Wikipedia
Shipton may refer to:
Places- Shipton, Gloucestershire
- Shipton, North Yorkshire
- Shipton, Shropshire
- Shipton Bellinger, Hampshire
- Shipton Brook, Buckinghamshire
- Shipton Gorge, Dorset
- Shipton Lee, Buckinghamshire
- Shipton-on-Cherwell, Oxfordshire
- Shiptonthorpe, East Riding of Yorkshire
- Shipton-under-Wychwood, Oxfordshire
- Shipton, Quebec, a former municipality that is now part of Danville, Quebec
- Shipton, Kansas, a community in the U.S.
- Shipton Hall, an historic house in Shropshire
- Eric Shipton (1907–1977), mountaineer
- George Shipton (1885–1886), General Secretary of the T.U.C.
- James Shipton (1798–1865), timber merchant and licensed carrier who served as Mayor of Wolverhampton from 1854 to 1855
- Mother Shipton, English seer and prophetess
- Roger Shipton, Australian politician
Usage examples of "shipton".
The thought of Shipton being connected with a rat like Blue Face is preposterous!
John Shipton, his son-in-law, was the very last man to be thought of in connection with crime.
When John Shipton returned home, a short while later, she greeted him with a smile and a kiss.
CHAPTER VI A RIDE WITH SLUG AT almost the same time that Richard Harrison was so carefully tailing the strange movements of John Shipton, events of an equally sinister character were in the making in a much more respectable section of town.
He had left the house immediately after Shipton had departed for his classes at the evening law school.
He had promised to be careful, to run no risks of letting Shipton know he was under surveillance.
How could Elaine hoodwink the plain-clothes man, if he came to see her and insisted on seeing Shipton in bed?
But Narvo gave a grunt of relief when he picked Elaine Shipton up again.
He intended to force Elaine to tell all she knew about John Shipton, as soon as he could get her to the place he had made ready for her.
Like Elaine, there was little Harrison could tell Shipton, after his son-in-law had completely revived him with some cold water from the bathroom faucet.
Peabody, who had tried to sneak up behind Shipton, uttered a snarl of rage that was drowned out by the bark of his own gun.
It was this that had made the splash at the moment that Shipton seemingly had disappeared over the stern.
While Barfield and his two companions were stabbing the water vainly with a flashlight beam, the cunning Shipton had inched swiftly forward toward the bow of the yacht on a ledge The Shadow had already made use of.
He assumed that John Shipton, having been caught in an attempt to hide aboard the yacht, had leaped overboard.
It was the same route that Shipton had taken after his fake leap overboard.