For the American Civil War battles Battle of the WeldonRailroad disambiguation Originally chartered in 1835 as the Wilmington and Raleigh Railroad , the Wilmington and WeldonRailroad name began use in 1855. At the time of its 1840 completion, the line was the longest railroad in the world with 161.5 miles of track. ref http www.lib.unc.edu ncc ref nchistory mar2006 index.html UNC University Libraries This Month in North Carolina History March 1840 ref The railroad played a key role in the Siege of Petersburg during the American Civil War . Among the early employees of the W&W RR was assistant engineer William G. Lewis . The future Civil War general began his railroad career in 1858. From 1854 to 1871 S.L. Fremont was Chief Engineer and Superintendent, Fremont, North Carolina is named in his honor. In 1872, the railroad was leased by the Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad , but this lease ended in 1878 when the WC&A went bankrupt. Eventually the W&R was merged into the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad on April 21, 1900. References reflist http www.cfhi.net DuplinRoadsBeforeWallceAHistory.php Duplin Roads Before Wallce DEFAULTSORT WilmingtonWeldonRailroad Category Defunct North Carolina railroads Category Predecessors of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Category Railway companies established in 1855 Category Railway companies disestablished in 1900 Category Defunct South Carolina railroads US rail transport stub ... more details
Chartered in 1834, the Wilmington and Raleigh Railroad began operations in 1840 between Wilmington, North Carolina and Weldon, NC . With 161.5 miles of track, it is said to have been the longest railroad in the world at the time of its completion. The name was changed in 1855 to the Wilmington and WeldonRailroad . The Wilmington and Raleigh Railroad is one of the earliest ancestors of the current CSX Transportation . External links http www.weldonnc.com History of Weldon.htm History of Weldon DEFAULTSORT Wilmington Raleigh Railroad Category Defunct North Carolina railroads Category Predecessors of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Category Railway companies established in 1834 Category Railway companies disestablished in 1855 US rail transport stub ... more details
The Battle of the WeldonRailroad refers to two actions in Virginia during the American Civil War The First Battle of the WeldonRailroad is now more commonly referred to as the Battle of Jerusalem Plank Road . The Second Battle of the WeldonRailroad is now usually referred to as the Battle of Globe Tavern . disambig ... more details
Infobox rail railroad name Wilmington and Carolina Railroad logo filename logo size marks locale start year 1870 end year 1870 successor line Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad gauge 5 ft 0 in hq city The Wilmington and Carolina Railroad was a South Carolina railroad company formed in January 1870 when the Wilmington and Manchester Railroad was reorganized. It lasted until April 1870, when the company was reorganized again as the Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad . DEFAULTSORT Wilmington and Carolina Railroad Category Defunct South Carolina railroads Category Railway companies established in 1870 Category Railway companies disestablished in 1870 US rail transport stub SouthCarolina stub ... more details
The Wilmington and Conway Railroad was a short lived Southeastern railroad that operated in South Carolina and North Carolina near the end of the 19th century. The Wilmington and Conway was created after the Wilmington, Chadbourn and Conway Railroad was sold at foreclosure in 1895. ref Wikipedia WikiProject Trains ICC valuations Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Wikipedia, WikiProject Trains, ICC valuations, Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ref The following year, the Wilmington and Conway was sold to the Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad . ref Wikipedia WikiProject Trains ICC valuations Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Wikipedia, WikiProject Trains, ICC valuations, Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ref The Chadbourn Lumber Company of Chadbourn, North Carolina , originally built the line to haul timber. ref http nationalregister.sc.gov SurveyReports ConwayReportFINALsm.pdf A Historical and Architectural Survey of Conway, page 28 ref References reflist DEFAULTSORT Wilmington and Conway Railroad Category Defunct South Carolina railroads Category Railway companies established in 1895 Category Railway companies disestablished in 1896 US rail transport stub ... more details
Infobox SG rail railroad name Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad logo filename logo size marks locale start year 1870 end year 1898 successor line Atlantic Coast Line Railroad old gauge br original gauge 5 ft 0 in hq city The Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad was a Southeastern United States railroad that served South Carolina and North Carolina during the second half of the 19th century . Formation The Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta was formed after the short lived Wilmington and Carolina Railroad was reorganized in mid 1870. Sale The line lasted until 1898 when it was absorbed into the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad . See also Columbia and Augusta Railroad References references DEFAULTSORT Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad Category Defunct South Carolina railroads Category Defunct North Carolina railroads Category Railway companies established in 1870 Category Railway companies disestablished in 1898 US rail transport stub ... more details
Infobox rail railroad name Wilmington and Manchester Railroad logo filename logo size marks locale start year 1853 end year 1870 successor line Wilmington and Carolina Railroad gauge 5 ft 0 in hq city The Wilmington and Manchester Railroad was a railroad that served South Carolina and North Carolina before, during and after the American Civil War . It received its charter in 1846 and began operation in 1853 from Wilmington, North Carolina , extending west to Camden Crossing, South Carolina . The track gauge was 5 ft 0 in. ref http www.csa railroads.com Wilmington and Manchester.htm ref Route The 163 mile route was built to haul South Carolina cotton to the Port of Wilmington, which was attempting to compete with the Port of Charleston, South Carolina Charleston . ref http tsalmon.topcities.com scrr wm.htm South Carolina Railroad History, Wilmington and Manchester Railroad ref The railroad would go on to become a major shipper of naval stores and cotton. ref http tsalmon.topcities.com scrr wm.htm South Carolina Railroad History, Wilmington and Manchester Railroad ref American Civil War The line was devastated at the end of the war between the States when Union Gen. William T. Sherman dispatched some 2,500 federal troops from the South Carolina coast to locate locomotive s and rolling stock that the Confederates were hiding in the state s hinterland. ref http www.angelfire.com un joneshistory PS.html The Golden Rule in 19th Century South Carolina Labor People and their Parallel Government ref In April 1865, the force, under Gen. Edward E. Potter located nine locomotives and approximately 200 cars, many belonging to the Wilmington and Manchester, near Manchester, South Carolina ... and helped get the line back in operating order. However, the Wilmington and Manchester declared bankruptcy in 1870. The railroad was reorganized as the short lived Wilmington and Carolina Railroad and again as the Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad . References reflist Category Defunct South ... more details
Infobox SG rail railroad name Wilmington Terminal Railroad logo filename G&W WT logo.jpg logo size 116 marks WTRY locale Wilmington, North Carolina start year 1986 hq city Wilmington, North Carolina The Wilmington Terminal Railroad reporting mark WTRY is a shortline railroad serving the Port of Wilmington North Carolina . It began operations in 1986 over trackage owned by the North Carolina Ports Railway Commission , whose other lines at Morehead City, NC Morehead City were simultaneously leased to the Carolina Rail Services Company . The company is owned by Rail Link, Inc. , a subsidiary of Genesee & Wyoming Inc. , ref North Carolina Railway Association http www.ncrailways.org companies WTRY.htm Wilmington Terminal Railroad ref which acquired it from the Rail Management Corporation in 2005. The Ports Railway Commission acquired the lines from who? in 1980, and expanded its property, leased to WTRY, through a purchase of spurs from CSX Transportation in 1993. In 2002, the lines were transferred to the North Carolina State Ports Authority , in accordance with a recently passed state law. ref http www.stb.dot.gov decisions readingroom.nsf WEBUNID B6F6C6398CCBF76285256C5C0058536C?OpenDocument STB Finance Docket No. 34258 , October 31, 2002 ref References reflist North Carolina railroads DEFAULTSORT Wilmington Terminal Railroad Category North Carolina railroads Category Genesee & Wyoming Inc. Category Railway companies established in 1986 ... more details
