupton (1628–1684) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Thomas Moore (Australian settler)

Thomas Moore (1762–1840) was an early European settler in Australia.

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Thomas Todd

Thomas Todd (January 23, 1765 – February 7, 1826) was an American attorney and Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.

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Thomastown, Victoria

Thomastown is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 17 km and approximately 30 minutes north of Melbourne's central business district.

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Thorp, Washington

Thorp is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Kittitas County, Washington, United States.

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Three Island Crossing

Three Island Crossing is a state park in the U.S. state of Idaho.

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Tiaret

Tiaret (Berber: Tahert or Tihert, ⵜⴰⵀⴻⵔⵜ, i.e. "Lioness"; تاهرت / تيارت) is a major city in central Algeria that gives its name to the wider farming region of Tiaret Province.

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Timeline of İzmir

Below is a sequence of some of the events that affected the history of the city of İzmir (historically also Smyrna).

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Timeline of Brazilian history

This is a timeline of Brazilian history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Brazil and its predecessor states.

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Timeline of Cardiff history

The timeline of Cardiff history shows the significant events in the history of Cardiff which transformed it from a small Roman fort into the modern capital city of Wales.

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Timeline of major crimes in Australia

This is a timeline of major crimes in Australia.

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Timeline of Raleigh, North Carolina

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.

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Timmins

Timmins is a city in northeastern Ontario, Canada, on the Mattagami River.

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Titan (Baxter novel)

Titan is a 1997 science fiction novel by British writer Stephen Baxter.

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Tobacco

Tobacco is a product prepared from the leaves of the tobacco plant by curing them.

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Tolay Lake

Tolay Lake is a shallow freshwater lake in southern Sonoma County, California, United States.

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Tolomato Cemetery

Tolomato Cemetery is a Catholic cemetery located on Cordova Street in St. Augustine, Florida.

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Tomás Bán Mac Aodhagáin

Tomás Bán Mac Aodhagáin is the name both of a person and of a song inspired by his life.

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Tornado, West Virginia

TornadoUnited States Geological Survey "Tornado Populated Place" is a census-designated place (CDP)United States Geological Survey "Upper Falls Census Designated Place" in Kanawha County, West Virginia, United States.

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Torrey, Utah

Torrey is a town located on State Route 24 in Wayne County, Utah, United States, from Capitol Reef National Park.

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Towle Silversmiths

Towle Silversmiths is an American silver manufacturer.

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Transportation in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania

Transportation in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania has a long and variegated history.

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Transportation in Saskatchewan

Transportation in Saskatchewan is the movement of people and goods from one place to another within the province.

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Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851)

The Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851 was signed on September 17, 1851 between United States treaty commissioners and representatives of the Cheyenne, Sioux, Arapaho, Crow, Assiniboine, Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nations.

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Treaty of Portsmouth (1713)

The Treaty of Portsmouth, signed on July 13, 1713, ended hostilities between Eastern Abenakis with the British provinces of Massachusetts Bay and New Hampshire.

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Trindade and Martin Vaz

Trindade and Martin Vaz (Trindade e Martim Vaz) is an archipelago located in the Southern Atlantic Ocean about east of the coast of Espírito Santo, Brazil, which it constitutes a part of.

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Triteleia grandiflora

Triteleia grandiflora is a species of flowering plant known by the common names largeflower triteleia, largeflower tripletlily and wild hyacinth.

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True Whig Party

The True Whig Party (TWP), also known as Liberian Whig Party, is the oldest political party in Liberia.

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Truro, Massachusetts

Truro is a town in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, United States, comprising two villages: Truro and North Truro.

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Truth and Reconciliation Commission (Canada)

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) was a truth and reconciliation commission organized by the parties of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement.

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Tuli, Zimbabwe

Tuli is a village in the province of Matabeleland South, Zimbabwe.

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Tunnel in the Sky

Tunnel in the Sky is a juvenile science fiction novel by American writer Robert A. Heinlein, published in 1955 by Scribner's as one of the Heinlein juveniles.

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Tunney, Western Australia

Tunney is a town located along the Albany Highway between Kojonup and Cranbrook, in the Great Southern region of Western Australia.

