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Gazetteer
Lockridge, IA -- U.S. city in Iowa
Population (2000): 275
Housing Units (2000): 109
Land area (2000): 0.729905 sq. miles (1.890445 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.729905 sq. miles (1.890445 sq. km)
FIPS code: 46065
Located within: Iowa (IA), FIPS 19
Location: 40.995065 N, 91.751656 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 52635
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Lockridge, IA
Lockridge
Wikipedia
Lockridge

Lockridge may refer to:

Usage examples of "lockridge".

Storm told Lockridge, "and once men were hanged here, in sacrifice to him.

Storm slipped agilely through the wire fence before Lockridge could help and broke into a trot.

Feeling naked under the wide empty sky, his pulse thuttering, Lockridge looked at the dolmen as if for some assurance of eternity.

No, as he neared, Lockridge saw that the veil which filled it, flickering with soft iridescence, every hue his eyes could see and (he suspected) many they could not, was immaterial: a shimmer in space, a mirage, a sheet of living light.

The gates came at variable intervals, averaging about half a mile, as near as Lockridge could gauge in this saturating cold illumination.

She threw down the instrument, seized Lockridge and kissed him with bruising strength.

They were big-boned and fair, clad similarly to Lockridge, their hair braided and beards haggled short.

When Lockridge saw her, tall and arrogant, he forgot about Auri and went to her.

When first he squinted through the brilliant noontide, Lockridge could hardly believe that these were the dreaded men of the Battle Axe.

The Yutho hooted mirth, chopped on the other side at someone Lockridge couldn't see, hurled a spear at an archer, and was gone by.

For that matter, Lockridge, today you killed a man whose wives and children will mourn him.

Before Lockridge quite knew what had happened, he was seated by the Ranger, a glass in his hand, and had told the entire story.

Breath raw in his lungs, knifed by his spleen, Lockridge made for the hollow tree where Storm had hidden the entrance control.

Thus Lockridge chose what he imagined was a prosperous man's travelling garb: linen underclothes and shirt, satin doublet, crimson trunk hose, high boots, floppy-brimmed cap, blue cloak trimmed with fur, sword and knife (the latter doubtless mainly for eating purposes), and miscellaneous gear that he could only guess about.

He must be one of the Danish aristocrats, Lockridge thought, in charge of this watch, of this foreign garrison set among his own people.