The Wilmington, Chadbourn and Conway Railroad was a Southeastern railroad that operated in South Carolina and North Carolina near the end of the 19th century. The Chadbourn Lumber Company of Chadbourn, North Carolina , built the line to haul timber. ref http nationalregister.sc.gov SurveyReports ConwayReportFINALsm.pdf A Historical and Architectural Survey of Conway, page 28 ref The line crossed the North Carolina line at Tabor City, North Carolina . and threaded south through Loris, South Carolina , into Conway, South Carolina to its terminus at the Waccamaw River . ref http nationalregister.sc.gov SurveyReports ConwayReportFINALsm.pdf A Historical and Architectural Survey of Conway, page 28 ref The line was sold at foreclosure in 1895 and renamed the Wilmington and Conway Railroad . ref Wikipedia WikiProject Trains ICC valuations Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Wikipedia, WikiProject Trains, ICC valuations, Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ref The following year, the Wilmington and Conway was sold to the Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad . ref Wikipedia WikiProject Trains ICC valuations Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Wikipedia, WikiProject Trains, ICC valuations, Atlantic Coast Line Railroad ref References reflist DEFAULTSORT Wilmington, Chadbourn and Conway Railroad Category Defunct South Carolina railroads Category Railway companies established in 1885 Category Railway companies disestablished in 1895 US rail transport stub ... more details
Infobox SG rail railroad name Hoosac Tunnel and WilmingtonRailroad logo filename logo size system map ... 1971 predecessor line Deerfield River Railroad successor line gauge old gauge convert 3 ft mm electrificaion length convert 25 mi km hq city Wilmington, Vermont website Railway line header BS header Hoosac Tunnel and WilmingtonRailroad BS table BS3 exKBHFa 0 Wilmington, Vermont Wilmington BS3 exBHF ... to the Hoosac Tunnel and WilmingtonRailroad . However, the final convert 14 mi km of track to Wilmington ... that were laid at various times near Wilmington and Readsboro remained narrow gauge. The railroad ... Hoosac Tunnel WilmingtonRailroad Category Defunct Vermont railroads Category Defunct Massachusetts ... de Hoosac Tunnel and WilmingtonRailroad ... Bridge, Massachusetts Monroe Bridge BS3 STRq eABZ3rf 25 Hoosac Tunnel Boston and Maine Railroad The Hoosac Tunnel and WilmingtonRailroad was an interstate railroad in southwestern Vermont and northwestern Massachusetts . It ran from Florida, Massachusetts Hoosac Tunnel, Massachusetts to Wilmington ... granted a charter to construct the Deerfield Valley Railroad in 1884, and a RailGauge 3 narrow gauge railway narrow gauge railroad was constructed over the convert 11 mi km from Hoosac Tunnel ... Harriman Dam in 1924, both of which were owned by the New England Power Company, which purchased the railroad in 1920. Originally the power company did not want to relocate the portion of the railroad flooded by the Harriman Dam, but was forced to by the citizens of Wilmington. The power company sold the railroad to local investors in 1928, who operated the railroad until a major flood in 1936 destroyed a bridge near Mountain Mills in Vermont. The railroad was sold again at that time, and the portion ... 1971, when the line was finally abandoned. Stations The railroad stopped at the following locations ..., Vermont Jacksonville, Vermont Mountain Mills, Vermont Wilmington, Vermont Popular nicknames for the HT ... more details
