X-Nico

unusual facts about Pemberton-Billing P.B.9


Pemberton-Billing P.B.1

Following the conclusion of the attempted flight testing, the P.B.1 was dismantled on 28 July 1914, with its engine being used in the Pemberton-Billing P.B.9 single seat scout aircraft.


Alfred Gerrard

He also worked as a book illustrator with his future wife Katherine Leigh-Pemberton, producing wood cuts for Elephants and Ethnologists (by Grafton Elliot Smith) and Egyptian Mummies (by Smith and Warren Royal Dawson) in 1924 and for the Book of Bath in 1925.

CFJC-TV

CFJC's studios are located on Pemberton Terrace and Columbia Street West in Kamloops, and its transmitter is located near Southern Yellowhead Highway/Highway 5, southeast of Kamloops Airport.

Chapslee Estate

General Innes sold the house in 1870 and, thereafter, it changed hands every few years and served as the residence of famous persons, including Sir Courtenay Ilbert, General Pemberton, General Sir C. E. Nairne, Surgeon-General Bradshaw, Surgeon-General Cleghorn and so on.

Children of Fire Mountain

That year it received the Feltex Television Awards for "Best Drama", "Best Script", and Terence Cooper as "Best Actor" for his role as Sir Charles Pemberton.

Coca wine

In Atlanta, John Pemberton, a pharmacist, developed a beverage based on Vin Mariani, called Pemberton's French Wine Coca.

Delia Pemberton

Delia Pemberton (born 1954) is an author and lecturer in Egyptology, formerly with the British Museum and Birkbeck College, University of London, UK.

Description of a Struggle

A short film loosely based on the work was made in 1993 by Tony Pemberton starring Parker Posey and himself.

Gardiner Greene

In 1803 Greene bought land in Boston on Pemberton Hill (i.e. Cotton Hill), from Tremont Street (opposite Court Street) to Somerset Street, including the former house of William Vassall (built c. 1758).

Hugh Pemberton

Hugh Pemberton qualified MB ChB from the University of Liverpool in 1913 and started working at the David Lewis Northern Hospital in Liverpool.

James C. Pemberton

James C. Pemberton served as a member of the 1862–1863 California State Assembly, representing the 4th District.

James Leigh-Pemberton

James Henry Leigh-Pemberton CVO (born 1956) is a British banker and the incumbent Receiver-General for the Duchy of Cornwall.

The son of former Governor of the Bank of England and life-peer Lord Kingsdown, James Leigh-Pemberton was educated at Eton and started his career at S. G. Warburg & Co.

Johnnie Troutman

Troutman attended Pemberton Township High School in Pemberton, New Jersey where he played on both offensive and defensive lines.

Joseph Pemberton

After his retirement in 1914, Pemberton turned to rose breeding, using the climber 'Trier' (descended from 'Aglaia', an 1896 cross by Peter Lambert using Rosa multiflora), he crossed it with hybrid teas to produce a class of highly scented, generally cluster-flowered roses which remain popular garden material to this day.

Leigh-Pemberton

Robin Leigh-Pemberton, Baron Kingsdown (born 1927), Governor of the Bank of England 1983–1993

James Leigh-Pemberton (born 1956), British banker and the Receiver-General for the Duchy of Cornwall

Edward Leigh Pemberton (1823–1910), Conservative Member of Parliament for East Kent 1868–1885

Minnesota State Highway 83

State Highway 83 serves as a north–south route in south-central Minnesota between Waldorf, Pemberton, St. Clair, and Mankato.

Miss Polly Rae

Miss Polly Rae and her Hurly Burly Girlys have collectively worked alongside Dusty Limits, Frisky and Mannish, Ivy Paige, Lady Carol, Stewart Pemberton, Frank Sanazi and James Devine.

Mount Currie

Mount Currie, British Columbia, a rural community near Pemberton, British Columbia, named for the summit

North Shore Credit Union

Based in North Vancouver, British Columbia, BlueShore Financial operates as a full service financial institution for its clients, and has 12 branches throughout the Lower Mainland of British Columbia and in Squamish, Whistler, and Pemberton.

Nuklon

Luthor's project grants super-powers to McKenna, who is given the codename Nuklon after Luthor buys the rights to Infinity Inc. from the Pemberton Estate.

Pemberton-Billing P.B.1

It had two-bay wings constructed of spruce and Ash, with ailerons on the upper wing and floats under the lower wingtips.

Pemberton, Western Australia

Rather than shut down, Pemberton's mill switched to plantation Tasmanian blue gum and pine in addition to karri.

Personal Appearance

Personal Appearance was produced by the legendary Brock Pemberton (founder of the Tony Awards) and staged by Antoinette Perry (in whose memory Pemberton named the Tonys).

Robin Leigh-Pemberton, Baron Kingsdown

On the grounds of the estate, there is also what is believed to be the only Eton Fives court attached to a private dwelling; it was built in 1925.

One of his sons, James Henry Leigh-Pemberton continues the family's association with the Duchy of Cornwall (beginning with its Chancellor, the 1st Baron Kingsdown) as Receiver-General.

Robin Pemberton

Previously, Pemberton was a crew chief for several NASCAR teams over the course of 17 years, heading teams for Rusty Wallace, Mark Martin and Kyle Petty.

Sophie Pemberton

Pemberton died in 1959 in Victoria and was interred there in the Ross Bay Cemetery.

St Matthew's Church, Wigan

It was paid for by Colonel Henry Blundell, owner of the Pemberton Colliery, in memory of his wife, Beatrice who had died in 1884.

Steven Pemberton

In 2009 Pemberton was awarded the CHI Lifetime Service Award by SIGCHI.

The Macomb Daily

The writers from the other Detroit area Journal Register newspapers who appear frequently in The Macomb Daily are Oakland Press staff writers Gary Graff (who covers pop music), Jim Hawkins (Detroit Tigers), Paula Pasche (Detroit Lions), and Dave Pemberton (Detroit Pistons and Michigan State Spartans) and the News-Heralds Matthew Mowery (Michigan Wolverines).

Victor Pemberton

In 1976 Pemberton wrote the audio drama Doctor Who and the Pescatons for an experiment in Doctor Who on vinyl record and an early spin-off from the programme.


see also