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81 Sentences With "nearby resident"

How to use nearby resident in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "nearby resident" and check conjugation/comparative form for "nearby resident". Mastering all the usages of "nearby resident" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Tim McCormack, a nearby resident, said the issue would be divisive.
One nearby resident, Marilyn Lodato, was named after the famous actress.
He was confronted by an armed nearby resident who chased after him.
She assured her that she would find a nearby resident to call police.
He then stabbed to death a nearby resident and took his car, police said.
A nearby resident saw the shooting and rushed to help the deputy, Lee said.
"Area 51 of Area 51," Musk said of this image taken by a nearby resident.
Probst said a nearby resident allowed him and his coworker to shelter in a home.
But a nearby resident and good Samaritan approached in his boat and helped the family escape.
Lynsie Mason, 23, a nearby resident, walked over with a box of doughnuts and a card.
A nearby resident, Cory Patirlo, said he had nearly 2 feet of water in his home.
A nearby resident said Green has also shouted racial epithets at people on the street below, DNAInfo reports.
"It almost looked like a cartoon or something," nearby resident Cheryl Stevens told Reuters just after Starhopper's flight.
Zookeepers offered 500,163 yen ($4,500) for Abuh's safe return, and before long, a nearby resident brought her back home safely.
She once turned to Facebook, pleading for help, and within 45 minutes a nearby resident offered her two insulin pens.
Nearby resident Zuckerberg is worth an estimated $72 billion, according to Forbes, making him one of the wealthiest people in the world.
Streets near Eastern Market are lined with restaurants; a nearby resident has counted 21964 of them within a short walk from his home.
A nearby resident felt she was suspicious, and called private security firm Fidelity ADT, who proceeded to call the South African Police Service.
Another nearby resident is also named as a plaintiff, and several residents who spoke to BuzzFeed News said they were considering joining the suit.
Hundreds of those bases were sold to a nearby resident, who used them on the exterior of his home and to pave a small sidewalk.
James Hodgkinson's rifle shots at congressmen rang out in the neighborhood around the baseball field ... and it was captured by one witness and a nearby resident.
The tunnel magnifies the train's whir, which has left the property undeveloped and, at least in my own experience as a longtime nearby resident, rarely used.
"It looks like they are trying to say something about some kind of race," one nearby resident, who did not want to be named, told a reporter.
Parents tried to shield their children, others ducked behind or under parked cars, and at least one nearby resident opened her home to shelter people fleeing the mayhem.
The neighborhood was what one nearby resident, who did not want to be named, called "a sleepy little street" just on the edge of Oahu's bustling tourist district.
Someone claiming to be a neighbor of the now-famous annex left information on the investigators' tip page that pointed to another nearby resident as having collaborated with Nazis.
A nearby resident found her and called Ghetto Rescue Foundation, a nonprofit active in the city's low-income communities, and a volunteer took the animal to an emergency vet.
"They built a nice waterfront and created 10,000 jobs in the western part of town, but all we got was two mosques," said Mira Dekanic, a retiree and nearby resident.
In the riots' precipitating incident, that was the 1991 beating of motorist Rodney King by what looked to be a group of out-of-control officers, captured by a nearby resident.
Figure 5b was taken by a nearby resident about 5 minutes after the accident from a location about 4,000 feet west of the site at an elevation of 750 feet msl.
Several of them belonged to a nearby resident, who on Monday reported that they had been killed, said the Floyd County sheriff, John P. Hunt, who did not name the owner.
Nancy Mehl, another nearby resident, told The Los Angeles Times she was in her kitchen when she heard what sounded like the high-pitched whine of a plane preparing for takeoff.
A nearby resident, looking at the trucks and the occasional young men who run up to drivers with packages to deliver to friends and family in North Korea, said the scene had not changed for a long time.
A pregnant pizza driver was being beaten with a rifle by two teens in southwest Atlanta on Wednesday night when a nearby resident, who owned a gun, saw the incident and sprang into action, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported .
A nearby resident identified as Abbey Kearney told CNN that she and her husband saw the crane come down on the Elan City Lights apartment building in downtown Dallas just as extremely high winds kicked up in the area.
First responders arrived to the crash site to find parts of the aircraft scattered among trees in a heavily-wooded area, according to the CBC, and a nearby resident told the outlet she heard a loud noise which she mistook for thunder.
