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Gazetteer
Branson, CO -- U.S. town in Colorado
Population (2000): 77
Housing Units (2000): 43
Land area (2000): 0.248685 sq. miles (0.644090 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.248685 sq. miles (0.644090 sq. km)
FIPS code: 08345
Located within: Colorado (CO), FIPS 08
Location: 37.015291 N, 103.883684 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 81027
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Branson, CO
Branson
Branson, MO -- U.S. city in Missouri
Population (2000): 6050
Housing Units (2000): 3366
Land area (2000): 16.178279 sq. miles (41.901548 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.160813 sq. miles (0.416503 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 16.339092 sq. miles (42.318051 sq. km)
FIPS code: 07966
Located within: Missouri (MO), FIPS 29
Location: 36.637706 N, 93.254965 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Branson, MO
Branson
Wikipedia
Branson

Branson may refer to:

Branson (surname)

Branson is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Brad Branson (born 1958), retired American professional basketball player
  • Catherine Branson, Australian human rights commissioner
  • Clive Branson (1907–44), British artist and poet
  • David Branson (1963–2001), Australian theatre director
  • Don Branson (1920–66), American racecar driver
  • Edward Branson, an American geologist and paleontologist
  • Frederick Woodward Branson (1851-1933), British chemist, glassblower, instrument maker and X-ray pioneer
  • G. A. H. Branson (1871–1951), judge of the High Court of England and Wales
  • George Branson (1918–99), Australian politician
  • Herman Branson (1914–95), African-American physicist
  • Jeff Branson (born 1977), American actor
  • Jeff Branson (baseball player) (born 1967), former American Major League baseball player
  • Jesse Branson (born 1942), retired American basketball player
  • Noreen Branson (1910–2003), British Communist activist
  • Richard Branson (born 1950), British entrepreneur
  • Tony Branson (born 1947), Australian rugby league footballer
  • William Henry Branson (1887–1961), American Seventh-day Adventist

Usage examples of "branson".

When Branson spoke his voice was cold, almost savage, a marked departure from the norm: even Branson had defences that could be breached.

Johnson would have been surprised if they had been otherwise: Branson, that most meticulous of planners, almost never missed a trick.

He was immediately through to Branson, waiting patiently in the dilapidated garage north of Daly City.

As a communications system it could not compare to those aboard the Presidential coach, but everything was there that Branson wanted.

Unlike many of Branson's associates Yonnie, who had been with Branson since he'd embarked upon his particular mode of life all of thirteen years ago, could not be classed among the intellectually gifted, but his patience, invariable good humour and total loyalty to Branson were beyond dispute.

In the rear coach Branson pressed a button on the console in front of him.

Disillusioned with civilian life they'd found their next best panacea with Branson, who had a splendid eye for the recruitment of such men.

In his thirteen years of upsetting law officers in the United States, Canada and Mexico, Branson had not yet had to have recourse to the last resort.

Whether this was due to moral scruples or not was unclear: what was clear was that Branson regarded it as bad business.

It said much for the standards that Branson imposed that none of the several thousand dollars that passed through the hands of Yonnie and Bartlett found its way into either of their pockets.

Here, as at the southern end, everything was completely under control, everything had gone precisely as Branson had meticulously and with much labour planned over the preceding months.

He took the paper from Branson who said: 'You can put it through to the phone by that chair opposite the President's?

He was indeed, as Branson had told Boyann, a telecommunications expert.

And k was difficult to see what use could be made of it - certainly they were unlikely to blow up the bridge with the President on it But Branson had a profound distrust of his fellow man, which was one of the reasons he had survived so long.

One of them crowded very closely indeed on Branson who suddenly became aware of something, obviously metallic, jabbing painfully into his left kidney.