Wheelwright (other)
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Wheelwright (other)
A wheelwright is a person who builds or repairs wheels. Wheelwright may also refer to: Places * Wheelwright, Kentucky, a city in Floyd County, Kentucky, USA * Wheelwright, Massachusetts, a village in the Town of Hardwick, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA * Wheelwright, a city in General López Department, Santa Fe Province, Argentina Other uses * Wheelwright (surname) * Piast the Wheelwright, legendary figure who founded the Piast dynasty of Poland * Wheelwright Hall, a dormitory at Phillips Exeter Academy named for John Wheelwright See also

* Worshipful Company of Wheelwrights, one of the Livery Companies of the City of London, England * Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA * Wainwright (other) * Cartwright (other) * Wright (other) {{DEFAULTSORT:Wheelwright ...
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Wheelwright
A wheelwright is a craftsman who builds or repairs wooden wheels. The word is the combination of "wheel" and the word "wright", (which comes from the Old English word "''wryhta''", meaning a worker or shaper of wood) as in shipwright and arkwright. This occupational name became the English surname ''Wright''. It also appears in surnames like ''Cartwright'' and ''Wainwright''. It corresponds with skilful metal workers being called ''Smith.'' These tradesmen made wheels for carts (cartwheels), wagons (wains), traps and coaches and the belt drives of steam powered machinery. They also made the wheels, and often the frames, for spinning wheels for home use. First constructing the hub (called the nave), the spokes and the rim segments called felloes, (pronounced fell low), and assembling them all into a unit working from the center of the wheel outwards. Most wheels were made from wood, but other materials have been used, such as bone and horn, for decorative or other purposes. ...
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Wheelwright, Kentucky
Wheelwright is a home rule-class city in Floyd County, Kentucky, United States. The population was 780 at the 2010 census, down from 1,042 in 2000. History Founded by the Elk Horn Coal Company in 1916, it was named for the company's president at that time, Jere H. Wheelwright. Elk Horn leased its mines from the Consolidation Coal. In 1930, Consolidation sold the Wheelwright coal camp to Inland Steel. In 1966, Inland Steel sold the camp to Island Creek Coal. The mine closed in the 1970s. After the mine was abandoned, the Kentucky Housing Corporation purchased the town, rehabilitated the homes, and sold the homes to residents. Wheelwright was home to one of the pack horse libraries in the 1930s and early 1940s. Geography Wheelwright is located at the southern end of Floyd County in the valley of the Right Fork Otter Creek. There is just one way in and out of the city, via the Junction Bridge, located in Bypro, also referred to as "Wheelwright Junction", on state route 122 ...
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Wheelwright, Massachusetts
Wheelwright is a village in the town of Hardwick, Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States, approximately northwest of the city of Worcester Worcester may refer to: Places United Kingdom * Worcester, England, a city and the county town of Worcestershire in England ** Worcester (UK Parliament constituency), an area represented by a Member of Parliament * Worcester Park, London, Engla .... It is named after George W. Wheelwright, who owned the village's paper mill around the turn of the 20th century. The village is mostly residential now. There is a small plastics manufacturing shop on the mill site. The village's zip code is 01094. External links Town of Hardwick Villages in Worcester County, Massachusetts Villages in Massachusetts {{WorcesterCountyMA-geo-stub ...
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General López Department
The General López Department (in Spanish, ''Departamento General López'') is an administrative subdivision (''departamento'') of the province of Santa Fe, Argentina. It is located in the south of the province. Its head town is Melincué (population 2,200), and its largest city is Venado Tuerto (population 70,000). It is bordered by the Caseros Department in the north, and by the Constitución Department in the north-east; the rest of its borders coincide with interprovincial limits (with Córdoba in the west and with Buenos Aires in the south and east). The towns and cities in this department are (in alphabetical order): Aarón Castellanos, Amenábar, Cafferata, Cañada del Ucle, Carmen, Carreras, Chapuy, Chovet, Christophersen, Diego de Alvear, Elortondo, Firmat, Hughes, La Chispa, Labordeboy, Lazzarino, Maggiolo, María Teresa, Melincué, Miguel Torres, Murphy, Rufino, San Eduardo, San Francisco de Santa Fe, San Gregorio, Sancti Spiritu, Santa Isabel, Teodelina, Venado Tue ...
