Ovenden is a village near Halifax, West Yorkshire, England.
Ovenden may also refer to:
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Thomas Watson may refer to:
Events from the year 1957 in Ireland.
Rowley may refer to:
Idle generally refers to idleness, a lack of motion or energy.
Nunnington is a small village and civil parish in the Ryedale district of North Yorkshire, England. The River Rye runs through the village. The population of the village taken at the 2011 census was 361.
Ure or URE may refer to:
The Brotherhood of Ruralists is a British art group founded in 1975 in Wellow, Somerset, to paint nature. Their work is figurative with a strong adherence to 'traditional' skills. Painting in oil and watercolour predominate, with mixed media assemblage, printmaking, ink and pencil drawing also being common. It has been described as "a kind of late twentieth-century reinvention of William Morris's arcadian craft guilds."
Julian Mark Ovenden is an English actor and singer. He has starred on Broadway and West End stages, in television series in both the UK and US, in films, and performed internationally as a concert and recording artist.
Pearse is a surname, and may refer to:
Ann Arnold née Telfer, was an English fine artist and a member of the Brotherhood of Ruralists. She was a figurative artist.
Graham Arnold was an English contemporary fine artist, working primarily in oil and mixed media.
Events from the year 1884 in the United Kingdom.
Derek is a male name. It is the English language short form of Diederik, the Low Franconian form of the name Theodoric. Theodoric is an old Germanic name with an original meaning of "people-ruler".
Hughes is an Anglicized spelling of the Welsh and Irish patronymic surname of French origin. The surname may also be the etymologically unrelated Picard variant "Hugh" of the Germanic name "Hugo".
The etymology of the surname Morrison is either Anglo-Norman, commonly found throughout England, Scotland and Ireland, or from the "Clan Morrison" and the myths and legends associated with bearers of the Morrison name in Scotland.
Armstrong is a surname of Scottish borders origin. It derives from a Middle English nickname which meant someone with strong arms. In Ireland the name was adopted as an Anglicization of two Gaelic names from Ulster: Mac Thréinfhir and Ó Labhraidh Tréan. Clan Armstrong is a clan from the border area between England and Scotland. The Scottish Armstrong is reputed to have been originally bestowed by "an antient (sic) king of Scotland" upon "Fairbairn, his armour-bearer" following an act of strength in battle. In the UK this surname is well represented in North East England, Cumbria, Lancashire, Yorkshire, Scottish Borders, Lanarkshire, Ayrshire, Dumfries & Galloway, and Northern Ireland, and in the US it is well represented in the Deep south, and other southern states.
Ovenden railway station served the village of Ovenden in West Yorkshire, England. It was on the Halifax and Ovenden Junction Railway, and closed in 1955. Because of the local area at Ovenden the L&Y and the GN did not think it was important to have a nice station so it was built of timber. However, it is the only station building which still exists, far outliving the stone buildings. Just along the line from Ovenden Station was Lee Bank Tunnel.
Graham Stuart Ovenden is an English painter, fine art photographer and writer.
Webb is an English and Scottish surname meaning weaver of cloth. Notable people with the surname include: