Crossword clues for seeley
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 460
Land area (2000): 1.206255 sq. miles (3.124186 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.020249 sq. miles (0.052445 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.226504 sq. miles (3.176631 sq. km)
FIPS code: 70798
Located within: California (CA), FIPS 06
Location: 32.792046 N, 115.689430 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Seeley
Wikipedia
Seeley may refer to:
Seeley is a variation of the Anglo-Norman Sealy surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Alastair Seeley (born 1979), motorcycle racer, currently competing in the British Superbike Championship
- Blossom Seeley (1891–1974), American Vaudeville performer, teamed with Benny Fields
- Bob Seeley (born 1928), American boogie woogie pianist
- Christopher Seeley (born 1987), mayor of Linesville, Pennsylvania
- Colin Seeley (born 1936), former motorcycle sidecar racer and motorcycle manufacturer
- Drew Seeley (born 1982), a Canadian actor
- Elias P. Seeley (1791–1846), American Whig politician, 11th governor of New Jersey
- George Seeley (1877–1921), English footballer with Southampton and Queens Park Rangers
- Gerald Seeley (1903—1941), English cricketer
- Harry Seeley (1839–1909), British paleontologist
- Ken Seeley (born 1962), American television personality
- John Seeley (disambiguation), multiple people
- Mabel Seeley (1903–1991), American mystery book author
- Mildred Seeley (1918–2001), doll collector, doll-related entrepreneur and prolific author on the subjects of doll
- Richard Seeley (born 1979), Canadian ice hockey defenceman
- Robert Seeley (1602–1668), Puritan settler in Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Robert Thomas Seeley, American mathematician
- Stuart William Seeley (1901–1978), American electrical engineer
- Tim Seeley (fl. 2000s), American comic book artist
- Walter Seeley (born 1941), American boxer
- William Henry Harrison Seeley (1840–1914), the first American citizen to be awarded the Victoria Cross
Usage examples of "seeley".
According to David Andrew Seeley, an acute young observer, there were at its height "perhaps a score of recognizable and distinct groups.
Thus, Seeley reported, their activities ranged "from beer parties to poetry readings, from pot-smoking to modern dance--and often those who indulge in one wouldn't touch the other.
In 1973, two teenagers, Mark Seeley and Michael Whitten, were out for a hike in Yellowstone when they inadvertently crossed between a female black bear and her cubs.
In an attempt to distract the bear from his friend, Seeley shouted at it, whereupon the bear came and pulled him out of his tree, too.
Seeley then proceeded to explain the differences that set apart such groups as the teeny-boppers (now largely vanished from the scene), the political activist beatniks, the folk beatniks, and then, and only then, the original hippies per se.