Cleanup date May 2009 Refimprove date December 2010 Infobox SG rail railroad name Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad logo filename logo size old gauge system map map caption map size marks ... The Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad was the Pennsylvania Railroad s main line ... , and the two companies merged April 18, 1836 to form the Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad ... ref The New Castle and WilmingtonRailroad was chartered to connect the two railroads, but was not constructed ... box before The Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company br Baltimore and Port Deposite Rail Road Company br The Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad Company The New Castle and Frenchtown ..., Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company big years formed by merger February 12, 1838 br merged ... big The Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company big years name changed March 14, 1836 br merged February 12, 1838 after Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company succession ... March 5, 1832 br merged February 12, 1838 after Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company ... chartered January 18, 1832 br merged April 18, 1836 after The Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad ... March 14, 1832 br merged April 18, 1836 after The Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad Company ... Road Company title big The Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad Company big years formed by merger April 18, 1836 br merged February 12, 1838 after Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company S end DEFAULTSORT Philadelphia Wilmington Baltimore Railroad Category Defunct Delaware railroads ... 1902 predecessor line successor line Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad electrification ... on April 2, 1831. It changed its name on March 14, 1836 to the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company . Chapter 296 of the 1831 Session Laws of Maryland, passed March 14, 1832, chartered ... other point on the Susquehanna River to the Delaware state line. The Wilmington and Susquehanna ... more details
Infobox SG rail railroad name Wilmington and Western Railroad logo filename WW Logo rollover.png logo ... year 1982 hq city Marshallton, Delaware The Wilmington and Western Railroad reporting mark WWRC is a freight railroad freight and heritage railroad in northern Delaware , operating over a former Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B&O branch between Wilmington, DE Wilmington and Hockessin, DE Hockessin ... and Chester County Railroad Company , passed February 5, 1867 ref and was renamed the Wilmington and Western Railroad in March 1869, ref name ICC Interstate Commerce Commission , 42 Val. Rep ... history.asp Wilmington & Western Railroad History , accessed February 2009 ref A foreclosure sale in April 1877 produced the Delaware Western Railroad , which was incorporated in June 1877 and merged into the Baltimore and Philadelphia Railroad , a B&O subsidiary, in February 1883. ref name ICC The B&O ... header BS header Wilmington and Western Railroad BS table BS2 ENDEa BS2 BUE Delaware Route 41 BS2 BHF ... links http www.wwrr.com Wilmington & Western Railroad http www.steamphotos.com Railroad Photos Wilmington Western Railroad 3358003 Z7X7V Wilmington & Western Railroad Photos Delaware railroads Registered Historic Places DEFAULTSORT Wilmington Western Railroad Category Railway related listings ... Castle County, Delaware simple Wilmington and Western Railroad ... 98 and 58 get ready to pull a double header The Delaware and Chester County Railroad was incorporated in February 1867 to build from Wilmington in the direction of Parkesburg, PA Parkesburg or Atglen ... to the railroad. Two trestles were entirely destroyed by the flooding of Red Clay Creek, which ... swept away or irreparably damaged. Despite the damage caused by these storms, the Wilmington and Western ... Valley Railroad . EMD SW1 SW 1 8408 was built in 1940 by the Electro Motive Diesel Electro Motive Corporation EMC of General Motors and served the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in freight service ... more details