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Tupi language

Old Tupi or classical Tupi is an extinct Tupian language which was spoken by the native Tupi people of Brazil, mostly those who inhabited coastal regions in South and Southeast Brazil.

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Turners Branch

Turners Branch is a stream in Audrain County in the U.S. state of Missouri.

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Turton, Lancashire

Turton is a historical area in the North West of England.

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Tusculum University

Tusculum University is a coeducational private university affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (USA), with its main campus in the city of Tusculum, Tennessee, United States, a suburb of the town of Greeneville.

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Types of tobacco

This article includes a list of tobacco cultivars and varieties.

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Ungarra, South Australia

Ungarra is a small agricultural based town located on the Eyre Peninsula, in the Australian state of South Australia about from the state's capital, Adelaide and around north of Port Lincoln.

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Union, South Carolina

The city of Union is the county seat of Union County, South Carolina, United States.

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University of Denver

The University of Denver (DU) is a research coeducational, four-year university in Denver, Colorado.

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Unknown Horizons

Unknown Horizons is a genre-mix of city-building game and real-time strategy game, strongly inspired by the Anno series.

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Urban neighbourhoods of Sudbury

This is a list of neighbourhoods in the urban core of Greater Sudbury, Ontario.

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Urbanization in Africa

The urbanization of most of Africa is moving fast forward, especially south of the Sahara.

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USS Arizona (BB-39)

USS Arizona was a built for and by the United States Navy in the mid-1910s.

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USS Sibley (APA-206)

USS Sibley (APA-206) was a of the US Navy, built and used during World War II.

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Valery Solomonovich Gurevich

Valery Solomonovich Gurevich, a Russian politician, is the vice-governor of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast.

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Vandalia State House State Historic Site

The Vandalia State House, built in 1836, is the fourth capitol building of the U.S. state of Illinois.

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Variety Unit

Variety Unit is an exhibit building at Shelburne Museum in Shelburne, Vermont.

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Vaughan

Vaughan (2016 population 306,233) is a city in Ontario, Canada.

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Vermilion Point

Vermilion Point is a remote, undeveloped shore in Chippewa County, Michigan, United States.

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Victoria County, Ontario

The County of Victoria, or Victoria County, was a county in the Canadian province of Ontario.

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Victorian masculinity

During the long reign of Queen Victoria over the United Kingdom from 1837 to 1901, there were certain social expectations that the separate genders were expected to adhere to.

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Vietnamese wine

Vietnamese wine is wine produced in Vietnam.

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Villa sisters

The Villa sisters, also known as the Villa del Orbe sisters, were the Dominican sisters who made the first flag of the Dominican Republic.

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Villacorta

Villacorta is a Spanish surname.

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Vincennes University

Vincennes University (VU) is a public university with its main campus in Vincennes, Indiana, in the United States.

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Vojlovica, Pančevo

Vojlovica (Војловица) is a neighborhood of the city of Pančevo, Serbia.

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Waal (river)

The Waal (Dutch) is the main distributary branch of the river Rhine flowing approximately through the Netherlands.

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Wagons East

Wagons East (sometimes stylised as Wagons East!) is a 1994 American Western adventure comedy film directed by Peter Markle.

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Walden, New York

Walden is the largest of three villages of the Town of Montgomery in Orange County, New York, United States.

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Walgoolan, Western Australia

Walgoolan is a small town located in the Eastern Wheatbelt region of Western Australia.

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Wallkill River

The Wallkill River, a tributary of the Hudson, drains Lake Mohawk in Sparta, New Jersey, flowing from there generally northeasterly U.S. Geological Survey.

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Walpole, Western Australia

Walpole is a town in the south-western region of Western Australia, located approximately south southeast of Perth and west of Denmark.

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Walter Hoyt

Walter Hoyt (also seen as Haite, Hayte, Hoit, Haight) (September 6, 1618 – 1698) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Walter Keeler (settler)

Walter Keeler (also Keiler) (born 1615) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

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Walter M. Walker

Major Walter M. Walker was a pioneer of the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Walter Padbury

Walter Padbury (22 December 1820 – 18 April 1907) was an Australian pioneer and philanthropist.