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Wheelwright (surname)
Wheelwright is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Edmund M. Wheelwright (1854–1912), American architect * Edward Lawrence Wheelwright (1921–2007), Australian economist and political theorist *Esther Wheelwright (1696-1780), Ursuline nun in Québec *Horace William Wheelwright (1815–1865), English naturalist and writer *John Wheelwright (1592–1679), English clergyman and early American settler *John Brooks Wheelwright (1897–1940), American poet *Philip Wheelwright (1901–1970), American philosopher *William Wheelwright William Wheelwright (March 18, 1798 – September 26, 1873) was a businessman who played an essential role in the development of steamboat and train transportation in Chile and other parts of South America. In 1838, with help from the Chilean ... (1798 --1873), American businessman {{surname, Wheelwright English-language surnames Occupational surnames English-language occupational surnames ...
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Piast The Wheelwright
Piast the Wheelwright ( 740/741? – 861 AD; Latin: ''Past Ckosisconis'', ''Pazt filius Chosisconisu''; Polish: ''Piast Chościskowic'', ''Piast Kołodziej'' , ''Piast Oracz'' or ''Piast'') was a semi-legendary figure in medieval Poland (9th century AD), and the presumed founder of the Piast dynasty that would rule the future Kingdom of Poland. Legend Piast makes an appearance in the '' Polish Chronicle'' of Gallus Anonymus, along with his father, Chościsko, and Piast's wife, Rzepicha. The chronicle tells the story of an unexpected visit paid to Piast by two strangers. They ask to join Piast's family in celebration of the 7th birthday (a pagan rite of passage for young boys) of Piast's son, Siemowit. In return for the hospitality, the guests cast a spell making Piast's cellar ever full of plenty. Seeing this, Piast's compatriots declare him their new prince, to replace the late Prince Popiel. If Piast really existed, he would have been the great-great-grandfather of Prince ...
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Wheelwright Hall
A wheelwright is a craftsman who builds or repairs wooden wheels. The word is the combination of "wheel" and the word "wright", (which comes from the Old English word "''wryhta''", meaning a worker or shaper of wood) as in shipwright and arkwright. This occupational name became the English surname ''Wright''. It also appears in surnames like ''Cartwright'' and ''Wainwright''. It corresponds with skilful metal workers being called ''Smith.'' These tradesmen made wheels for carts (cartwheels), wagons (wains), traps and coaches and the belt drives of steam powered machinery. They also made the wheels, and often the frames, for spinning wheels for home use. First constructing the hub (called the nave), the spokes and the rim segments called felloes, (pronounced fell low), and assembling them all into a unit working from the center of the wheel outwards. Most wheels were made from wood, but other materials have been used, such as bone and horn, for decorative or other purposes. S ...
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John Wheelwright
John Wheelwright (c. 1592–1679) was a Puritan clergyman in England and America, noted for being banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Antinomian Controversy, and for subsequently establishing the town of Exeter, New Hampshire. Born in Lincolnshire, England, he graduated from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. Ordained in 1619, he became the vicar of Bilsby, Lincolnshire, until he was removed for simony. Leaving for New England in 1636, he was welcomed in Boston, where his brother-in-law's wife, Anne Hutchinson, was beginning to attract negative attention for her religious outspokenness. Soon he and Hutchinson accused the majority of the colony's ministers and magistrates of espousing a "covenant of works". As this controversy reached a peak, Hutchinson and Wheelwright were banished from the colony. Wheelwright went north with a group of followers during the harsh winter of 1637–1638, and in April 1638 established the town of Exeter in what would become th ...
