Hammersley Inlet And Oakland Bay
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Hammersley Inlet And Oakland Bay
Hammersley is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Ben Hammersley (born 1976), British photojournalist *Charles E. Hammersley (died 1957), American politician * Frederick Hammersley (1824–1901), Major-General and the first Inspector of Gymnasia in the British Army * Frederick Hammersley (1858-1924), British Army officer, commanded the Landing at Suvla Bay by his division during the Gallipoli Campaign *Frederick Hammersley (1919–2009), American abstract painter * James Astbury Hammersley (1815–1869), English painter, and teacher of art and design *John Hammersley (1920–2004), British mathematician *Martyn Hammersley (born 1949) British sociologist *Peter Hammersley (1928–2020), British admiral *Rachel Hammersley (born 1974) British historian *Rodolfo Hammersley (born 1889, date of death unknown), Chilean track and field athlete *Samuel Hammersley (1892–1965), Conservative Party politician in England *William Hammersley (1826–1886), sports journalist ...
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Ben Hammersley
Ben Hammersley FRSA FRGS (born 3 April 1976) is a British technologist, strategic foresight consultant, futurist, keynote speaker, broadcaster and systems developer, based in New York City. He specializes on Adaptive Futurism and Cognitive Risk from a multidisciplinary perspective. Education Hammersley is the eldest of three children and was educated at Loughborough Grammar School, and the School of Oriental and African Studies, from which he dropped out after a year. Technology and strategic forecasting Hammersley is the founder and principal oHammersley Futures an international strategic foresight consultancy advising corporates and governments on futureproofing and risk planning. Hammersley Futures specializes on how society reacts to technological innovation and the changing nature of the workplace, crime and conflict, and the market, and on tools to adapt to the changes. Clients include the UK Foreign Office, the European Commission, the US government, HSBC, Vodafone, D ...
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Peter Hammersley
Rear Admiral Peter Gerald Hammersley CB OBE (nicknamed Spam; 18 May 1928 – 16 January 2020) was an English Royal Navy officer who served from 1946 to 1982. Hammersley won a scholarship to Britannia Royal Naval College to train as a deck officer but his eyesight was too poor. Instead, he chose to become an engineer and studied at the Royal Naval Engineering College from 1946 to 1950. He trained onboard HMS ''Frobisher'' and HMS ''Duke of York'' and served on HMS ''Ocean'' during the Korean War. Hammersley specialised in submarines from 1954 and in 1959 served on secondment to the US Navy on the nuclear submarine ''Nautilus''. In 1960 he became the first marine engineering officer to serve aboard the Royal Navy's first nuclear-powered submarine, HMS ''Dreadnought''. Hammersley helped design the ''Swiftsure''-class of submarines and commanded a number of shore installations including the Royal Naval Engineering College. He served as aide-de-camp to Queen Elizabeth II ...
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Hammersley Wild Area
Hammersley Wild Area is a wild area in the Susquehannock State Forest in Potter and Clinton counties in north-central Pennsylvania in the United States. It is the largest area without a road in Pennsylvania and the state's second largest wild area (the first being Quehanna Wild Area). The wild area is named for Hammersley Fork, a tributary of Kettle Creek, which flows through the area. The wild area includes of the Susquehannock Trail System, an loop hiking trail almost entirely on state forest land. The Hammersley Wild Area was last clearcut around 1900 and is a mature second growth forest today. The Forrest H. Duttlinger Natural Area is adjacent to the southwest corner of the wild area in Clinton County, and it contains of old-growth forest, mostly Eastern Hemlock. The Hammersley Wild Area has been called "one of the state forest system’s jewels" and "a true state treasure" by the Pennsylvania Audubon Society. History The Hammersley Wild Area and Susquehannock Stat ...
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Hammersley Inlet
Hammersley Inlet, in southwestern Puget Sound in the U.S. state of Washington, is an arm of water leading to Shelton, Washington and Oakland Bay. Hammersley Inlet is also known as Big Skookum. Description Hammersley Inlet connects the Oakland Bay and Shelton to the greater Puget Sound. It is approximately of winding, potentially rapidly flowing water. As tides change in the South Puget Sound, Hammersley Inlet is the only artery through which all water must flow between the Oakland Bay and the greater Puget Sound. As tides change, they force the water through narrow, winding, shallow, Hammersley, producing erratic currents up to . Many mariners avoid Hammersley because of these conditions, but with the proper planning, a depth sounder, and care, Hammersley can be navigated without incident. The NOAA chart for the inlet is #18457, but most locals rely on the placemats from the Shelton Yacht Club. There are few aids to navigation on Hammersley, as the many log booms towed through th ...
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William Hammersley
William Josiah Sumner Hammersley (25 September 1826 – 15 November 1886) was an English-born first-class cricketer and sports journalist in Victoria, Australia, one of the four men credited with setting down the original rules of Australian rules football. Life Hammersley (1826-1886) was born on 25 September 1826 at Ash, Surrey, England to father William Josiah Hammersley of England. Hammersley was educated at Aldenham School and at a private school in Billericay. He matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge, but did not graduate with a degree. During his teens he was a prominent cricketer having debuted at Lord's on 10 June 1847 as a batsman for Cambridge. He was also a prominent shooter and footracer. Hammersley migrated to Australia in 1856. Upon his arrival in Melbourne he became a member of the Melbourne Cricket Club. He first represented the colony of Victoria against New South Wales in the intercolonial cricked match at the Domain in January 1857 and was a regular mem ...
