Crossword clues for brady
brady
- Sitcom bunch surname
- Recent Super Bowl quarterback
- Photographer of Lincoln
- Patriots quarterback Tom
- Name on a 1994 gun control law
- Lincoln photographer
- Greg, Peter, Bobby, Marcia, Jan, or Cindy
- Family name for today's theme
- Deflategate QB
- Civil War lensman
- Bunch on TV once
- Bunch of old sitcoms?
- "The ___ Bunch" (1969-1974 TV series)
- "The ___ Bunch" ('70s sitcom)
- '70s sitcom family name
- ''The ___ Bunch''
- Bunch name
- TV's "The___Bunch"
- ___ bill, opposed by 64-Down
- Civil War photographer Mathew
- Two-time Super Bowl M.V.P. Tom
- "The ___ Bunch" of 1970s TV
- American pioneer photographer famous for his portraits
- Was the official Union photographer for the Civil War (1823-1896)
- United States financier noted for his extravagant lifestyle (1856-1917)
- Diamond Jim
- Famed Civil War photographer
- Lincoln's photographer
- Sitcom surname
- Wayne ___ ("Let's Make a Deal" host)
- TV's 'The -- Bunch'
- Three-time Super Bowl MVP Tom
Wiktionary
n. 1 (surname habitational from=Old English) 2 (given name male from=surnames) transferred from the surname. 3 (given name female from=surnames) transferred from the surname.
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 170
Land area (2000): 0.327404 sq. miles (0.847973 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.327404 sq. miles (0.847973 sq. km)
FIPS code: 06085
Located within: Nebraska (NE), FIPS 31
Location: 41.022792 N, 100.367828 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 69123
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Brady
Housing Units (2000): 2603
Land area (2000): 9.188220 sq. miles (23.797379 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 2.324377 sq. miles (6.020109 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 11.512597 sq. miles (29.817488 sq. km)
FIPS code: 09916
Located within: Texas (TX), FIPS 48
Location: 31.132252 N, 99.341255 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Brady
Housing Units (2000): 257
Land area (2000): 7.120851 sq. miles (18.442918 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.006871 sq. miles (0.017796 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 7.127722 sq. miles (18.460714 sq. km)
FIPS code: 07590
Located within: Washington (WA), FIPS 53
Location: 46.995987 N, 123.521752 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Brady
Wikipedia
Brady is a surname derived from the Irish surname Ó Brádaigh or Mac Brádaigh.
In a listing by the U.S. Census Bureau of the Most Common U.S. Surnames Brady is ranked at #411.
Notable people with the surname include:
- Alice Brady (1892–1939), American silent-film actress, Best Supporting Actress Oscar winner
- Aindrias Mac Brádaigh, bishop of Kilmore, died 1445
- Beau Brady (born 1981), Australian actor
- Bill Brady (politician), Illinois state senator and candidate for governor
- Bob Brady (born 1945), American politician from Pennsylvania
- Brady baronets, a titled family in Ireland
- Brian Brady Fianna Fáil Teachta Dála representing Donegal West (1932–1949)
- Charles Brady (artist) (1926–1997), American-born Irish painter
- Charles E. Brady, Jr. (1951–2006), American astronaut
- Christian M. M. Brady (born 1969), American targumist
- Conor Brady, Irish journalist and newspaper editor
- Cyprian Brady, Irish politician
- Dan Brady (Ohio politician), U.S. politician from Ohio
- Dan Brady (Illinois politician), member of the Illinois House of Representatives
- E. J. Brady (1869–1952), Australian journalist and writer
- Edward Thomas Brady (born 1943), American judge and Associate Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court
- Edwin James Brady (1869–1952), born in Carcour, New South Wales he had an adventurous life in many lands and was the author of some fine sea ballads
- Elward Thomas Brady, Jr. (c. 1926-2007), American politician
- Fiachra Mac Brádaigh ( fl. 1710–1760), Gaelic poet
- George Brady (born 1928), Holocaust survivor
- George K. Brady (1838–1899), United States Army officer, briefly commander of the Department of Alaska
- Gerard Brady (born 1936), Irish Fianna Fáil politician and Minister for Education
- Gilbert Mac Brádaigh Bishop of Ardagh from 1396 to 1400
- Graham Brady (born 1967), British politician and MP
- Hana Brady (1931–1944), Jewish holocaust victim
- Aodh Mac Brádaigh (Hugh Brady) first Protestant Bishop of Meath and Kildare
- Hugh R. Brady President of University College Dublin, Ireland
- Ian Brady (born Ian Duncan Stewart 1938), a perpetrator of the Moors murders
- James Brady (1940-2014), American White House Press Secretary shot alongside President Ronald Reagan
- James Bernard MacBrady, Count of the Holy Roman Empire
- James Buchanan Brady aka "Diamond Jim" (1856–1917), prominent American financier
- James H. Brady (1862–1918), Governor of Idaho, United States Senator from Idaho
- James M. Brady, editor of the Washington Post Online
- James Patrick Brady (1908–1967?) Canadian Metis political figure
- James T. Brady (1815–1869), New York City lawyer and politician
- Jim Brady (baseball) (born 1936), American economist, educator, and baseball player and coach
- Jim Brady (boxer), Scottish boxer of the 1930s and 1940s
- Joan Brady, writer, the first woman – and the only American – to win the Whitbread Book of the Year Award for the Theory of War, lives in Oxford, England
- Joan Brady, American writer of Christian novels
- John Green Brady (1847–1918), American politician, Governor of the District of Alaska (1897–1906)
- John Joseph Brady, American journalist and writer