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Worshipful Company Of Wheelwrights
The Worshipful Company of Wheelwrights is one of the Livery Companies of the City of London, England. An organisation of Wheelwrights and Coachmakers petitioned for incorporation in 1630. The petition was granted forty years later, in 1670, when a Royal Charter was granted to the Wheelwrights. (The Coachmakers were separately incorporated in 1677.) The Wheelwrights' Company was granted the status of a Livery Company in 1763. Over the years, wheel making has largely changed from being hand-made by craftsmen to being made by machines. Whilst there are a number of working wheelwrights still practising the ancient craft, which the company actively supports through its apprenticeship scheme, the company is no longer a trade association for wheelwrights. Instead, it functions largely as a charitable body focusing on mobility. The Wheelwrights' Company ranks sixty-eighth in the order of precedence for Livery Companies. Its motto is ''God Grant Unity''. See also * Wheelwright ...
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Wheelwright Museum Of The American Indian
The Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian is a museum devoted to Native American arts. It is located in Santa Fe, New Mexico and was founded in 1937 by Mary Cabot Wheelwright, who came from Boston, and Hastiin Klah, a Navajo singer and medicine man. History Wheelwright and Klah were introduced in 1921 and quickly became close friends. It was not long before they determined to create a permanent record of Klah's and other singers’ ritual knowledge. Klah dictated and Wheelwright recorded the Navajo Creation Story and other great narratives that form the basis of Navajo religion. While Wheelwright concentrated on the spoken word in Navajo ritual, Frances (“Franc”) Newcomb focused on the sandpaintings that are created and destroyed during healing ceremonies, recreating versions of them in tempera on paper. Klah participated in yet another way: he was a weaver, and his huge tapestries were also permanent records of sandpaintings. By the early 1930s, it was clear to Wheelwri ...
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Wainwright (other)
Wainwright may refer to: * Wainwright (occupation), a tradesperson skilled in the making and repairing of carts or wagons * Wainwright (surname), including the list of people Places Canada * Wainwright, Alberta, a town in Alberta ** Wainwright (provincial electoral district), former Alberta electoral district ** CFB Wainwright, Canadian Forces Base ** Municipal District of Wainwright No. 61, a municipal district in Alberta United States * Wainwright, Alabama * Wainwright, Alaska * Fort Wainwright, United States Army base located near Fairbanks, Alaska * Wainwright, Missouri * Wainwright, Jackson County, Ohio * Wainwright, Tuscarawas County, Ohio * Wainwright, Oklahoma Other uses * Wainwright (hill), one of 214 fells (hills and mountains) described in A. Wainwright's ''Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells'' * USC&GS Wainwright (1942) a survey ship in commission in the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey from 1942 to 1967 * USS ''Wainwright'', name of three United Stat ...
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Cartwright (other)
Cartwright may refer to: * Wainwright (occupation), a tradesperson skilled in the making and repairing of carts or wagons * Cartwright (surname), including the list of people Places ; Australia * Cartwright, New South Wales ; Canada * Cartwright, Manitoba * Cartwright, Newfoundland and Labrador ** Cartwright Airport * Cartwright High School in Blackstock, Ontario * Cartwright Point, Ontario * Cartwright Sound, British Columbia ; United States * Cartwright, North Dakota * Cartwright, Oklahoma * Cartwright, Texas Other uses * Cartwright Carmichael, basketball player * Cartwright Inquiry, an investigation into medical malpractice in New Zealand * Yt antigen system, also known as Cartwright See also * Wainwright (other) * Wheelwright (other) A wheelwright is a person who builds or repairs wheels. Wheelwright may also refer to: Places * Wheelwright, Kentucky, a city in Floyd County, Kentucky, USA * Wheelwright, Massachusetts, a village in the Town of Hardwi ...
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