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Gazetteer
Dundas, MN -- U.S. city in Minnesota
Population (2000): 547
Housing Units (2000): 229
Land area (2000): 1.534820 sq. miles (3.975165 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.534820 sq. miles (3.975165 sq. km)
FIPS code: 17126
Located within: Minnesota (MN), FIPS 27
Location: 44.428939 N, 93.202773 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 55019
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Dundas, MN
Dundas
Wikipedia
Dundas

Dundas may refer to:

Places
  • Dundas, Greenland, a former settlement known as the trading place established by Knud Rasmussen and Peter Freuchen in 1910 in the North Star Bay across Pituffik [Thule Air Base]
  • Dundas, Minnesota, United States
  • Dundas, New Brunswick, Canada
  • Dundas, New South Wales, Australia
  • Dundas, Ohio, United States
  • Dundas, Ontario, Canada
    • Dundas railway station (Ontario), a former railway station in Dundus
  • Dundas, Tasmania, Australia
  • Dundas, Virginia, United States
  • Dundas, Western Australia, Australia
  • Dundas, Wisconsin, United States
  • Dundas Aqueduct, Wiltshire, England
  • Dundas County, Ontario, Canada
  • Dundas Island (British Columbia), Canada, the largest of the Dundas Islands
  • Dundas Island (Nunavut), Canada
  • Dundas Island, New Zealand
  • Dundas Square, a public square in downtown Toronto, Canada
  • Dundas Street, Hong Kong
  • Dundas Street, Toronto, Ontario
    • Dundas (TTC), a Toranto subway station on Dundas Street
  • Shire of Dundas, Western Australia
People See: Dundas (surname) Things
  • Charlotte Dundas, the first practical steamboat
  • Clan Dundas, a Scottish clan
  • Dundas Castle, castle near Edinburgh
  • Dundas Cactus Festival, an event held in Dundas, Ontario, Canada
  • Dundas Data Visualization, Inc., A commercial Software company from Ontario, Canada.
Dundas (TTC)

Dundas is a subway station on the Yonge–University line in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located at the intersection of Yonge Street and Dundas Street. Wi-fi service is available at this station.

Dundas (electoral district)

Dundas was a federal electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that was represented in the Canadian House of Commons from 1867 to 1925. It was created by the British North America Act of 1867.

It consisted initially of Dundas County. In 1914, it was expanded to include the townships of Finch and Osnabruck, and the village of Finch.

The electoral district was abolished in 1924 when it was merged into Grenville—Dundas riding.

Dundas (surname)

Dundas is a surname, and a Scottish clan ( Clan Dundas), and may refer to:

