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Seaford Christian Academy
Seaford may refer to: Places Australia * Seaford, Victoria ** Seaford railway station, Melbourne * Seaford, South Australia ** Seaford railway station, Adelaide United Kingdom * Seaford, East Sussex ** Seaford (UK Parliament constituency) ** Seaford branch line ** Seaford (Sussex) railway station United States * Seaford, Delaware * Seaford, New York ** Seaford (LIRR station) * Seaford, Virginia * Seaford Hundred, an unincorporated subdivision of Sussex County, Delaware People * John Seaford, Anglican priest * Richard Seaford, British classicist * Baron Seaford, a UK peerage Sports * Seaford Town F.C., an association football team in Seaford, East Sussex * Seaford Football Club, an Australian rules football club * Seaford Rangers FC, an association football team in Seaford, South Australia Other uses * Seaford House, a building in London * Seaford Museum, a museum in Seaford, East Sussex * Short Seaford, a British flying boat * HMS ''Seaford'', the name of several ships o ...
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Seaford, Victoria
Seaford is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 36 km south-east of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the City of Frankston local government area. Seaford recorded a population of 17,215 at the . History Seaford was the site of the Karrum Karrum swamp, which was utilised for food by the Bunurong Aboriginal people. In the early twentieth century, after European settlement, the swamp was drained for farming purposes (with wet areas remaining only at low lands; including Seaford and the Edithvale wetlands). The name Seaford arose during a meeting of local residents in 1913, called to decide upon a name for the settlement and the new railway station about to open. It was agreed that the name should contain some reference to the sea. Councillor Sydney Plowman suggested "Seaford", dropping the "l" from his home town of Sleaford, in Lincolnshire, England. The suggestion was adopted. The Seaford Post Office opened on 6 March 1914. During the 1950s a ...
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John Seaford
John Nicholas Shtetinin Seaford (born 12 September 1939) is a retired Anglican priest. He was educated at Radley and Durham University and ordained in 1969. After curacies in Enfield and Winchester he held incumbencies at Chilworth, North Baddesley, Highcliffe and Hinton Admiral before becoming Dean of Jersey and Rector of St Helier St Helier (; Jèrriais: ; french: Saint-Hélier) is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey, the largest of the Channel Islands in the English Channel. St Helier has a population of 35,822 – over one-third of the total population of Jersey – ..., posts he held from 1993 to his retirement in 2005. References Deans of Jersey 1939 births People educated at Radley College Alumni of St Chad's College, Durham Living people {{Christianity-bio-stub ...
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HMS Seaford
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS ''Seaford'', after the coastal town of Seaford, now in East Sussex. A fifth was planned, but was not completed for the navy: * was a 24-gun sixth rate purchased in 1695 and captured by the French in 1697. * was a 24-gun sixth rate launched in 1697, rebuilt in 1724 and broken up in 1740. * was a 24-gun sixth rate launched in 1741 and broken up by 1754. * was a 20-gun sixth rate launched in 1754, participated in the Battle of Manila (1762), and sold in 1784. * HMS ''Seaford'' was to have been a . She was laid down in 1941, renamed later that year, and captured while under construction by the Japanese during the Fall of Hong Kong The Battle of Hong Kong (8–25 December 1941), also known as the Defence of Hong Kong and the Fall of Hong Kong, was one of the first battles of the Pacific War in World War II. On the same morning as the attack on Pearl Harbor, forces of the ... in late 1941. She was completed by them and lau ...
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Short Seaford
The Short S.45 Seaford was a 1940s flying boat, designed as a long range maritime patrol bomber for RAF Coastal Command. It was developed from the Short S.25 Sunderland, and initially ordered as "Sunderland Mark IV". Background In 1942, the Air Ministry issued Specification R.8/42 for a replacement of the Sunderland, as a long range patrol bomber for service in the Pacific Ocean. It required more powerful engines, better defensive armament, and other enhancements.Barnes 1989, pp. 357Green 1968, p. 106. Design and development The Sunderland Mark IV used major structural elements of the Sunderland Mark III, with a fuselage stretch of 3 ft ahead of the wing, an extended and redesigned planing bottom, the same wing with thicker Duralumin skinning, and Bristol Hercules engines. Further structural changes were made after initial flight tests. The planned armament consisted of two fixed forward-firing .303 inch (7.7 mm) Browning machine guns in the nose, a Brockhouse Eng ...
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Seaford Museum
The Seaford Museum and Heritage Society is a local history museum located at the Martello Tower in East Sussex, East Sussex, England. It was established in 1979 and contains objects, archives and displays relating to the history of the local area. The Museum Seaford Museum is housed in Tower number 74 and is situated on the Esplanade in Seaford, East Sussex. The Tower is the most westerly of a line of defensive fortifications built along the Kent and Sussex coast during the Napoleonic Wars. The Tower is a round two-storey structure surrounded by a dry, brick-lined moat. It was constructed between 1806 and 1810. The War Department sold it in 1880. During the next 90 years it passed through a number of hands and was used for various commercial purposes. During the 1930s the moat floor was used as a roller skating rink while the tower was used as a cafeteria. In 1976 the Tower was acquired by Lewes District Council and the Museum was installed there in 1979. The Museum has of f ...
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Seaford House
Seaford House, originally called Sefton House, is a former aristocratic mansion and the largest of the detached houses sited on each corner of Belgrave Square, London, England. It is a magnolia stucco building with four main storeys most famed for its interiors (the first floor, or piano nobile, being decorated in the French style). Dating from 1842, Sefton House was designed by Philip Hardwick to meet the requirements of 3rd Earl of Sefton. The house, with its railings and gate piers, have been listed Grade II* for their architectural merit. The 3rd and 4th Earls used it as their town house; the 5th Earl, being an invalid, could not do so and after he died childless in 1901, the lease was sold to William Tebb. Lord Howard de Walden, who was also Baron Seaford, acquired the lease for Sefton House in 1902 and renamed it Seaford House. He installed friezes, panelling, and a staircase of green onyx specially imported from South America. The house was requisitioned by the warti ...
