Crossword clues for stevenson
stevenson
- Affair affecting one's profile?
- Author's version of events swallowed by youngster
- From southern town, originally, and yet northern writer
- Author's position over red meat I twice ignored
- Author, disheartened Scot — odds on!
- Two-time presidential also-ran
- Writer of Treasure Island, d. 1894
- Two-time loser to Eisenhower
- First citizen of Libertyville, Ill
- Author of Kidnapped
- Eisenhower opponent
- Democratic presidential nominee before Kennedy
- Scottish author (1850-1894)
- United States politician and diplomat (1900-1968)
- David Balfour's creator
- Did his treasure weigh "seven tons"?
- Author still succeeded working after getting stone on head
- Extremely short, curtailed church service for novelist
- Way English archdeacon’s supported by Scottish writer
- Scottish writer holding vespers briefly on street
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 948
Land area (2000): 4.947035 sq. miles (12.812762 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.298616 sq. miles (0.773411 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 5.245651 sq. miles (13.586173 sq. km)
FIPS code: 73080
Located within: Alabama (AL), FIPS 01
Location: 34.869442 N, 85.831829 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 35772
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Stevenson
Housing Units (2000): 523
Land area (2000): 1.475309 sq. miles (3.821032 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.098361 sq. miles (0.254755 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.573670 sq. miles (4.075787 sq. km)
FIPS code: 67875
Located within: Washington (WA), FIPS 53
Location: 45.696203 N, 121.888424 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 98648
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Stevenson
Wikipedia
Stevenson is an English language patronymic surname meaning "son of Steven". Its first historical record is from pre-10th-century England. Another origin of the name is as a toponymic surname related to the place Stevenstone in Devon, England.
Notable people sharing this surname include:
- Adonis Stevenson (born 1977), Canadian boxer
- Alexander Campbell Stevenson (1802-1889), American politician and physician
- Alexandra Stevenson (born 1980), American tennis player
- Ben Stevenson (born 1936), British ballet dancer and director
- Carter L. Stevenson (1817–1888), American soldier
- Charles Stevenson (1908–1979), American philosopher
- Coke Stevenson (1888-1975), American politician, Governor of Texas 1941–47
- Dani Stevenson (born 1980), American R&B singer
- DeShawn Stevenson (born 1981), American basketball player
- Eric Stevenson (disambiguation)
- Frank A. Stevenson (born 1970), Norwegian computer game developer and cryptographer
- Ian Stevenson (1918–2007), Canadian psychiatrist and reincarnation researcher
- James Stevenson died 1805, East India Company officer
- Jessica Hynes (née Stevenson) (born 1972), English writer and actress
- John Stevenson (disambiguation)
- J. J. Stevenson
- Juliet Stevenson (born 1956), English actress
- Laura Stevenson (born 1984), American singer-songwriter
- Leigh Stevenson (1895-1989), Canadian air marshal
- Lewis Stevenson (disambiguation)
- Monica Lisa Stevenson (born 1967), American gospel musician
- Morris Stevenson (1943–2014), Scottish footballer
- Robert Stevenson (disambiguation)
- Ronald Stevenson (born 1928), Scottish composer
- Ryan Stevenson (born 1984), Scottish footballer
- Savannah Stevenson, English musical theatre actress
- Stewart Stevenson (born 1946), Scottish politician
- Teófilo Stevenson (born 1952), Cuban boxer
- Toby Stevenson (born 1976), American pole vaulter
- Tom Stevenson (born 1951) British wine writer
- Tommy Stevenson (1914–1944), jazz trumpet player
- Trudy Stevenson (born 1944), Zimbabwean politician
- William Bennet Stevenson (c. 1787 – c. 1830), British explorer
Extended families:
-
Stevenson family from Illinois
- Adlai Stevenson I (1835–1914), U.S. Vice President
- Adlai Stevenson II (1900–1965), American politician, governor of Illinois
- Adlai Stevenson III (born 1930), U.S. Senator from Illinois
- Lewis Stevenson (politician) (1868–1929), American politician from Illinois
- McLean Stevenson (1929–1996), actor
- Scottish family of (mostly) lighthouse engineers
- Alan Stevenson (1807–1865), lighthouse engineer
- Charles Alexander Stevenson (1855–1950), lighthouse engineer
- D. E. Stevenson (1892–1973), author
- David Stevenson (engineer) (1815–1886), lighthouse engineer
- David Alan Stevenson (1854–1938), lighthouse engineer
- Robert Stevenson (civil engineer) (1772–1850), lighthouse engineer
- Robert Alan Mowbray Stevenson (1847–1900), art critic
- Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894), author of Treasure Island and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
- Thomas Stevenson (1818–1887), lighthouse designer
- Scottish family with links to Tyneside
- Flora Stevenson (1839–1905) education reformer
- J. J. Stevenson (1831–1908), architect
- James Cochran Stevenson (1825–1905) chemical manufacturer and Member of Parliament
- Louisa Stevenson (1835–1908), campaigner for women's causes
- Nathaniel Stevenson (1840-1811), General and Governor of Guernsey
- James Stevenson-Hamilton (1867-1957), 16th of Fairolm and Kruger National Park ranger
- Hilda Runciman (1869-1956), MP for St. Ives, 1928–1929
Stevenson is a station on the Port Authority of Allegheny County's light rail network, located in Dormont, Pennsylvania. The street level stop is located in a highly populated residential area that features many medium density multi-unit facilities. It serves commuters within walking distance, providing access toward Downtown Pittsburgh, South Hills Village, or Library.
