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Howell
Howell may refer to: Places In the United States * Howell, Georgia, an unincorporated community * Howell, Evansville, a neighborhood in Indiana * Howell, Michigan, a city in Livingston County * Howell County, Missouri * Howell, Missouri, an unincorporated community * Howell, Utah, a town * Howell Mountains, California * Howell Island, Missouri - see Howell Island Conservation Area * Howell Township (other), several places Elsewhere * Howell, Lincolnshire, England, a hamlet ** Asgarby and Howell, a civil parish in Lincolnshire * Howell, New South Wales, Australia, a locality and ghost town * Mount Howell, Ellsworth Land, Antarctica * Howell Peak, Oates Land, Antarctica Businesses * Howell, Soskin, a defunct American publisher acquired by Crown Publishing Group, Crown Books * John Howell & Son, British building and engineering company * Howell Works, a 19th century pig iron producing facility in New Jersey, United States Other uses *Howell (name), a surname and giv ...
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Howell (name)
Howell ( , ) is a surname and given name originating from Wales. It is an Anglicisation, anglicised form of the Welsh name Hywel. It originates in a dynasty of kings in Wales and Brittany in the 9th and 10th-centuries, most notably king Hywel Dda ("Howel the Good") and three Welsh royal houses of that time onwards. The royal House of Tudor was also descended from them. Today, nearly 200,000 people bear this surname. Etymology and history Welsh origin The name Howell originates from the Welsh language, Welsh masculine given name, Hywel, meaning "eminent" or "prominent", derived from the Old Welsh given name, Higuel. Literally meaning, wiktionary:hy-#Welshhy, ''hy-'' (“good”) + wiktionary:gwêl#Welsh, ''gwêl'' (“sight”), "well-seen". The first known recording of the name comes in the ''Anglo-Saxon Chronicle'', referring to a Brittonic Peoples, Brittonic king known as Huwal of the West Welsh in 926 AD. Many scholars believe this to be referring to the 10th-century law ...
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Howell County, Missouri
Howell County is in southern Missouri. As of the 2020 census, the population was 39,750. The largest city and county seat is West Plains. The county was officially organized on March 2, 1857, and is named after Josiah Howell, a pioneer settler in the Howell Valley. Howell County comprises the West Plains, MO, Micropolitan Statistical Area. History Howell County was organized on March 2, 1857, from Oregon County, and is named for Josiah Howell, who made the first settlement in Howell Valley. The first circuit court met in a log cabin one mile east of West Plains, according to an 1876 account. A small, wooden courthouse was built on the square in West Plains in 1859. It was damaged during the Civil War in 1862. The county was reorganized three years later, but all of the county records were destroyed in an 1866 fire. A second courthouse was built in West Plains in 1869. It was a small, three-room, frame building, about 24 by 30 feet. Geography According to the U.S. Census B ...
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Howell, Georgia
Howell is an unincorporated community An unincorporated area is a parcel of land that is not governed by a local general-purpose municipal corporation. (At p. 178.) They may be governed or serviced by an encompassing unit (such as a county) or another branch of the state (such as th ... and former town in Echols County, in the U.S. state of Georgia. History A post office called Howell was established in 1899, and remained in operation until 1957. The Georgia General Assembly incorporated the place in 1905 as the Town of Howell. The town's municipal charter was dissolved in 1995. It first appeared as a town in the 1910 United States census with a population of 194. It last appeared in the 1970 United States census. It was consolidated into the Echols County government in 2008. References Former municipalities in Georgia (U.S. state) Unincorporated communities in Echols County, Georgia Populated places disestablished in 1995 {{EcholsCountyGA-geo-stub ...
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Howell Works
Howell Works (later the Howell Works Company) was a bog iron-based production facility for pig iron which was established in New Jersey in the early 19th century by United States, American engineer and philanthropist James P. Allaire. It is notable as one of the earliest American examples of a company town. Allaire purchased the Howell Works property to provide pig iron for his Allaire Iron Works in New York City, New York, which was at the time a leading manufacturer of marine steam engines. The Howell Works also manufactured its own lines of cast iron products. Allaire eventually transformed the Howell Works into an almost completely self-sufficient community, with its own housing and food supply for the workforce, its own post office, church, school and company store, even its own currency. After bog iron was made redundant by the increasing availability of iron ore, Allaire closed the Howell Works and eventually retired there with his family. The property remained in private ha ...
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Howell Shrublands
Howell is a locality, on the western slopes of the Northern Tablelands, within the New England (New South Wales), New England region of New South Wales, Australia. There was once a mining village of the same name, now a ghost town. Much of the effective western boundary of the locality is part of the shoreline of Copeton Dam, Lake Copeton, as a portion of the locality is now inundated. Howell is mainly forested, with some land cleared for agriculture. The area now known as Howell lies on the traditional lands of Kamilaroi people. The name Howell also is applied to an endangered ecological community, ''Howell Shrublands in the New England Tableland and Nandewar Bioregions,'' based on distinctive natural vegetation. It is characterised by low shrubs, in particular ''Babingtonia densifolia'' and ''Homoranthus prolixus.'' However, the mix of species at sites varies considerably over time, including when all shrub species may be absent, resulting in a natural grassland, or when some ...