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Seaford Rangers FC
Seaford Rangers (formerly the Seaford Surfers) are a soccer club from Seaford, South Australia. Seaford play in the South Australian State League. Their home ground is at Karingal Reserve. They have a strong support group, known as The Norseman St Elite (NSE). Famous old boys of the group include, Ryan (Ducklegs) Babbage, Davey (Foxy) Moore, Stephen (Hampster Style) Hawkins, Daniel (The Adonas/Franga) Frayne, Steve Kovacs, Mark (Gramps) Griffins, Adam (Treeni/Head) Treen, Graham Powell, Andrew Dickinson, Brad Andrews, Ryan Hancock, Peter (Udey) Smart. History Noarlunga City was founded in 1970 under the name of Port Noarlunga-Christies Beach and played in the SAASL Div 4 in 1971, and played their home games at Benny Ave Port Noarlunga. In 1975 they changed their name to Noarlunga City. The club joined the SASF competitions in 1978 as Noarlunga City and was playing their games at O'Sullivan Beach Oval. They play in predominantly white with black trim. In 1983 Seaford Sports & So ...
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Seaford Football Club
The Seaford Football Netball Club, nicknamed the ''Tigers'', is an Australian rules football and netball club based in the south eastern region of Australia, first organised in late 1921. Formation meetings were held at Armstrong's Grocery Store, Martins Garage and Weatherley's Milk Bar. The football team currently competes in the Mornington Peninsula Nepean Football League. The netball department began at the club in 2011. The club also introduced women's football in 2013. At end of the 2016 season, Seaford FNC fielded three men's, four netball and three women's football sides. The highest profile player to come out of Seaford is retired St Kilda player and Brownlow Medallist Robert Harvey. At the end of the 2018, Seaford FNC came last in the newly created First Division of MPNFL, finishing with 2 wins, 14 losses and 2 draws, and therefore were relegated to Second Division Men's football premierships Netball premierships Women's football premierships VFL/AFL players ...
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Seaford Town F
Seaford may refer to: Places Australia * Seaford, Victoria ** Seaford railway station, Melbourne * Seaford, South Australia ** Seaford railway station, Adelaide United Kingdom * Seaford, East Sussex **Seaford (UK Parliament constituency) ** Seaford branch line ** Seaford (Sussex) railway station United States * Seaford, Delaware * Seaford, New York ** Seaford (LIRR station) * Seaford, Virginia * Seaford Hundred, an unincorporated subdivision of Sussex County, Delaware People * John Seaford, Anglican priest * Richard Seaford, British classicist * Baron Seaford, a UK peerage Sports * Seaford Town F.C., an association football team in Seaford, East Sussex * Seaford Football Club, an Australian rules football club * Seaford Rangers FC, an association football team in Seaford, South Australia Other uses * Seaford House, a building in London * Seaford Museum, a museum in Seaford, East Sussex * Short Seaford, a British flying boat * HMS ''Seaford'', the name of several ships of th ...
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Baron Seaford
Baron Seaford, of Seaford in the County of Sussex, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 1 July 1826 for Charles Ellis, a Jamaican sugar planter and slave-owner who had earlier represented Heytesbury, Seaford and East Grinstead in the House of Commons. In 1798 he married the Hon. Elizabeth Catherine Caroline Hervey, daughter of John Hervey, Lord Hervey, eldest son of Frederick Augustus Hervey, 4th Earl of Bristol and 5th Baron Howard de Walden. In 1803 Lord Seaford's four-year-old son Charles Ellis inherited the barony of Howard de Walden from his great-grandfather and became the sixth Baron Howard de Walden (this title was created by writ in 1597; see the Baron Howard de Walden for earlier history of this peerage). In 1845 he also succeeded his father as second Baron Seaford. Charles married in 1828 Lady Lucy Cavendish-Bentinck, daughter of William Bentinck, 4th Duke of Portland, and his wife Henrietta Scott. Through this marriage a substantial fo ...
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Richard Seaford
Richard Seaford is a British classicist. He is professor emeritus of classics and ancient history at the University of Exeter. His work focuses on ancient Greek culture, especially that of ancient Athens. Career Seaford has published widely on Greek literature and religion, from Homer to the New Testament, and especially on the god Dionysos. His book ''Money and the Early Greek Mind. Homer, Tragedy, Philosophy'' (2004) explores the role of money on ancient Greek culture, which he argues was the first culture to become pervasively monetised. He argues that the introduction of coinage, which occurred around the end of the 7th century BCE, provided a crucial stimulus for the advent of Greek philosophy, in which a universal substance is (like money) transformed from and into everything else. In 2005–2008 he was awarded a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship for a study of Aeschylus. For 2013-4 he was awarded an AHRC Fellowship for a comparative historical study of early Indian w ...
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Seaford Hundred
Seaford Hundred is a hundred in Sussex County, Delaware Delaware ( ) is a state in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States, bordering Maryland to its south and west; Pennsylvania to its north; and New Jersey and the Atlantic Ocean to its east. The state takes its name from the adjacent Del ..., United States. Seaford Hundred was formed in 1869 from Northwest Fork Hundred. Its primary community is Seaford. References External links * Old Seaford Post Office, * Seaford, * Seaford Fire Department, Hundreds in Sussex County, Delaware {{Delaware-geo-stub ...
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