The Wilmington, Onslow and East Carolina Railroad was incorporated by the North Carolina General Assembly in 1885 ref http books.google.com books?id 4Jc4AAAAIAAJ&pg PA445&lpg PA445&dq 22Wilmington, Onslow and East Carolina Railroad 22&source bl&ots Dn7DUHNqfq&sig aiE FC8mA7WaEvZ8GNDAcXyaR8w&hl en&ei zdn3TNGVIYSglAf5qvyMAg&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum 5&ved 0CCYQ6AEwBDgK v onepage&q 22Wilmington 2C 20Onslow 20and 20East 20Carolina 20Railroad 22&f false Laws and resolutions of the State of North Carolina, passed by the General Assembly at its session, 1885, page 439 ref and existed until 1893, when it was merged into the Wilmington, Newbern and Norfolk Railroad . It eventually became part of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad . References reflist Category Predecessors of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Category Defunct North Carolina railroads Category Railway companies established in 1885 Category Railway companies disestablished in 1893 US rail transport stub ... more details
Weldon may refer to Weldon s bark grinding mill , a type of bark mill Places In Canada Weldon, Saskatchewan In England Weldon, Northamptonshire Weldon, Northumberland In the United States Weldon, Arkansas Weldon, California Weldon, Illinois Weldon, Iowa Weldon, North Carolina Weldon Township, Michigan People People called Weldon , Welldon or Wheldon Anthony Weldon Casey Bill Weldon , an American blues musician Catherine Weldon Curt Weldon , a former American Congressman R PA , involved in various national security roles Dan Wheldon , a British Racecar Driver compete in Indy Racing League Dave Weldon , an American Congressman R FL Fay Weldon , a British writer Felix de Weldon George Weldon Fred Wheldon Sir Huw Wheldon , a British TV presenter and executive James Edward Cowell Welldon John Weldon disambiguation Dame Juliet Wheldon , a British civil servant Mark Weldon politician , a British local body politician Mark Weldon New Zealand , a New Zealand CEO and former swimmer Paul Weldon Richard B. Weldon, Jr. , an American politician Walter Frank Raphael Weldon , a British statistician Walter Weldon , a British chemist Weldon process William C. Weldon , a CEO of Johnson & Johnson William Weldon officer of arms Weldon Santos de Andrade , a Brazilian football player Schools called WeldonWeldon Park Academy London, Ontario, Canada See also Welton disambiguation disambig de Weldon es Weldon fr Weldon it Weldon nl Weldon ja pl Weldon pt Weldon fi Weldon sv Weldon vo Weldon ... more details
TOCright Wilmington may refer to People Spencer Compton, 1st Earl of Wilmington , British Prime Minister, 1742 1743, who gave his name to many of the places called Wilmington. Earl of Wilmington , a title in the Peerage of Great Britain created in 1730 for Spencer Compton Places sorted alphabetically by country and then by size In Australia Wilmington, South Australia In the United Kingdom Wilmington, Devon Wilmington, Kent Wilmington, Somerset Wilmington, a village in the civil parish of Long Man , East Sussex, England In the United States Cities Wilmington, Delaware Wilmington, Will County, Illinois Wilmington, North Carolina Wilmington, Ohio Towns and villages Wilmington, Los Angeles, California Wilmington, Greene County, Illinois Wilmington, Indiana Wilmington, Massachusetts Wilmington MBTA station Wilmington Township, Minnesota Wilmington, New York Wilmington Township, Lawrence County, Pennsylvania Wilmington Township, Mercer County, Pennsylvania Wilmington, Vermont Wilmington Island, Georgia Wilmington River Georgia Wilmington River Wilmington Manor, Delaware New Wilmington, Pennsylvania , Lawrence County, Pennsylvania South Wilmington, Illinois , Grundy County, Illinois Other communities Wilmington Hundred , an unincorporated subdivision of New Castle County, Delaware Educational institutions Wilmington College Ohio , in Wilmington, Ohio Wilmington University , New Castle, Delaware University of North Carolina at Wilmington , in Wilmington, North Carolina See also USS Cabot CVL 28 was laid down as Wilmington CL 79 disambig geo DEFAULTSORT Wilmington Category English toponyms bg ca Wilmington desambiguaci de Wilmington es Wilmington fr Wilmington ko it Wilmington sw Wilmington nl Wilmington ja no Wilmington pl Wilmington pt Wilmington ru simple Wilmington sk Wilmington fi Wilmington sv Wilmington vo Wilmington zh ... more details
