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William Pitt's place
Answer for the clue "William Pitt's place ", 7 letters:
chatham
Alternative clues for the word chatham
Word definitions for chatham in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 1338 Housing Units (2000): 612 Land area (2000): 2.043879 sq. miles (5.293621 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.001371 sq. miles (0.003552 sq. km) Total area (2000): 2.045250 sq. miles (5.297173 sq. km) FIPS code: 15000 Located within: Virginia ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Chatham was a provincial electoral district in New Brunswick. It was created from the multi-member riding of Northumberland in the 1973 electoral redistribution , and was abolished in the 1994 electoral redistribution .
Usage examples of chatham.
The Darling Downs hopping mouse, Chatham Islands swan, Ascension Island flightless crake, at least five types of large turtle, and many others are forever lost to us except as names.
Beyond Chatham, they rolled with all possible speed to pass before dark the Black Heath, dreaded for its lurking highwaymen.
A whole heap of people from Caxambas, Chokoloskee, Fakahatchee, including more'n one of my own kin, worked at Chatham Bend at one time or another, and a heap more had dealings with him here and there.
Theodore Montagu, the man who, according to the story of the elevator boy at the Chatham Arms, had returned at half past two on the night of the murder, testified that as his taxicab turned in front of the apartment house the headlights flashed on a man standing in a tradesmen's entrance across the street, and that the man looked like Major Benson.
The first time anyone—at least any fisherman—suggested a closure was in 1988, when a Chatham fisherman named Mark Simonitsch stood up to speak at a New England Fisheries Council meeting.
Merchantmen were coming in for the London river, four sail of Guineamen, and a brig of war for Chatham, apart from the usual hovellers and peterboats: how flabby and loose they looked, by comparison.
In their subsistence modes, Polynesians ranged from the hunter-gatherers of the Chathams, through slash-and-burn farmers, to practitioners of intensive food production living at some of the highest population densities of any human societies.
The settlers of the Chathams and the cold southern part of New Zealand's South Island were thus forced to abandon the farming legacy developed by their ancestors over the previous thousands of years, and to become hunter-gatherers again.
At the lower end were the hunter-gatherers of the Chathams (only 5 people per square mile) and of New Zealand's South Island, and the farmers of the rest of New Zealand (28 people per square mile).
Many larger islands never did become unified politically, whether because the population consisted of dispersed bands of only a few dozen hunter-gatherers each (the Chathams and New Zealand's southern South Island), or of farmers scattered over large distances (the rest of New Zealand), or of farmers living in dense populations but in rugged terrain precluding political unification.
It is easy to trace how the differing environments of the Chatham Islands and of New Zealand molded the Moriori and the Maori differently.
In a very different writing in the proper places: (Miss) Betty Mayfield, West Chatham, New York.
Babbitt's green and white Dutch Colonial house was one of three in that block on Chatham Road.