Loudon's Highlanders, a unit of the United kingdom Army raised in 1745 and ranked as 64th Foot
Loudon's Highlanders, or the 64th Highlanders, or Earl of Loudon's Regiment of Foot, was an infantry regiment of the British Army.
At this time all road racing events are held at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire.
Loudon Wainwright III | Dorothy Loudon | John Claudius Loudon | Loudon | John Loudon McAdam | Loudon's Highlanders | Loudon, New Hampshire | Trevor Loudon | Loudon Park Cemetery | Lord Loudon's regiment | I'm Alright (Loudon Wainwright III album) | 1839 map of what is now Loudon County, showing the location of Blair's Ferry |
Loudon had been critical of the catacombs at Kensal Green as 'bad taste', and had also found the 'pleasure-ground style' at Norwood cemetery objectionable; yet offered only praise for the new principles of cemetery layout, management and design at Abney Park.
His recordings include Lucia di Lammermoor (with Maria Callas) and The Devils of Loudon (with Tatiana Troyanos).
The Blair's Ferry Storehouse is located at the corner of Main Street and Church Street, just off U.S. Route 11 in downtown Loudon.
Flight testing of the Loudon was successful and an experimental type certificate was issued by the Canadian Department of Transport in November 1952, receiving the registration CF-ZBN-X.
Fort Loudoun Dam, a hydroelectric dam on the Tennessee River in Loudon County, Tennessee, United States
In the 1983 Newhart episode "A View from the Bench", where Dick Loudon is expelled from Boston Garden's seating section to the tunnel for a Celtics game, where an exhausted player is offered a "cold drink" from Loudon and turns back shouting "Hey, kid" as he tosses Newhart his basketball shoes as a souvenir.
Several times a year, I-393 also serves traffic to events at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon.
The journal was formed by the merger of the Magazine of Natural History (1828–1840) and the Annals of Natural History (1838–1840; previously the Magazine of Zoology and Botany, 1836–1838) and Loudon and Charlesworth's Magazine of Natural History).
The Old Loudon Road was built in 1755 during the French and Indian War to bring troops and provisions from Albany to the areas of Lake George and Ticonderoga.
:*An early volume by J.C. Loudon on the noted British landscape gardener and architect, Humphry Repton.
Meanwhile, the horticulturalist, George Loddiges, whom Loudon held in high regard, labelled his arboretum trees at Abney Park Cemetery in 1840, as Sorbus latifolia, the currently-accepted binomial.