Richard Weldon may refer to Richard B. Weldon, Jr. , state senator in Maryland Richard Chapman Weldon , Canadian law professor hndis Weldon, Richard ... more details
Mark Weldon may refer to Mark Weldon politician , British politician Mark Weldon New Zealand , New Zealand executive and former swimmer hndis Weldon, Mark ... more details
Weldon Canyon is the name of two canyon s in California . Los Angeles County In Los Angeles County, California , United States , at coord 39 19 59 N 118 30 21 W , Weldon is a canyon through which Interstate 5 California Interstate 5 passes. The Old Road, now paralleled by I 5, opened on May 28, 1930 through the canyon as a bypass of the 1910 Newhall Tunnel . This original road through the canyon was 20 feet 6 m wide and made of concrete . The canyon is named after Arthur Weldon , who helped build the Southern Pacific Railroad s nearby San Fernando Tunnel . ref name s60 61 Harrison Irving Scott, Ridge Route The Road That United California, pp. 60 61, third printing, 2003, ISBN 0 615 12000 8 ref Solano County In Solano County, California , at Coord 38 24 42 N 122 03 01 W region US CA type landmark name Weldon Canyon in Solano County , Weldon is the name sometimes given to a canyon west of Vacaville, California . ref http maps.google.com maps?ll 38.411668, 122.050381&t p ref Weldon canyon is mentioned in the diaries of Willis Linn Jepson . This canyon is now more commonly called Mix Canyon . Mix Canyon Road runs through it. References Reflist Category Santa Susana Mountains Category Geography of Los Angeles, California Category Landforms of Los Angeles County, California Category Landforms of the San Francisco Bay Area Category Canyons and gorges of California Category Historic trails and roads in California Category Transportation in the San Fernando Valley ... more details
William Weldon may refer to William C. Weldon , current Chief Executive Officer of Johnson & Johnson William Henry Weldon , long serving officer of arms at the College of Arms in London hndis Weldon, William ... more details
John Weldon may refer to John Weldon musician 1676 1736 , British musician John Weldon animator , Academy Award winning National Film Board of Canada animator See also Brinsley MacNamara 1890 1963 , Irish writer, born John Weldon hndis name Weldon, John ... more details
Infobox MLB player name Weldon Wyckoff image Weldon Wyckoff, 1914.jpg position Pitcher bats Right throws Right birth date birth date 1892 2 19 birth place Williamsport, Pennsylvania death date death date and age 1961 5 8 1892 2 19 death place Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin debutdate April 19 debutyear by 1913 debutteam Philadelphia Athletics finaldate May 8 finalyear by 1918 finalteam Boston Red Sox stat1label Win loss record pitching Win loss record stat1value 23 34 stat2label Earned run average stat2value 3.55 stat3label Strikeout s stat3value 299 teams nowiki nowiki This forces MediaWiki to recognize the first bullet. Kind of a workaround to a bug. Philadelphia Athletics by 1913 by 1916 Boston Red Sox by 1916 by 1918 John Weldon Wyckoff February 19, 1892 May 8, 1961 was a starting pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Oakland Athletics Philadelphia Athletics 1913 1916 start and Boston Red Sox 1917 end 1918 . Wyckoff batted and threw right handed. He was born in Williamsport, Pennsylvania . In some baseball resources, he is referred as John Wyckoff . In a six season career, Wyckoff posted a 23 34 record with 299 strikeout s and a 3.55 earned run average ERA in 573 2 3 innings pitched . Wyckoff attended Bucknell University and began his baseball career at age 19 with http www.russpickett.com history baseball.htm Wilmington in the Tri State League in 1911. He joined the Philadelphia Athletics two years later. His most productive season came in 1914, when he recorded career highs with 11 win baseball wins and a 3.02 ERA, and pitched in Game One of the 1914 World Series World Series . A hard thrower, Wyckoff was prone to wildness, always base on balls walking more batters than he struck out. In 1915 he led the American League with 165 walks in 276 innings. A year ... Wyckoff, Weldon ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION American baseball pitcher DATE OF BIRTH February ... Falls, Wisconsin DEFAULTSORT Wyckoff, Weldon Category Boston Red Sox players Category Philadelphia ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Wilmington Hundred is the name of an unincorporated subdivision of New Castle County, Delaware New Castle County , Delaware . Hundred division Hundreds were once used as a basis for representation in the Delaware General Assembly , and while their names still appear on all real estate transactions, they presently have no meaningful use or purpose except as a geographical point of reference. Boundaries and Formation Wilmington Hundred is that portion of New Castle County that surrounds the confluence of the Christiana River , and Brandywine Creek Christina River Brandywine Creek , where they enter the Delaware River , and is one and the same as the municipal corporation of the city of Wilmington, Delaware Wilmington . It was formed from Christiana Hundred , Brandywine Hundred and New Castle Hundred in 1855 and was named for the city of Wilmington, under which name the entire area is incorporated. Development Wilmington Hundred has been a fully urbanized area since the late 19th century, including residential, commercial, and industrial areas. Geography The important geographical features are the Christiana River, Brandywine Creek, and the Delaware River, which forms its eastern boundary. It is in the piedmont United States piedmont and Atlantic Coastal Plain coastal plain regions with several low hills overlooking the Delaware River. The fall line cuts through the hundred. Transportation Important roads include portions of Interstate 95 in Delaware ..., Wilmington and Dover, Concord Avenue Delaware Route 202 , and the old main highway between Wilmington and Baltimore, now Maryland Avenue Delaware Route 4 . A portion of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad , subsequently the main north south line of the Pennsylvania Railroad , now Amtrak , and a portion of the old Baltimore and Ohio Railroad , now CSX Transportation , both cross through Wilmington. New Castle County, Delaware Delaware Category Hundreds in New Castle County ... more details
Wilmington College may refer to Wilmington College Ohio Wilmington University , formerly known as Wilmington College in the state of Delaware University of North Carolina at Wilmington , formerly known as Wilmington College schooldis ... more details
The Burdett , later Weldon Baronetcy , of Dunmore in the County of Carlow, is a title in the Baronetage of Ireland . It was created on 11 July 1723 for Sir Thomas Burdett, 1st Baronet Thomas Burdett , who represented Carlow County Parliament of Ireland constituency Carlow County and Carlow Borough Parliament of Ireland constituency Carlow Borough in the Irish House of Commons , with remainder, in default of male issue of his own, to the male issue of his sister Anne, wife of Walter Weldon. The sixth Baronet was a Colonel in the British Army . Burdett, later Weldon Baronets, of Dunmore 1723 Sir Thomas Burdett, 1st Baronet 1668 1727 Sir William Vigors Burdett, 2nd Baronet 1715 1798 Sir William Bagenal Burdett, 3rd Baronet 1770 1840 Sir Anthony Weldon, 4th Baronet 1781 1858 Sir Anthony Crossdill Weldon, 5th Baronet 1827 1900 Sir Anthony Arthur Weldon, 6th Baronet 1863 1917 Sir Anthony Edward Wolseley Weldon, 7th Baronet 1902 1971 Sir Thomas Brian Weldon, 8th Baronet 1905 1979 Sir Anthony William Weldon, 9th Baronet b. 1947 References Kidd, Charles, Williamson, David editors . Debrett s Peerage and Baronetage 1990 edition . New York St Martin s Press, 1990. Rayment bt date March 2012 Use dmy dates date March 2012 Category Baronetcies Weldon Category 1723 establishments in Ireland ... more details
Orphan date January 2012 Barbara Weldon 1829&ndash 1882 was a notable New Zealand prostitute and character. She was born in County Limerick , Ireland in about 1829. ref name DNZB Weldon DNZB title Barbara Weldon first Anne last Hutchison id 1w11 accessdate December 2011 ref References Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Weldon, Barbara ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Prostitute, character DATE OF BIRTH 1829 PLACE OF BIRTH County Limerick, Ireland DATE OF DEATH 1882 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Weldon, Barbara Category 1829 births Category 1882 deaths Category People from County Limerick Category New Zealand prostitutes NewZealand bio stub ... more details