- in the
process learn more
about the
people they only
remember as "the
Roadmakers". In a post-apocalypse
North America where almost everyone was killed...
- his
sight in childhood; a
violin player,
local guide,
bridgebuilder and
roadmaker. John
Walton (1784–1862),
entomologist William Hargrove (1788–1862), historian...
-
Prize (shortlist) for 'The
Blind Roadmaker' 2016
Forward Best
Collection Prize (shortlist) for 'The
Blind Roadmaker) 2008
Shirley Jackson Award for Best...
-
number of
quarries and lime
kilns in the area. The
village pub is The
Roadmaker,
originally named The New Inn. It is
owned and run by four ex-British...
-
Samuel Butler, 1835-1902, London: L. Parsons;, Small,
Maynard and
Company [
Roadmaker Series] (1924); reprinted: Freeport, NY,
Books for
Libraries Press [Select...
- 1913, and the
National Amalgamated Operative Street Masons,
Paviors and
Roadmakers Society of
Great Britain and
Ireland in 1919. In 1914,
Arthur Gill became...
- (PDF).
Western Australia Government Gazette. 16
August 1957. p. 2469. The
Roadmakers Eyre Highway. Main
Roads Department Western Australia.
September 1969...
-
Sharpe (Johnston's
Deputy Commissioner),
Bertram L.
Sclater (Surveyor,
Roadmaker, and
Commandant of the Constabulary),
Alexander Whyte (a
zoologist who...
-
diplomat Abena P. A.
Busia devoted a
chapter to Efua
Sutherland ("To the
Roadmaker:
Fragments of a Meditation") in her
volume of
poems Traces of a Life:...
- was the
construction of roads. The
rebellion of 1745
brought the
great roadmaker,
Marshal Wade, to Newcastle, and
inspired the
freeholders of Northumberland...