Gibbings

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Gibbings is a surname.

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Badfinger Welsh rock band

Badfinger were a Welsh/British rock band formed in Swansea that were active from the 1960s to the 1980s. Their best-known lineup consisted of Pete Ham, Mike Gibbins, Tom Evans, and Joey Molland. They are recognised for their influence on the 1970s power pop genre.

Michael George Gibbins was a Welsh musician, most notable for being the drummer of Badfinger.

<i>Wish You Were Here</i> (Badfinger album) 1974 studio album by Badfinger

Wish You Were Here is the sixth album by rock band Badfinger and their third consecutive album produced by Chris Thomas. It was recorded in the spring of 1974 at Colorado's Caribou Ranch and released in November of that year on Warner Bros. Records. Wish You Were Here was the second and last album the band released on the Warner's label.

David Gibbins is an underwater archaeologist and a bestselling novelist.

George Edward Cokayne British genealogist and author

George Edward Cokayne,, was an English genealogist and long-serving herald at the College of Arms in London, who eventually rose to the rank of Clarenceux King of Arms. He wrote the authoritative and standard reference works The Complete Peerage and The Complete Baronetage.

<i>Head First</i> (Badfinger album) 2000 studio album by Badfinger

Head First is the final studio album to be released by British rock band Badfinger, released on 14 November 2000, but recorded 26 years earlier in December 1974–January 1975, at the Beatles' Apple Studios in London, although it was not released at the time. Originally intended to be Badfinger's eighth album (WB), the recordings were shelved when legal difficulties erupted between the band and WB that year, and the version that was finally released was a rough mix of the album made in 1975 by Phil McDonald, one of the recording engineers at Apple Studios. The cover art for the album is a lion roaring.

Vivian Gibbins English footballer

William Vivian Talbot Gibbins was an English amateur footballer who played as a striker.

Gibbins is a surname.

Duncan Gibbins was a British film and music video director, as well as a screenwriter. Gibbins was known for his romance and thriller films as well as for the various music videos he directed. Gibbins's first break was with the 1986 release of, Fire with Fire, about a young woman who attends a Catholic school and a young man from a nearby prison camp who fall in love with each other and must runaway together to escape the law, the church and their parents. On 3 November 1993, Gibbins died as a result of third degree burns he received from a fire at the home he was renting. He was forty-one years old at the time of his death.

USNS <i>Henry Gibbins</i> (T-AP-183)

USNS Henry Gibbins (T-AP-183) was a troop transport that served with the United States Military Sea Transportation Service (MSTS) during the 1950s. Prior to her MSTS service, she served as US Army transport USAT Henry Gibbins during World War II. She later served with the New York Maritime Academy as TS Empire State IV and with the Massachusetts Maritime Academy as USTS Bay State.

Museum of Counterfeit Goods Museum in Bangkok, Thailand

The Tilleke & Gibbins Museum of Counterfeit Goods is a museum focused on intellectual property infringement in Yan Nawa District, Bangkok, Thailand. It is operated by Tilleke & Gibbins, a law firm with offices in Thailand and Vietnam. In the firm's Bangkok office on the 26th floor of Supalai Grand Tower, the museum is home to a variety of counterfeit and infringed goods that the firm has accumulated in its work.

Gibb is a surname of Scottish origin dating to the sixteenth century. It is a diminutive of "Gilbert".

USS <i>West Elcasco</i> (ID-3661)

USS West Elcasco (ID-3661) was a steel-hulled cargo ship which saw service as an auxiliary with the U.S. Navy in World War I and as an Army transport in World War II.

F. W. Thring Australian film director

Francis William Thring, better known as F. W. Thring, was an Australian film director, producer, and exhibitor.

Clara Gibbings is a 1934 Australian film directed by F.W. Thring about the owner of a London pub who discovers she is the daughter of an earl. It was a vehicle for stage star Dorothy Brunton.

Selly Oak Park public park in Selly Oak, Birmingham, England.

Selly Oak Park is a public park in Selly Oak, Birmingham, England. It is close to the University of Birmingham. The stump from the "Selly Oak", a large oak tree on Oak Tree Lane was situated in the park after it was felled in 1909.

Callum Gibbins is a New Zealand rugby union player who plays as a flanker for Glasgow Warriors in the Pro14.

The Mid Glamorganshire by-election of 1910 was held on 31 March 1910. The by-election was held due to the incumbent Liberal MP, Samuel Thomas Evans becoming President of the Probate and Divorce Division of the High Court of Justice. It was won by the Liberal-Labour candidate Frederick Gibbins.

Michael "Mick" Gibbins is an English former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1970s and 1980s. He played at representative level for Yorkshire, and at club level for Featherstone Rovers, and Hull FC, as a prop, or second-row, i.e. number 8 or 10, or, 11 or 12, during the era of contested scrums.

Gibbins Brook

Gibbin's Brook is a 16.8-hectare (42-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Sellindge in Kent.