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Gazetteer
Stratton, NE -- U.S. village in Nebraska
Population (2000): 396
Housing Units (2000): 205
Land area (2000): 0.448584 sq. miles (1.161826 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.448584 sq. miles (1.161826 sq. km)
FIPS code: 47395
Located within: Nebraska (NE), FIPS 31
Location: 40.148653 N, 101.227529 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 69043
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Stratton, NE
Stratton
Stratton, CO -- U.S. town in Colorado
Population (2000): 669
Housing Units (2000): 359
Land area (2000): 0.455325 sq. miles (1.179286 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.455325 sq. miles (1.179286 sq. km)
FIPS code: 74485
Located within: Colorado (CO), FIPS 08
Location: 39.302976 N, 102.604272 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 80836
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Stratton, CO
Stratton
Stratton, OH -- U.S. village in Ohio
Population (2000): 277
Housing Units (2000): 146
Land area (2000): 0.531688 sq. miles (1.377065 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.531688 sq. miles (1.377065 sq. km)
FIPS code: 75000
Located within: Ohio (OH), FIPS 39
Location: 40.523054 N, 80.629405 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Stratton, OH
Stratton
Wikipedia
Stratton

Stratton may refer to:

Stratton (crater)

Stratton is a lunar impact crater on the Moon's far side. It is located to the north of the large craters Keeler and Heaviside, and less than one crater diameter to the south of Dewar.

As with many craters on the Moon, this feature has become worn and eroded due to a multitude of subsequent impacts of various sizes. The most prominent of these is a small, cup-shaped impact along the southwestern outer rim. The remainder of the rim has been worn down, forming an uneven shoulder about the interior depression. The interior floor has a small ridge near the midpoint, but is otherwise unremarkable.

Stratton (Centreville, Maryland)

Stratton, also known as Hortense Fleckenstein Farm and Solomon Scott Farm, is a historic home located at Centreville, Queen Anne's County, Maryland, United States. It is a center-passage plan house, constructed of brick laid in Flemish bond, four bays wide and one room deep, with flush brick chimneys centered on each end of a pitched gable roof. The house was built about 1790.

Stratton was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.

Stratton (financial services)

stratton is one of Australia's largest car and asset finance brokers, with offices in most Australian capital cities and a national network of franchises.

stratton offers business and personal finance for a range of different types of assets, including cars, truck and heavy vehicles, business equipment, machinery, property and marine-craft, as well as a range of insurance products. stratton originates in excess of $300 million of car and asset finance per annum, and has a staff of over 150 people nationwide.

stratton is a Finance Broker, accredited by over 50 lenders and insurers, some with exclusive agency.

Stratton (company)

Stratton is a brand of powder compacts, lipstick holders and other devices and containers for cosmetics, made in Birmingham, England. the company also made costume jewellery.

The parent company was founded in 1860 as Stratnoid, and initially made knitting needles. It changed its name to Stratton and in 1920 merged with Jarrett and Rainsford, to form a company named Jarrett, Rainsford and Laughton Ltd., trading as Stratton and as Stratton of Mayfair.

In 1923 the company began assembling compacts, using components imported from the United States.

In 1929, the company was headquartered at its Alexandra Works, Kent Street, Birmingham, with showrooms in Hamsell Street, Jewin Street, London, EC2.

By the early 1930s, it was making its own components in Birmingham, and producing half of all the compacts made in the United Kingdom.

In November 1940, during World War II, four of its five Birmingham factories were lost to enemy bombing. The company recovered and diverted its work to producing war supplies.

By 1947, the company was operating from the Leominster Works, Lower Essex Street, Birmingham, and had showrooms at Dean Street, London, W1.

In 1948, the company patented a mechanism for a self-opening inner lid for compacts. During subsequent years, it acquired rivals including Kigu and Mascot.

A new factory at Warstock Road, Birmingham, was acquired. The company changed hands several times before finally closing in 1997, but the name was revived subsequently and the company using it is still in operation, again assembling imported components.