Stevenson is a surname, and it may also refer to:
In places:
- Stevenson, Alabama, USA
- Stevenson, Indiana, USA
- Stevenson, Maryland, USA
- Stevenson, Washington, USA
- Stevenson, California, USA
- Stevenson, Ayrshire in Scotland
In educational institutions:
- Adlai E. Stevenson High School (disambiguation), (various locations)
- Stevenson College (Edinburgh)
- Stevenson College (University of California, Santa Cruz), residential college at the University of California, Santa Cruz
- Stevenson University, in Baltimore County, Maryland
-
Stevenson School
- upper school campus located in Pebble Beach, California, USA
- lower school campus located in Carmel, California, USA
In other uses:
- Donoghue v. Stevenson, legal case originating in Scotland
- Stevenson and Higgins, Scottish cabinet company
- Stevenson screen an enclosure for meteorological instruments
Usage examples of "stevenson".
English critics, like John Addington Symonds, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Edward Dowden, have testified to the power of the democratic element in our literature and have given the dictum that it cannot be neglected.
Let me see: there was Ben Thornburg, and Beck Jolly, and Squire Bell, and Horace Bixby, and Major Downing, and John Stevenson, and Billy Gordon, and Jim Brady, and George Ealer, and Billy Youngblood--all A 1 alligator pilots.
Ralph Stevenson, the Cultural Attache of the American Embassy in Montevideo.
Stevenson made a careful survey, and prepared his models for a stone tower, the idea of which was at first received with pretty general scepticism, Smeaton's Eddystone tower could not be cited as affording a parallel, for there the rock is not submerged even at high-water, while the problem of the Bell Rock was to build a tower of masonry on a sunken reef far distant from land, covered at every tide to a depth of twelve feet or more, and having thirty-two fathoms' depth of water within a mile of its eastern edge.
While at Ewa, Lieutenant Stevenson had trained him in the use of the radio direction finder, even though he suspected that the instrument wasn't going to work very well when they reached the Gobi.
He has influenced Robert Louis Stevenson, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Baudelaire, among many others, and the modern science fiction genre owes a great and obvious debt to his works.
Patty Jo Clark Stevenson, originally from Lake Forest, Illinois, candy heiress, Vassar graduate, director of the Dallas Symphony Foundation, philanthropist, mother of five, [305] grandmother of fourteen, felt the tug on her stomach as the airplane began its descent.
His tone suggests he has a name in mind, but Stevenson quashes that thought right away.
The lands of Stevenson in Lanarkshire first mentioned in the next century, in the Ragman Roll, lie within twenty miles east.
At Stevenson, Lee and Marshall switched to a Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad train for the trip northwest to the capital of Tennessee.
But Wellesley had no regrets at posing such difficulties for Stevenson, for the chance to turn the enemy's flank was heaven-sent.
If the weather was clear over Stevenson base, he didn't anticipate any difficulties in locating the true horizon.
One of the real commanders was dead, having been strangled at the stake by Unk. The strangled man had been Private Stony Stevenson, f ormer real commander of a British attack unit.
Frigate said, `I was in a hospital in Western Samoa, dying of cancer, wondering if I would be buried nest to Robert Louis Stevenson.
And it has churned out a rollcall of worthies far out of proportion to its modest size -Stevenson, Watt, Lyell, Lister, Burns, Scott, Conan Doyle, J.