- John Riker Brady (1822–1891), New York State Supreme Court Justice, administered oath of office to President Chester A. Arthur
- Joseph V. Brady, (1922-2011) neuroscientist
- Karren Brady (born 1969), British sporting executive and broadcaster, best known as the former managing director of Birmingham City Football Club, the first woman to hold such a post in the top flight of English football when the team was promoted
- Kevin Brady (born 1955), American politician from Texas
- Liam Brady (born 1956), Irish footballer, coach, and television pundit
- Mathew Brady (ca. 1823–1896), Irish-American photographer who documented the American Civil War
- Matthew Brady (1799–1826), Australian bushranger
- Matthew Brady (district attorney), American district attorney in San Francisco (1919–1943)
- Mike Brady (golfer) (1887–1972), American professional golfer
- Mike Brady (musician) (born 1947), Australian musician
- Michael Mac Brádaigh (died 1745), Jacobite
- Nicholas Brady (poet) (1659–1726), divine and poet
- Nicholas Brady (philanthropist) (1878–1930), businessman and philanthropist
- Nicholas Brady (banker) (born 1930), banker and Secretary of the Treasury
- Nicholas Brady, victim in the Byron David Smith killings
- Patrick Henry Brady (born 1936), United States Army Helicopter Pilot, Medal of Honor recipient (1968)
- Paul Brady (born 1947), Irish singer/songwriter
- Paul L. Brady, American judge
- Peter R. Brady (1825–1901), Arizona pioneer; first elected sheriff of Pinal County; sheriff of Pima County, Arizona
- Fedlim Mac Brádaigh, (fl. 1710), Gaelic poet usually referred to as "bold Phelim Brady the bard of Armagh"
- Phillip Mac Brádaigh, (died 1719), Gaelic poet and a Protestant clergyman
- Richard Mac Brádaigh (died 1607), Franciscan bishop of Kilmore
- Robert A. Brady (1901–1964), American economist
- Robert A. ‘Bob’ Brady (born 1945), a United States Congressman
- Robert David Brady (born 1946), American modernist sculptor
- Royston Brady (born 1972), Irish businessman and former politician
- Samuel Brady (1756-1795), American military captain during the Ohio Valley's frontier days
- Sarah Brady (1942-2015), American gun control activist, wife of James Brady
- Scott Brady (1924-1985), American actor
- Seán Brady (born 1939), Archbishop of Armagh (1996–)
- Tom Brady (born 1977), American football quarterback and 4 time super bowl winner and 3-time Super Bowl MVP
- Thomas Mac Brádaigh (1752–1827), farmer's son from Cootehill, County Cavan, became a Field Marshal in the Austrian service and Governor of Dalmatia
- Thomas A. Mac Brádaigh(1813–1847), Lt. USMC, Among the 40 marines who stormed the "Halls of Montezuma", September 13, 1847
- Vincent Brady (born 1936), Irish Fianna Fáil politician, Government Chief Whip (1987–1991), Minister for Defence (1991–1992)
- Wayne Brady (born 1972), American comedian and TV personality
- W. Tate Brady (1870–1925), Pioneer businessman of Tulsa, Oklahoma
- William (Bill) Brady (born–1958), American Radio personality, Voiceover artist & actor
- William J. Brady (1829–1878), Sheriff of Lincoln County during the Lincoln County Wars
- William O. Brady (1899–1961), American Roman Catholic Archbishop of St. Paul (1956–1961)
- William Maziere Brady (1825–1894), author of Episcopal Succession in England, Scotland and Ireland
Brady is a common surname and given name.
It may also refer to:
Usage examples of "brady".
Brady had gone on from eight to ten, followed by Sinclair from ten to twelve, then Bradley had been awakened.
Brady and Sinclair they narrated the salient events that had transpired since Bradley and his party had marched away on September 4th.
She would have to make an appointment with Brady as soon as she could afford a new dress and a modish haircut, and when she gained back some of the weight she had lost.
Shrewdly, Brady had gone beyond the normal distribution to magazines and newspapers for engravings and woodcuts.
Although the photographic impresario with the failing eyesight had kept to his agreement and permitted a credit linein the smallest typeto the operators who had made the stunning pictures, the photos were presented as a Brady Gallery special event.
Brady for fear Brady would send somebody else, or worst of all, come himself.
Gardner read it quicklylucky fellow, he did not have to squint through thick spectacles to make out the words, as Brady didand wondered how his employer had managed it.
While Scott was posing with his shirt off, an English actress entered for her photographic appointment and Brady had quickly stepped in front of the general, saving the day by preserving his modesty.
When Brady called on him to present his photograph, at no cost, the general could not turn down his request to photograph the battlefield.
The assistants carried the 16x20 Anthony camera out of the studio and into the mobile laboratory, with Brady carrying the 4 X 4 stereo camera.
Gardner remembered the oats for Guerro, the mule, which Brady had forgotten.
Gardner was moved to ask, Brady thought with typical lack of imagination.
In the end, Brady mused as they rolled down rutted Pennsylvania Avenue, Posterity would pay.
The gallery here was in good hands with Gardner, and the emporium in New York did not have a capable manager he could trust: good business sense suggested that Brady keep his eye on the store in New York.
In one elegant carriage directly in front of them, its fine horse ridden by a negro boy, was a passenger Brady recognized as William Howard Russell of the London Times.