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Howell Mountain AVA
Howell Mountain is an American Viticultural Area (AVA) located in Napa County, California and the first sub-AVA within the internationally-acclaimed Napa Valley. The region was effectively recognized on January 30, 1984 by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF), Treasury after reviewing the petition submitted by members of the grape-growing and wine-producing industries in the area proposing to establish a viticultural area named "Howell Mountain." The area is located in the Howell Mountains within the Vaca Range on the northeast side of valley around the town of Angwin and overlooks the town of St. Helena. The boundaries of the AVA are dictated by vineyards located at elevations at and above . History Among the early vineyards established in the Howell Mountain region was by two experienced French winemakers, Brun and Chaix, in 1877. They started a successful wine enterprise contributing to the industry boom in the 1880s. Their winery had a capacity of . The m ...
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Howell Mountain, California
Howell Mountain (formerly, White Cottage) is an unincorporated community in the Vaca Mountains, within Napa County, California. It lies at an elevation of 1683 feet (513 m). History Howell Mountain was originally territory of the Wappo people. It was settled by European-Americans beginning in the 1840s. Wine grapes were first planted on the mountain in the 1870s by William Campbell Watson, grandson-in-law of settler George Yount. Numerous wineries and health spas were built in the area in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In August 2020, Howell Mountain was evacuated due to the Hennessey Fire, which resulted in the burning of over in five counties, including near Howell Mountain. Geography Howell Mountain is located north-northeast of Saint Helena.  For census purposes, it forms part of the Angwin census-designated place A census-designated place (CDP) is a Place (United States Census Bureau), concentration of population defined by the United St ...
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Howell House (other)
Howell House may refer to: in the United States (by state then city) * Storm Cellar, William Howell House, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in White County * Howell-Garner-Monfee House, North Little Rock, Arkansas * Howell House (Escondido, California), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in San Diego County * Mrs. George Arthur Howell Jr. House, Atlanta, Georgia, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Fulton County * William Dean Howells House (Cambridge, Massachusetts) * Howell House (Reno, Nevada), listed on the NRHP in Washoe County * Benjamin Howell Homestead, Parsippany, New Jersey, listed on the NRHP in Morris County * Edgar W. Howell House, Buffalo, New York * Howell-Butler House, Roseboro, North Carolina * Howell Homeplace, Tarboro, North Carolina * Alden and Thomasene Howell House, Waynesville, North Carolina * John W. Howell House, Monmouth, Oregon, listed on the NRHP in Polk County * Howell-Kohlhagen House, Roseburg, O ...
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Hugh Howell Road
State Route 236 is a long state highway in Fulton County and DeKalb County, Georgia. The route begins at Piedmont Road ( SR 237) in south Buckhead and ends at Lawrenceville Highway (US 29/ SR 8) in Tucker. It is signed as Lindbergh Drive in Fulton County, and LaVista Road in DeKalb County. Route description SR 236 begins at an intersection with SR 237 (Piedmont Road) in Buckhead, Atlanta. The route heads east on Lindbergh Drive, a street which begins a mile to the west of SR 237 at US 19/ SR 9. Midway between SR 237 and the Fulton-DeKalb County line, SR 236 passes under a large interchange connecting Interstate 85, SR 13, and SR 400 and connects to I-85 northbound HOV lane via an on-ramp located in the center of the interchange. Past I-85, SR 236 curves to the southeast and crosses into DeKalb County, where Lindbergh Drive becomes LaVista Road at Cheshire Bridge Road. As LaVista Road, SR 236 is two lanes wide and has a 35 miles per hour speed limit. As the route heads ea ...
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Duplicate Bridge
Duplicate bridge is a variation of contract bridge where the same set of bridge deals (i.e., the distribution of the 52 cards among the four hands) are played by different competitors, and scoring is based on relative performance. In this way, every hand, whether strong or weak, is played in competition with others playing identical cards, and the element of skill is heightened while that of chance is reduced. This stands in contrast to Bridge played without duplication, where each hand is freshly dealt and where scores may be more affected by chance in the short run. Four-way card holders known as Board (bridge), bridge boards are used to enable each player's hand to be preserved from table to table, and final scores are calculated by comparing each pair's result with others who played the same hand. In duplicate bridge, players normally play all the hands with the same partner, and compete either as a partnership (in a 'Pairs tournament') or on a team with one or more other p ...
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Howell Trophy
The Howell Trophy or Cellular South Howell Trophy or C Spire Howell Trophy is an award given annually to the best men's college basketball player in the state of Mississippi by the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame. It is open to players from all four-year colleges in Mississippi. It has only been won by a non-Division I player once. The trophy is named after former Mississippi State Mississippi State University for Agriculture and Applied Science, commonly known as Mississippi State University (MSU), is a public land-grant research university in Mississippi State, Mississippi, United States. It is classified among "R ... star Bailey Howell. Winners and finalists Trophies won by school See also Other annual awards presented by the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame for the best players in that state: * Gillom Trophy – given to the best women's college basketball player * C Spire Ferriss Trophy – given to the best college baseball player * Conerly Trophy – giv ...
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Howell High School (other)
Howell High School may refer to: * Howell High School (Howell, Michigan), United States * Francis Howell Central High School, Cottleville, Missouri, United States * Howell High School (New Jersey), Farmingdale, New Jersey, United States * Clement Howell High School, Providenciales, Turks and Caicos {{schooldis ...
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