Living In 12 Photos View Slide Show ' While Chris Wilson, 59, was moving to Bushwick from Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, with his husband, Karl Brown, 57, and their two children a year ago, he was amazed that a nearby resident offered to move his car to accommodate the moving truck.
Most of its district schools were sold or repurposed; the Cataumet Schoolhouse and the Bournedale Village School are the only schoolhouses still owned by the town. It was built by James West, a nearby resident, for $1,200.
The buildings of Brown's Station had either been moved or abandoned. Although Brown Station was flooded, some homes retained the town as their address. In the 1950s, letters to Paula Cohen, a nearby resident, were still addressed to Brown Station.
He also credited a nearby resident, Oliver Burke, with some early efforts to preserve the site by "removing obstructions from between the mullions of the beautiful windows" and making "repairs to the tower, thereby rendering it accessible to the top." In 1868, Burke, a barrister by profession, wrote his own account of the friary's history.
X-Force Annual #1 (1991) A nearby resident, Ida Fassbender, discovers the trio's technologically assisted jaunts, and her paranoia endangers their lives. She resolves the problem and unofficially becomes the boys' grandmother. Leech is comforted by Ida's resemblance to Annalee.New Mutants Annual #7 (1991) Another kidnapping plan works successfully and Artie and Leech are taken by the murderous mutant terrorists Gene Nation.
With Polly Duncan in England, Qwilleran realizes that Pickax is a bore in summer. So he decides to go to his cabin on the lakeshore in Mooseville. Shortly before Qwill arrives, Buddy Yarrow, a carpenter, drowns while fishing, but the police report it as an accident. When he arrives, Qwill discovers his heater is broken, so calls a nearby resident and friend, Mildred Hanstable.
During the spring and early summer seasons, nearby resident farmers and herders bring their sheep and cattle, especially during the summer months, to allow grazing on the shore and drink from the lake. Boulders and rocks are calcareous and host plenty of moss. Perennials plants grow around the lake during the spring. Rhododendron forests thrive on the shores and bloom yearly during the spring.
The Dalton Covered Bridge, also called the Dalton Bridge, is a historic covered bridge that carries Joppa Road over the Warner River in Warner, New Hampshire. Its name refers to a nearby resident (first "Mrs. Dalton", then "Widow Dalton") at the time of its construction. The bridge was built in 1853 by Joshua Sanborn, and its original abutments were built by George Sawyer and Webster Davis; all were local residents.
After the end of the war, white settlers began to take up residence in the vicinity of the abandoned fort. A blockhouse was built by one nearby resident in 1810; by 1820, more settlers had built houses, a mill, and a school near the fort site. The new community was named "Fort Jefferson." In the fall of 1907, the Greenville Historical Society dedicated a memorial on the site of the fort.
Boycie and Abdul leave, and Slater appears, having received a call from a nearby resident. Del prepares to exit until he sees Slater searching the area, and hides under a tarpaulin at the far end of the trailer. He is not seen, but Slater inadvertently locks him in the trailer, before Denzil arrives and drives off. In desperation, Rodney sets off in pursuit, eventually following Denzil to Hull.
This chapel is first mentioned in Pietro Dusina's report of his apostolic visit to Malta in 1575. Dusina visited the chapel on 9 February 1575, the first chapel he visited in Qrendi. Dusina mentions that the church had one altar but lacked any other objects necessary for services, including a rector and an income. However, Vincentius Aquilina, a nearby resident used to organise a service and vespers on the feast day.
In 1996, a nearby resident named Jillian Robbins, opened fire on the lawn in front of the HUB (now called the HUB- Robeson Center Building). The 19-year-old shooter killed one student and injured another during her unprovoked attack. She was ultimately stopped after being tackled while trying to load her second clip into her Mauser rifle by aerospace engineering student Brendon Malovrh.Penn State Shooting Is Fatal to Student; Woman Is Arrested.
That night, Nathan and Lavinia witness the meteor being struck by several bolts of lightning. Ward notices that the groundwater has taken on an oily sheen and tests it. When his test strips begin to glow brightly with the Color, he advises the Gardners not to drink it. While notifying nearby resident Ezra of the contamination, he is shown a recording of sounds of unknown origin sounding beneath Ezra's house at night.