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Waltham Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Waltham Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Wanchese, North Carolina

Wanchese is a census-designated place (CDP) on Roanoke Island in Dare County, North Carolina, United States.

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Wanship, Utah

Wanship is a census-designated place in Summit County, Utah, United States.

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Wappinger

The Wappinger were an Eastern Algonquian-speaking tribe from New York and Connecticut.

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War crimes in occupied Poland during World War II

It's estimated that over six million Polish citizens,Project in Posterum, Retrieved 20 September 2013.

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Water law in the United States

Water law in the United States refers to the Water resources law laws regulating water as a resource in the United States.

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Waterberg Biosphere

The Waterberg (Thaba Meetse) is a mountainous massif of approximately in north Limpopo Province, South Africa.

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Waterfall, Alaska

Waterfall is an Unincorporated community on the west coast of Prince of Wales Island in Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area, Alaska, United States, approximately west of Ketchikan.

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Waterways of West Virginia

West Virginia waterways find their highest sources in the highland watersheds of the Allegheny Mountains.

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Wayne County, West Virginia

Wayne County is the westernmost county in the U.S. state of West Virginia.

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Webster Sycamore

The Webster Sycamore (alternatively known as the Webster Springs Sycamore and the Big Sycamore Tree) was an American sycamore (Platanus occidentalis) in the U.S. state of West Virginia.

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West Branch Susquehanna River

The West Branch Susquehanna River is one of the two principal branches, along with the North Branch, of the Susquehanna River in the northeastern United States.

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West Branch Susquehanna Valley

The West Branch Susquehanna Valley of central Pennsylvania, United States, in the Ridge-and-valley Appalachians, is the low-lying area draining into the West Branch Susquehanna River southeast of the Allegheny Front, northeast of the Bald Eagle Valley, southwest of the Wyoming Valley and north of the water gap formed between Shamokin Mountain and Montour Ridge.

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West Yellowstone, Montana

West Yellowstone is a town in Gallatin County, Montana, adjacent to Yellowstone National Park.

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Western Australia Day

Western Australia Day (formerly known as Foundation Day)King, Rhianna (2012).

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Western Sydney Parklands

The Western Sydney Parklands is an urban park system and a nature reserve located in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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Westlake, Texas

Westlake is a town in Denton and Tarrant Counties in the U.S. state of Texas and an upscale suburb of Fort Worth.

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Westminster, Colorado

Westminster is a Home Rule Municipality in Adams and Jefferson counties in the U.S. state of Colorado.

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Whitbourne, Newfoundland and Labrador

Whitbourne is a town on the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada in Division 1.

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White Barbadian

White Barbadians or European Barbadians are Barbadian citizens or residents of European descent.

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Whitla, Alberta

Whitla is an unincorporated community in Alberta, Canada within the County of Forty Mile No. 8.

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Whitney, Oregon

Whitney is an unincorporated community, also considered a ghost town, in Baker County, Oregon, United States, on Oregon Route 7 southwest of Sumpter.

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Who Are We? The Challenges to America's National Identity

Who Are We? The Challenges to America's National Identity (2004) is a treatise by political scientist and historian Samuel P. Huntington (1927–2008).

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Will S. Green

William Semple Green (December 26, 1832, Kentucky – July 2, 1905) was a California pioneer, a steamboat captain, mail carrier, surveyor, newspaper publisher, writer, legislator, United States Surveyor General for California, California State Treasurer, and irrigationist.

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William B. Ide

William Brown Ide (March 28, 1796 – December 19 or 20, 1852) was a California pioneer who headed the short-lived California Republic in 1846.

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William Barlow (pioneer)

William Barlow (October 26, 1822 – June 18, 1904) was an early Oregon pioneer and founder of Barlow, Oregon, United States.

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William Beck Ochiltree

William Beck Ochiltree (October 18, 1811 – December 27, 1867), was a settler, judge, and legislator in Texas.

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William Byron Rumford

William Byron Rumford (February 2, 1908 – June 12, 1986) was an American pharmacist and politician.