Stratton (surname)

Stratton is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Addams Stratton McAllister (1875–1946), U.S. electrical engineer and editor
  • Allan Stratton, Canadian author
  • Ben Stratton, Australian rules footballer
  • Brian Stratton, Mayor of Schenectady, New York
  • Brooke Stratton (born 1993), Australian long jumper
  • Casey Stratton (born 1976), U.S. musician
  • Charles C. Stratton (1796–1859), U.S. politician
  • Charles Sherwood Stratton (1838–1883), U.S. circus performer under the stage name General Tom Thumb
  • David Stratton (born 1939), Australian film critic and TV personality
  • Dennis Stratton (born 1954), British guitarist
  • Dorothy C. Stratton (1899–2006), director of U.S. Coast Guard women's reserve
  • Ellen Stratton (born 1939), U.S. model
  • Evelyn Lundberg Stratton (born 1953), Supreme Court of Ohio Justice
  • Felton Stratton (1895–1974), American baseball player
  • F.J.M. Stratton (1881–1960), British astrophysicist
  • Gene Stratton Porter (1863–1924), U.S. author, screenwriter and naturalist
  • George M. Stratton (1865-1957), U.S. psychologist
  • Gil Stratton (1922–2008), U.S. actor and sportscaster
  • Hal Stratton, chairman of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, 2002
  • Harold M. Stratton, founder of Briggs & Stratton
  • James Robert Stratton, Irish-Canadian politician
  • John Stratton (disambiguation), multiple people
  • Julius Adams Stratton (1901–1994), U.S. educator and President of MIT
  • Kim Stratton (born 1961), American gospel musician
  • Mary Chase Perry Stratton (1867–1961), U.S. ceramic artist
  • Michael Stratton, British clinical scientist
  • Mike Stratton (born 1941), U.S. football player
  • Monty Stratton (1912–1982), U.S. baseball player
  • Richard Stratton (CCC), U.S. educator
  • Richard A. Stratton, U.S.N., former P.O.W.
  • Rick Stratton, Make-up artist
  • Samuel S. Stratton (1916–1990), U.S. politician
  • Samuel Somerville Stratton
  • Samuel Wesley Stratton (1861–1931), U.S. educator and President of MIT
  • Solomon Stratton (1785–1818), U.S. explorer
  • Terry Stratton (born 1938), Canadian politician
  • Tony Stratton-Smith (1933–1987), English music manager, entrepreneur and founder of Charisma Records
  • William Stratton (1914–2001), U.S. politician
  • W. S. Stratton (1848–1902), U.S. gold prospector and philanthropist
  • John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton (1602–1678)

Usage examples of "stratton".

The Krug was circulating (Tony was always generous when the evening was deductible) and dinner was now well underway, but Rupert and Beattie Johnson still hadn't turned up and Sarah Stratton, who should have been on Rupert's right, and Tony, who should have had Beattie on his left, were trying to hide their irritation and disappointment.

Then I had a long stint with an engaging tramp called Beattie Johnson, and then a few games of tennis with Sarah Stratton.

Gil Beckley hadn't mentioned the list—he was an even better cop than Stratton had thought.

The first time Stratton tried to make one he found he could not maneuver into the left segment of the bike lane in time.

Undoubtedly Ena Stratton had committed suicide - and a very good thing for all concerned, that hagridden lady herself included.

Stratton had been braying her intention of committing suicide all the evening.

Stratton was tall and lean with a neatly clipped moustache and the look of a typical ex-RAF type except for the eyes which had the same sort of shine that you get when light gleams on the edge of a cut-throat razor and which contrasted oddly with the slightly effeminate edge to his public school voice.

Stratton stood about fifteen feet above the dig in a skylight-lit hall the size of a football field.

As she had said to Wally Stratton, she was not an extroverted Southern belle.

Through the open door Stratton could see him staring farsightedly at what was obviously a handwritten guest register.

Buying people off had become standard Stratton behaviour, but from the way the others had behaved to Forsyth at the Wednesday Board meeting, he had cost them too much.

Not that his constituents were prudish (having Rupert Campbell-Black in the next door constituency, they were used to the erotic junketing of MPs), but as Paul Stratton had not only used his political career to feather his nest financially, but also set himself up as a pillar of respectability and uxoriousness, constantly inveighing against pornography, homosexuality, easier divorce and the general laxity of the nation's morals, they had found it hard to stomach his hypocrisy.

He hadn't been much of an enemy and wouldn't be much of a friend, but any neutralised Stratton could, in my terms, be counted a blessing.

Stratton, slouched and alone at the rear of a reception room in Xian's Renmin Daxia Hotel, disliked Prudoe's showmanship as much as he despised his pop art scholarship.

The pair of them stood there, looking tremendously uncomfortable, each silently reinforcing the other's preconceived notion that this 'do-it-yourself wedding' (as Phil referred to it) was going to be (as Stratton kept predicting) 'an incredible horror show.