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Barwick (surname)
Barwick is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Bill Barwick, American Western music singer-songwriter and voice-over artist *Brian Barwick, English sports official *Daniel Barwick (born 1968), American college president *Diane Barwick (1938–1986), Canadian-born anthropologist, researcher and teacher *Doug Barwick (born 1962), Australian rules footballer *Garfield Barwick (1903–1997), Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia *Greg Barwick, Australian rugby league player * John Barwick (theologian) (fl. 1340), Anglo-Scots theologian *John Barwick (1612–1664), English royalist churchman and Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral *Julianna Barwick, American musician *Paul Barwick (born 1946), American LGBT rights activist and same-sex marriage pioneer *Peter Barwick (1619–1705), English physician and author *Sandy Barwick (born 1949), New Zealand female ultramarathon runner * Steve Barwick (born 1960), Welsh cricketer *Terry Barwick, English football player *Tony B ...
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Bill Barwick
Bill Barwick (March 12, 1946 – November 10, 2017) was an American Western music singer-songwriter, guitarist, and voiceover artist based in Colorado. Early life Barwick was originally from North Carolina, and started making music at the age of eight. He lived for a time in Hampton, New Hampshire. As a teenage trumpet player, he attended the ''Summer Youth Music School'' program at the University of New Hampshire, where he lived, worked, and played for two weeks exclusively with other musicians. He has said of that experience: I don't know where my life would have gone if I hadn't met people who loved music as much as I did. I also learned there were people more talented than me, better at their instruments, who worked harder, who practiced more. The only way I would get better, I realized, was to work at it. I learned diligence and a practice ethic. He moved west to Denver in the 1970s and lived there until his death. Musical career Barwick has been a weekly regular at De ...
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John Barwick
John Barwick (1612–1664) was an early English royalist churchman and Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral. Early life He was born at Witherslack, in Westmorland. John was the third of five sons, and he and his brother Peter Barwick (later his biographer) were the ones given an education. After time at local grammar schools John was sent to Sedbergh School, then in Yorkshire. In 1631 he entered St. John's College, Cambridge, where Thomas Fothergill was his tutor, and graduated B.A. in 1635. The Master Owen Gwyn had died in 1634, and the subsequent election was disputed and attracted the attention of the king; Barwick became involved as the college's representative. He was then elected to a fellowship. He took holy orders, and in 1638 his M.A. degree. Civil War period In 1642 royalists at Cambridge raised a sum of money for the king, and gathered together some college plate. Parliament received information of what was going on, and sent Oliver Cromwell with a party of infantry to ...
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Tony Barwick
Anthony Clive "Tony" Barwick (10 July 1934 – 18 August 1993)https://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-10182/biographical-summaries-of-notable-people?itemId=447240&action=showRecord was a British television scriptwriter who worked extensively on series created and produced by Gerry Anderson. Career Television Barwick scripted episodes for Anderson's Supermarionation series '' Thunderbirds'' (two out of 32 episodes), ''Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons'' (21 out of 32 episodes), ''Joe 90'' (16 out of 30 episodes) and ''The Secret Service'' (four out of 13 episodes), as well as his live-action series ''UFO'' (14 out of 26 episodes), ''The Protectors'' (ten out of 52 episodes) and '' Space: 1999'' (two out of 48 episodes). He also contributed scripts to Anderson and Christopher Burr's Supermacromation series ''Terrahawks,'' writing under various pseudonyms for all but one episode. All of these pseudonyms ended with the suffix "-stein" in imitation of the name of the l ...
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Terry Barwick
Terence Patrick Barwick (born 11 January 1983) is an English football manager and former professional footballer. As a player he was a midfielder who played between 2000 and 2020. He played as a professional in the Football League for Scunthorpe United and Grimsby Town, before going on to play in non-League football for York City, Northwich Victoria, Stalybridge Celtic, Retford United, Droylsden, Worksop Town, Frickley Athletic, Bottesford Town and most notably Goole where he spent four spells at between 2009 and 2020. In 2018 he was appointed joint manager at Goole, a position which he resigned from fourteen months later. Playing career Scunthorpe United Sheffield born Barwick came through the youth ranks of Scunthorpe United and was added to the first team squad in the final months of the 1999–2000 campaign. He made his debut in the club's 2–1 league defeat against Burnley when he came on as 46th-minute substitute for Justin Walker (footballer), Justin Walker. Though he o ...
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Steve Barwick
Stephen Royston Barwick (born 6 September 1960) is a former Welsh cricketer. Barwick was a right-handed batsman who began his career a right-arm medium-fast bowler, before adding variation in the form of changes of pace and off cutters, with his restyled bowling being termed by fellow professionals like Andrew Caddick as the "slowest seam bowling around". Playing for Glamorgan for 18 seasons, he took 768 wickets in all formats of the game. Married to Margaret Barwick, father to Michael, Kathryn and Jessica. Glamorgan Born at Neath, Glamorgan. Barwick made his first-class debut in 1981 against Oxford University, a season in which he also made his List A debut against Essex. Barwick played as a bowler, at the beginning of his career he bowled as a fast-medium bowler. A mainstay of the Glamorgan side for the best part of 15 years, Barwick made over 200 first-class and 268 List A appearances for the county, establishing bowling partnerships with the likes of Rodney Ontong, Ste ...