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William Cooley

William Cooley (1783–1863) was one of the first American settlers, and a regional leader, in what is now known as Broward County in the state of Florida.

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William Courten

Sir William Courten or Curteen (1572–1636) was a wealthy 17th century merchant, operating from London.

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William G. T'Vault

William Green T'Vault (1806–1869) was a pioneer of the Oregon Country and the first editor of the first newspaper published west of the Missouri River.

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William H. Wharton

William Harris Wharton (April 27, 1802 – March 14, 1839) was an American colonist, diplomat, senator and statesman in early Texas.

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William Marcus West

William Marcus West is a Scottish American pioneer who settled in what is now eastern Sonoma County, California, United States.

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William Paget, 4th Baron Paget

William Paget, 4th Baron Paget of Beaudesert (1572 – 29 August 1629) was an English peer and colonist born in Beaudesert House, Staffordshire, England to Thomas Paget, 3rd Baron Paget and Nazareth Newton.

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William Randolph

William Randolph I (bapt. 7 November 1650 – 11 April 1711) was an American colonist, landowner, planter, merchant, and politician who played an important role in the history and government of the English colony of Virginia.

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William Shakespeare Hall

William Shakespeare Hall (1825–1895) was a pioneer settler of the Swan River Colony and a well-known J.P., explorer, pastoralist, and pearler.

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William Tell Coleman

William Tell Coleman (1824–1893) was an American pioneer.

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William Whitley

William Whitley (August 4, 1749 – October 5, 1813), was an American pioneer.

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Williams, Arizona

Williams (Wii Gvʼul) is a city in Coconino County, Arizona, west of Flagstaff.

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Wilmot Brookings

Wilmot Wood Brookings (October 23, 1830 – June 13, 1905) was an American pioneer, frontier judge, and early South Dakotan politician.

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Winchester, Virginia

Winchester is an independent city located in the northwestern portion of the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States.

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Windidda

Windidda Station, often referred to as Windidda, is a pastoral lease that operates as a cattle station.

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Windom Township, Mower County, Minnesota

Windom Township is a township in Mower County, Minnesota, United States.

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Window shutter hardware

The evolution of early exterior window shutter hardware, terms and terminology related to shutter hardware and blacksmithing, and American regional styles of installation.

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Winnifred, Alberta

Winnifred is an unincorporated community in Alberta, Canada, within the County of Forty Mile No. 8.

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Winnipeg Route 17

Route 17, also known as Chief Peguis Trail, or CPT, is a major highway in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

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Winthrop, Massachusetts

Winthrop is a city in Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States.

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Winthrop, Washington

Winthrop is a town in Okanogan County, Washington, United States.

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Wolves (2014 film)

Wolves is a 2014 Canadian action horror film directed by David Hayter.

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Wood Mountain, Saskatchewan

Wood Mountain is a village in Old Post Rural Municipality 43, Saskatchewan, Canada.

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Wooltana Station

Wooltana Station most commonly known as Wooltana is a pastoral lease that operates as a sheep station in outback South Australia.

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World War II by country

Nearly every country in the world participated in World War II, with the exception of a few countries that remained neutral.

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World Without Stars

World Without Stars is volume three in the French graphic novel (bande dessinée) science fiction series Valérian and Laureline created by writer Pierre Christin and artist Jean-Claude Mézières.

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Wren, Oregon

Wren is an unincorporated community in Benton County, Oregon, United States.

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Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park

Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park is located about 100 kilometres southeast of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, or 44 kilometres east of the community of Milk River, and straddles the Milk River itself.

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Wungong, Western Australia

Wungong (older spelling Wongong), pronounced is a semi-rural south-eastern suburb of Perth, Western Australia, located midway between Armadale and Byford and located in the local government area of the City of Armadale.

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Wyoming, Pennsylvania

Wyoming is a borough in the Greater Pittston area of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.

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Yalup Brook, Western Australia

Yalup Brook is a small town located in the South West of Western Australia along the South Western Highway, between Waroona and Harvey.

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Yarmouth, Maine

Yarmouth is a town in Cumberland County, Maine, located twelve miles north of the state's largest city, Portland.

