The community was founded in 1930 and is named after Missouri governor Henry Stewart Caulfield, who took office in 1929.
He is the founder and owner of Ozark Awards, Ozark Wings Hatchery and Hunting Preserve, and is a resident of Caulfield, Missouri.
It formerly had a post office with a ZIP code of 65642, but mail is now served from the post office in Caulfield.
It once had a post office, but its mail now comes from Caulfield.
Holden Caulfield | Caulfield Grammar School | Patrick Caulfield | Caulfield | Henry S. Caulfield | Caulfield, Missouri | Caulfield Cup | Electoral district of Caulfield | Michael Caulfield | Caulfield railway station | Caulfield Racecourse | Caulfield Guineas |
Caulfield was elected in 1874 as a Democrat to the Forty-fourth Congress to succeed John B. Rice, who had not sought reelection; when Rice died a month after the election, Caulfield won an additional special election to complete Rice's term in the Forty-third Congress, and served from February 1, 1875 to March 3, 1877.
In January 2011, Rachel Flaherty of the Caulfield Glen Eira Leader reported Mack-Hancock had filmed a guest role in the Seven Network drama series, Winners & Losers.
On Saturday, 17 September 2011, coached by Steve Lawrence, Caulfield Grammarians defeated St Bernards Old Collegians 17.12 (114) to 12.9 (81) to win the 2011 B Section Premiership by 33 points.
Aside from its use for racing, the Caulfield Racecourse is also used by the VCAA to examine students who are unable to attend examinations at their schools as well as by Monash University for end of semester examinations.
He was elected in 2010 as the Member for Caulfield and delivered his first speech on 8 February 2011.
Denis Caulfield Brady, was a Liberal Member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom who represented the constituency of Newry.
She played CIA liaison officer Sarah Caulfield in the eighth series of BBC drama Spooks.
This tradition has inspired artists from many disparate disciplines, amongst them, the writers, Ted Hughes (1992), Carlota Caulfield (2003), and Hilary Mantel in Wolf Hall (2009); visual artists, Jean Dubuffet (1977) and Bill Viola (1985); and composer John Buller (2003).
In his next start, he lost to the reigning champion two-year-old, Miss Finland, in the HDF McNeil Quality, again at Caulfield over 1,200 metres.
Helen Jean Shardey (born 31 October 1944, in Melbourne) was a state politician for the Liberal Party of Australia who held the seat of Caulfield from 1996 to 2010.
Caulfield grew up with his parents, Henry P. Caulfield and Grace Nelson Caulfield in Hollywood, California, graduating from Hollywood High School in 1931.
In 1970 Andy Warhol made prints titled "Flowers" of the Mandrinette with petals in different colours based on a photograph by the nature photographer Patricia Caulfield, published in the June 1964 issue of the magazine Modern Photography.
The character, as Holden Morrisey Caulfield, also appears in Salinger's "Slight Rebellion off Madison", published in the December 21, 1946 issue of The New Yorker.
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Newfoundland Punk band Mopey Mumble-Mouse wrote the song "Holden Caulfield", inspired by the character and Mark David Chapman, quoting Chapman in the song's intro.
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Caulfield also figures as a character in the short story "I'm Crazy", published in Colliers (December 22, 1945), and other members of the Caulfield family are featured in "Last Day of the Last Furlough", published in The Saturday Evening Post (July 15, 1944) and the unpublished short stories "The Last and Best of the Peter Pans" (c. 1942) and "The Ocean Full of Bowling Balls" (c. 1945).
Mummify was killed in the 2005 Caulfield Cup, when he broke a bone in his leg, and had to be euthanised.
Monash University, Caulfield campus is a campus of Monash University located in Caulfield, which is a suburb of Melbourne, Australia, in the state of Victoria.
As with Elliott Gould's character in Capricorn One, Gene Hackman's "Robert Caulfield" is named after Peter Hyams' old boss from his days as working as a TV reporter.
;The Los Angeles Times from 1983 to 1999 by Deborah Caulfield, Jay Sharbutt, Dennis McDougal, Charles Champlin, Nancy Wride, and Stephen Braun
Rising Fast was ridden in the 1954 events by Melbourne jockey Bill Williamson but when he was seriously injured prior to the Caulfield Cup he was replaced by Arthur Ward.
The main schools in St Kilda East are the Christian Brothers College, St Kilda, the Caulfield Campus of Caulfield Grammar School, Malvern Community School, Ripponlea Primary School, the St Kilda East campus of Mount Scopus Memorial College, Yeshivah College, Beth Rivkah Ladies College and part of St Michael's Grammar School.
The artwork of the single features a photo taken by Geri Caulfield at a Smiths gig at the London Palladium.
The man who frequently appears throughout the episode calling Peter (and later Neil) a phony is named Holden Caulfield in the credits, a reference to the character of the same name who is the protagonist of the 1951 book The Catcher in the Rye, known to use the word "phony" many times throughout the book.
Maxwell Caulfield does, in fact, have a background in soap operas, appearing as Miles Colby in Dynasty and its prime-time spin-off The Colbys.
This season Whobegotyou had 11 starts for wins in the G2 Bill Stutt Stakes contested over 1,600 metres; G1 Caulfield Guineas over 1,600 m and G2 AAMI Vase over 2,040 metres before finishing in third place in the Victoria Derby.
Caulfield became one of the busiest warm up men for both BBC and UTV on shows such as "The Kelly Show" Get it Right Next Time, Town Challenge, The Daniel O'Donnell Show, Give my Head Peace, Saints and Scholars, Scots Irish Evenings and The 11+ Show.