  • Charles Dundas, one of several people including
    • Charles Dundas, 1st Baron Amesbury (1751–1832), British politician
    • Charles Dundas (governor), promoter of coffee cultivation in Tanganyika
    • Charles Saunders Dundas, 6th Viscount Melville (1843–1926)
  • David Dundas, one of several people including
    • Lord David Dundas (born 1945), British composer of film and television music
    • Sir David Dundas, a military officer of the 18th and 19th centuries in England
    • Sir David Dundas, 1st Baronet, a distinguished surgeon
  • Francis Dundas (1759?-1824), British army officer
  • George Heneage Lawrence Dundas, British Sea Lord
  • Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville (1742–1811), British statesman
  • Henry Dundas, 3rd Viscount Melville (1801–1876), British soldier
  • Henry Charles Clement Dundas, 7th Viscount Melville (1873–1935)
  • Henry Charles Patric Brouncker Dundas, 8th Viscount Melville (1909–1971)
  • Hugh Dundas, British World War II fighter pilot
  • Hugh Dundas, Scottish chieftain, fought alongside William Wallace (Braveheart).
  • James Dundas, Lord Arniston (died 1679) was a Scottish member of parliament, and judge
  • James Whitley Deans Dundas (1785–1862), admiral in the Royal Navy
  • John Dundas (RAF officer) (1915– 1940), a British Second World War fighter pilot
  • John Dundas (1808–1866), a British Whig, and later Liberal politician.
  • John Dundas (1845–1892), a British Liberal politician
  • Sir Lawrence Dundas, 1st Baronet, (died 1781)
  • Lawrence Dundas, 1st Earl of Zetland, (1766-1839)
  • Lawrence Dundas, 1st Marquess of Zetland (1844–1929)
  • Lawrence Dundas, 2nd Marquess of Zetland (1876–1971), British politician.
  • Lawrence Dundas, 3rd Marquess of Zetland, (1908-1989)
  • Maria Dundas, the writer Maria Callcott (1786–1844)
  • Mark Dundas, 4th Marquess of Zetland, (born 1937)
  • Paul Dundas (born 1952), Scottish scholar
  • Richard Saunders Dundas (1802–1861), British naval officer.
  • Robert Dundas, Lord Arniston (died 1726), Scottish judge
  • Robert Dundas, of Arniston, the elder (1685–1753), Scottish judge.
  • Robert Dundas, of Arniston, the younger (1713–1787), Scottish judge.
  • Robert Dundas of Arniston (1758–1819), Scottish judge.
  • Robert Dundas, 2nd Viscount Melville (1771–1851), British statesman
  • Robert Dundas, 4th Viscount Melville
  • Robert Dundas, 5th Viscount Melville (1835–1904)
  • Robert David Ross Dundas, 9th Viscount Melville (b. 1937)
  • Robert Adam Dundas, the British politician Robert Adam Christopher
  • Ross Dundas, Scottish Businessman, Founder of "The Wishing Tree" Gift Economy
  • Roslyn Dundas (born 1978), Australian politician
  • Thomas Dundas, 1st Baron Dundas (1741–1820), British statesman.
  • Thomas Dundas, 2nd Earl of Zetland (1795–1873), British politician and nobleman.
  • Thomas Dundas (Royal Navy officer) (c.1765-1841), Royal Navy admiral and Trafalgar captain.
  • William Dundas (1762–1845), Scottish politician
  • William Pitt Dundas

Usage examples of "dundas".

They had been foremost in damning Dundas with their sly, pejorative words, their judgment of his character, wise after the event.

It was she he thought of more than Dundas, she whose grief outweighed his own, and which tore still at the deep well of emotion within him, unhealed even now.

But what hurt with a massive, drowning pain—because it was irretrievable—was the fear that in the past the fraud for which Arrol Dundas had died was in some way responsible for the crash Monk remembered with such awful guilt.

Monk had a sudden start of memory of Arrol Dundas, so vivid he could see the lines in Dundas’s skin, the curve of his nose, and a gentleness in his eyes as he looked across at Monk.

And if Monk had betrayed Arrol Dundas, and had even the slightest knowing or willing hand in the rail crash in the past, then he had never been the man Hester believed him to be, and everything he had so carefully built, with such difficult letting go of his pride, would come shattering down like a house of cards.

The attendant was at his elbow to tell him they were closing when he saw the name Dundas, and then the rest of it: He had died of pneumonia in prison in Liverpool, April 1846.

He knew now as if it were all clear in his fragmented mind just what the final verdict would be, not because it was true but because there were too many of the negotiations conducted by Dundas, agreements with his signature on them, money in his accounts.

If he had said anything at all to help clear Dundas, it was not reported.

He could not remember what he had said, only the feeling of being trapped, stared at by the crowd, frowned on by the judge, weighed and assessed by the jurors, fought over by the opposing counsel, and looked to for help he could not give by Dundas himself.

Arrol Dundas was in the dock—and that perception made all the difference.

There seemed no question that Dundas had purchased land in his own name, farmland of poor quality, which he had paid market value for, little enough when you need it for running sheep.

It was for Dundas, white-faced, crumpled as if age had caught up with him and shrunken him inside and in a day he had been struck by twenty years.

As he had already heard from the clerk days ago, there was nothing wrong with the track—there was no connection whatever with the fraud, or with Arrol Dundas, or therefore with Monk.

And now he was no longer rationally sure that Dundas had been innocent.

He had seen Dundas as he wished him to be, like millions before him, and millions to come.