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Samuel Hammersley
Samuel Schofield Hammersley (22 December 1892 – 28 March 1965) was an industrialist and Conservative Party politician in UK. Educated Hulme Grammar School, Oldham, and King's College, Cambridge. In 1915 during World War I he joined East Lancashire Regiment and was wounded at Gallipoli. Transferred as Captain to Tank Corps at its inception. In 1919 he married Kate Wakley, with whom he had 5 daughters. In 1922 he joined his father on the board of his cotton mills. Throughout his life fought for jobs and the future for the cotton industry. He wrote a book in 1925 entitled "Industrial Leadership". He thought that the average British man worked for the satisfaction of working as much as for the money. He was convinced that manufacturing was the backbone of national prosperity. During World War II worked with the Ministry of Supply for tank production. He built up S. Noton Ltd into the world's largest maker of luggage and handbags and was listed in the ''Directory of Directors 1946 ...
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Rodolfo Hammersley
Rodolfo Hammersley (born June 10, 1889, date of death unknown) was a Chilean track and field athlete who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics. He was born in Valparaíso and was the father of Andrés Hammersley and Arturo Hammersley.Rodolfo Hammersley
Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2015-02-01.
He was a generalist in track and field, practising a wide variety of events. In 1910 he was timed at 10.4 seconds for the , which would have equalled the at that time. In the < ...
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Rachel Hammersley
Rachel Hammersley is Professor of Intellectual History at Newcastle University. She is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and an editorial board member for the journals '' History of European Ideas'' and Global Intellectual History'. From 2001 to 2004, Hammersley was a lecturer, and then Leverhulme Research Fellow, at Sussex University. In June 2018, she was a member of the expert panel on BBC Radio 4's '' In Our Time'' on Montesquieu. The BBC radio 4 series ''Making History'' has featured Hammersley as an expert in 2010 on late eighteenth century French plans to invade Britain, in 2015, for the same programme, she was asked to discuss the Jacobite siege of Carlisle and the French Resistance, and in 2017 she contributed to a feature on the Northumbrian Enlightenment. Her early research was concerned with the influence of English republican ideas on the French Revolution, focusing in particular on the employment of those ideas by some members of the Cordeliers Club. Sh ...
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Martyn Hammersley
Martyn Hammersley (born 1949) is a British sociologist whose main publications cover social research methodology and philosophical issues in the social sciences. Biography He studied sociology as an undergraduate at the London School of Economics (1967–70), and was subsequently a postgraduate student in the sociology department at the University of Manchester, obtaining an MPhil and PhD with a thesis reporting an ethnography of an inner-city secondary school. At that time Manchester was a major centre for ethnomethodology, where it was in tension with symbolic interactionism and Marxism, and his work was influenced by all of these approaches. After a research fellowship and temporary lectureship at Manchester, he obtained a permanent position at The Open University in 1975. He was recruited to work on ''E202'' ''Schooling and Society'', a course that was subsequently embroiled in a public controversy about 'Marxist bias'. He remained at the Open University until retirement in ...
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Charles E
Charles is a masculine given name predominantly found in English and French speaking countries. It is from the French form ''Charles'' of the Proto-Germanic name (in runic alphabet) or ''*karilaz'' (in Latin alphabet), whose meaning was "free man". The Old English descendant of this word was '' Ċearl'' or ''Ċeorl'', as the name of King Cearl of Mercia, that disappeared after the Norman conquest of England. The name was notably borne by Charlemagne (Charles the Great), and was at the time Latinized as ''Karolus'' (as in ''Vita Karoli Magni''), later also as '' Carolus''. Some Germanic languages, for example Dutch and German, have retained the word in two separate senses. In the particular case of Dutch, ''Karel'' refers to the given name, whereas the noun ''kerel'' means "a bloke, fellow, man". Etymology The name's etymology is a Common Germanic noun ''*karilaz'' meaning "free man", which survives in English as churl (< Old English ''ċeorl''), which developed its depr ...
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John Hammersley
John Michael Hammersley, (21 March 1920 – 2 May 2004) was a British mathematician best known for his foundational work in the theory of self-avoiding walks and percolation theory. Early life and education Hammersley was born in Helensburgh in Dunbartonshire, and educated at Sedbergh School. He started reading mathematics at Emmanuel College, Cambridge but was called up to join the Royal Artillery in 1941. During his time in the army he worked on ballistics. He graduated in mathematics in 1948. He never studied for a PhD but was awarded an ScD by Cambridge University and a DSc by Oxford University in 1959. Academic career With Jillian Beardwood and J.H. Halton, Hammersley is known for the Beardwood-Halton-Hammersley Theorem.  Published by the Cambridge Philosophical Society in a 1959 article entitled “The Shortest Path Through Many Points,” the theorem provides a practical solution to the “traveling salesman problem.” He held a number of positions, both in and outs ...
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James Astbury Hammersley
James Astbury Hammersley (1818–1867) was an English painter, and a teacher of art and design. Life Hammersley was born at Burslem, Staffordshire in 1818. He studied art under James Baker Pyne. During the 1840s he taught at the Nottingham School of Design, where his pupils included Henry Hunter and Andrew MacCallum. From May 1849 until 31 December 1862 Hammersley was head-master of the Manchester School of Design. He took part in the formation of the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts, being elected its first president, 28 May 1857. He resigned the post on 30 December 1861. Hammersley died on 11 March 1867 in Manchester, and was buried at St. John's Church, Higher Broughton. The ''Dictionary of National Biography'' incorrectly claims that he was born in 1815 and died in 1869. Works Hammersley received a commission, from Albert, Prince Consort, to paint the prince's birthplace, Schloss Rosenau, Coburg, and another scene in Germany. These works are now in the Royal Colle ...
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