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Sandy Barwick
Sandra May Barwick (born 1949) is a New Zealand ultramarathon runner who set a new six-day track world record in Campbelltown, Australia, 18–24 November 1990. Covering 549 miles 110 yards in six days, Barwick set a record that still stands today. In the 1994 Queen's Birthday Honours, Barwick was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire is a British order of chivalry, rewarding contributions to the arts and sciences, work with charitable and welfare organisations, and public service outside the civil service. It was established o ..., for services to athletics. Career highlights Sandy Barwick set these world records. * Track: 6 day 883.631 km, Campbelltown, Australia, December 1990 * Road: 1000 km 7 days 16 hour 11 minutes * 2000 km 17 days 3 hours 1 minute * 1000 miles 12 days 14 hours 38 minutes 40 sec * 1300 miles 17 days 22 hours 46 minutes 07 sec *(All road records were set at the Sri C ...
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Peter Barwick
Peter Barwick (1619–1705) was an English physician and author. Life He was the younger brother of John Barwick, and like him was educated at Sedbergh School, and St John's College, Cambridge, where he was a foundation scholar. He was appointed by Bishop Matthew Wren to the fellowship at St John's, in the gift of the Bishop of Ely, but could not be admitted because of the troubled times. He was driven from Cambridge by the First English Civil War. Barwick became tutor to Ferdinando Sacheverell, of Old Hayes in Leicestershire. He returned to Cambridge in 1647 to take his M.A. degree, and studied medicine. In 1651 he was at Worcester, meeting with Charles II of England, and receiving tokens of his favour; and like his brother he was a royalist supporter. In 1655 he received his M.D. degree, and in 1657 took a house in St. Paul's Churchyard. Here he was joined by his brother John, who daily read the proscribed service of the Church of England in the presence of a few royalis ...
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Paul Barwick
Paul Barwick (born 1946) is an American former LGBT rights activist and same-sex marriage pioneer. In 1972, he filed one of the first lawsuits in the history of the United States regarding the right of gays and lesbians to marry, after he and the late fellow activist John Singer were denied a civil marriage license at the King County Administration Building in Seattle, Washington. The case, '' Singer v. Hara'', was the best-known gay marriage case in the state of Washington until ''Andersen v. King County'' in 2006. He moved to San Francisco, California, which was his residence for 30 years, but he now currently lives in Centralia WA. Biography Born in Washington, Barwick served three years in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War, working as a military policeman. Later, he became an emergency dispatcher for the Washington State Patrol, and attended Olympic College in Bremerton. Barwick ran unsuccessfully for vice-president of the student body, while attending Olympic. It was at Olym ...
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Julianna Barwick
Julianna Barwick is an American musician who composes using electronic loops. Her first album, '' The Magic Place'', was released in 2011. Music career Barwick has said that her music is influenced by her participation in church choir while growing up in Louisiana. She composes with a machine to create electronic loops built around her vocalizing. She self-released her debut EP, ''Sanguine'', in 2006. The songs are wordless with vocal overdubs, vocal percussion, and improvisation. On the EP, ''Florine'', she uses a loop station and pedals to create minimalist repetition accompanied by layers of vocals and synthesizers. In 2010, Barwick was commissioned to remix "Reckoner" by Radiohead. During the next year, she released an album of improvisational music, ''FRKWYS Vol. 6'', with Ikue Mori. She recorded her first full-length album, '' The Magic Place'', on a rehearsal stage because it was soundproof and had a piano. The title of the album refers to a tree on her family's farm th ...
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Floruit
''Floruit'' (; abbreviated fl. or occasionally flor.; from Latin for "they flourished") denotes a date or period during which a person was known to have been alive or active. In English, the unabbreviated word may also be used as a noun indicating the time when someone flourished. Etymology and use la, flōruit is the third-person singular perfect active indicative of the Latin verb ', ' "to bloom, flower, or flourish", from the noun ', ', "flower". Broadly, the term is employed in reference to the peak of activity for a person or movement. More specifically, it often is used in genealogy and historical writing when a person's birth or death dates are unknown, but some other evidence exists that indicates when they were alive. For example, if there are wills attested by John Jones in 1204, and 1229, and a record of his marriage in 1197, a record concerning him might be written as "John Jones (fl. 1197–1229)". The term is often used in art history when dating the career ...
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Western Music (North America)
Western music is a form of country music composed by and about the people who settled and worked throughout the Western United States and Western Canada. Western music celebrates the lifestyle of the cowboy on the open ranges, Rocky Mountains, and prairies of Western North America. Directly related musically to old English, Irish, Scottish, and folk ballads, also the Mexican folk music of Northern Mexico and Southwestern United States influenced the development of this genre, particularly corrido, ranchera, New Mexico and Tejano. Western music shares similar roots with Appalachian music (also called ''country'' or ''hillbilly music''), which developed around the same time throughout Appalachia and the Appalachian Mountains. The music industry of the mid-20th century grouped the two genres together under the banner of ''country and western music'', later amalgamated into the modern name, ''country music''. Origins Western music was directly influenced by the folk music tradition ...
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John Barwick (theologian)
John Barwick (fl. 1340) was an English theologian. Life Barwick took his name from Berwick, where he appears to have been born or brought up. From Berwick he seems to have removed to the Franciscan schools at Oxford, at which university he became a Doctor of Theology, and is enumerated as the twenty-second reader of divinity belonging to that order in the early years of the fourteenth century. He appears to have studied at Paris Paris () is the capital and most populous city of France, with an estimated population of 2,165,423 residents in 2019 in an area of more than 105 km² (41 sq mi), making it the 30th most densely populated city in the world in 2020. S ... likewise; for we are told by Dempster and Bale that he also went by the name of Breulanlius; and this Breulanlius is mentioned towards the end of the fifteenth century by the all-accomplished Pico della Mirandula as resisting Roger Bacon and other philosophers, who seem to have advocated the study of astrol ...
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