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Yazoo stream

A Yazoo stream is a geologic and hydrologic term for any tributary stream that runs parallel to, and within the floodplain of a larger river for considerable distance, before eventually joining it.

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Yellow Springs Township, Des Moines County, Iowa

Yellow Springs is a township in Des Moines County, Iowa, United States.

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Yevgenia Bosch

Yevgenia Bosch (Євгенія Богданівна (Готлібівна) Бош; Евге́ния Богда́новна (Го́тлибовна) Бош) (Yevgenia Bogdanovna (Gotlibovna) Bosch), also known as Evgenia Bosh, Evgenia Bogtdanovna Bosch or Evheniya Bohdanivna Bosch (August 1879 – 5 January 1925) was a Bolshevik activist, politician, and member of the Soviet government in Ukraine during the revolutionary period in the early 20th century.

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Yorkville, Illinois

Yorkville (Official name: United City of Yorkville) is a city in Kendall county, Illinois, United States.

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Yukon wolf

The North American wolf Canis lupus pambasileus is a subspecies of gray wolf that is called the Yukon wolf in Canada and the Alaskan Interior wolf in the United States.

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Zacharie Cloutier

Zacharie Cloutier (c. 1590 – September 17, 1677) was a French carpenter who, in 1634, immigrated to New France in the first wave of the Percheron Immigration from the former province of Perche, to an area that, today, is part of Quebec, Canada.

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Zaki al-Arsuzi

Zakī al-Arsūzī (زكي الأرسوزي; June 1899 – 2 July 1968) was a Syrian philosopher, philologist, sociologist, historian, and Arab nationalist.

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14 BC

Year 14 BC was either a common year starting on Thursday or Friday or a leap year starting on Wednesday, Thursday or Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar (the sources differ, see leap year error for further information) and a common year starting on Tuesday of the Proleptic Julian calendar.

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1608 in Quebec

Events from the year 1608 in Quebec.

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1609 in Quebec

Events from the year 1609 in Quebec.

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1610 in Quebec

Events from the year 1610 in Quebec.

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1613 in Quebec

Events from the year 1613 in Quebec.

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1615 in Quebec

Events from the year 1615 in Quebec.

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1677

No description.

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1744 in art

Events from the year 1744 in art.

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1773

No description.

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1778 in Great Britain

Events from the year 1778 in Great Britain.

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1813 in art

Events in the year 1813 in Art.

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1836

No description.

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1836 in the United States

Events from the year 1836 in the United States.

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1845

No description.

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1913 Australia rugby union tour of New Zealand

The 1913 Australia rugby union tour of New Zealand was a collection of friendly rugby union games undertaken by the Australia national rugby union team against various invitational teams from New Zealand and also against the New Zealand national team.

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19th century

The 19th century was a century that began on January 1, 1801, and ended on December 31, 1900.

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2005 in Israel

Events in the year 2005 in Israel.

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2005 in the Palestinian territories

Events in the year 2005 in the Palestinian territories.

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2005 United Kingdom snow events

The year 2005 saw 25 heavy snowfall days, which is the joint snowiest year with 1876 across the United Kingdom, between the years 1861-2005.

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20th-century history of Kosovo

Kosovo during the 20th century history has largely been characterised by wars and major population displacements.

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42 BC

Year 42 BC was either a common year starting on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday or a leap year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar (the sources differ, see leap year error for further information) and a common year starting on Tuesday of the Proleptic Julian calendar.

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443 BC

Year 443 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar.

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45 BC

Year 45 BC was either a common year starting on Thursday, Friday or Saturday or a leap year starting on Friday or Saturday (link will display the full calendar) (the sources differ, see leap year error for further information) and the first year of the Julian calendar and a leap year starting on Friday of the Proleptic Julian calendar.

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5th century BC

The 5th century BC started the first day of 500 BC and ended the last day of 401 BC.

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600s BC (decade)

This article concerns the period 609 BC – 600 BC.

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96th Regiment of Foot

The 96th Regiment of Foot was a British Army regiment, raised in 1798.

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Redirects here:

Colonist, Colonist (Russia), Colonists, Ensconce, Free settler, Free settlers, Pioneer family, Settled, Settlers.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Settler

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