Munthe grew up in Sweden. At the age of seventeen, he was on a sailing trip which included a brief visit to the Italian island of Capri. Hiking up the Phoenician steps to the village of Anacapri, Munthe came across a ruined chapel owned by a nearby resident, Maestro Vincenzo, and fantasized owning and restoring the property. The chapel, dedicated to San Michele, had been built on some of the ruins of Roman Emperor Tiberius' villa.
It could be travelled in 32 hours, with a ferry to cross the estuary at Mandurah. The ferry was operated, and later owned, by nearby resident Mrs Lyttleton, as the government was not interested at that time in owning or leasing out the ferry. The government later appropriated the ferry on 2 February 1843, and imposed standardised tolls for passengers and livestock. Ten years later, the ferry service was made available to the public free of charge.
On July 11, Confederate sharpshooters successfully shot two of the fort's soldiers, but Union soldiers pushed the Confederate soldiers back to a point from the fort. The Confederate Army used the house of a nearby resident, Francis Preston Blair, as a headquarters and a makeshift hospital for their wounded. The livestock of several nearby farmers was captured by the Confederate Army. By the evening of July 11, pedestrians lined nearby Seventh Street to watch the fighting.
Nearby resident Duff Gilfont described the proposed apartment building as "such a blight to this area," and that "there would have been so many people inconvenienced by it." Several neighborhood associations opposed rezoning the building, expressing concern that the new building would be used as a hotel. Sommer denied that there were plans to use the building as a hotel or an office building. Fraser Mansion in 1975, as the Sagittarius nightclub Several covenants were proposed.
A nearby resident, botanist Ray Paynter, coordinated an effort to protect the Clackline area for conservation purposes in the 1960s and 70s. The Department of Mines opposed the idea, even though the operators of Clackline Refractory, which mined in the area, were supportive. Paynter and the Clackline community continued to push for the creation of a reserve. On 3 March 1973, she wrote to Northam MLA Ken McIver, citing the species of birds, orchids, and kangaroos that would benefit.
A nearby resident testified that while walking back to her home after shopping at a local market, she noticed a greenish-blue Cadillac without a rear license plate pull up across from her house. She observed two men inside the car; one behind the wheel and the other in the back seat. She later observed another man come over a nearby fence and dive through the open window of the Cadillac. The car then drove away.
From its construction until 1928 the building served as a school, and was known as the District 8 School or the Moses S. Bartlett School, after a nearby resident. Its use declined after 1881, when the town abolished its districts, but was occasionally used due to fluctuating enrollments. The district schools were permanently closed in 1928, and elementary classes were centralized. The town sold the school for $200 in 1939, and it was converted to residential use.
A turning point came to Candlish's career in 1855 when he acquired the lease of Seaham Bottle Works at Seaham harbour with his childhood friend, Robert Greenwell. He later bought out his partner and patronage was given by nearby resident Frederick Stewart, 4th Marquess of Londonderry and the works renamed Londonderry Bottle Works, becoming the largest bottling business in Europe. Candlish purchased a site at Diamond Hall in Millfield and by 1872, had six glasshouses located in Seaham and four in Millfield.
Owned by Montgomery County until 1989 when ownership transferred to the Centerville-Washington Township Park District, this triangular shaped parcel contains a historical marker recognizing the Village of Woodbourne that was settled in 1797 in this location. The Woodbourne cemetery, located next to the park across Paddington Road also features a historical marker placed by the Centerville Historical Society telling a story of how a nearby resident stole many of the gravestones in order to create a patio in their back yard.
A nearby resident, Bill Alvarado (1936-2006), was first on the scene and reported he found Prefontaine flat on his back, still alive but pinned beneath the wreck. By the time medics arrived, he was pronounced dead. It had been reported that his blood alcohol content was found by the Eugene Police Department to The official cause of death was traumatic asphyxiation and he had no other injuries that contributed. Prefontaine's body was buried in his hometown of Coos Bay at Sunset Memorial Park.
The United Country Party was a minor political party in the United Kingdom during the late 1970s. The Party was among those against immigration, inflation and the excesses of the 'Winter of Discontent', claiming to represent 'people with common sense'. The party was formed by Edmund Iremonger, a member of the Conservative Party and The Freedom Association;Boothroyd, David Politico's Guide to The History of British Political Parties (2001), p. 325. noted amateur astronomer and television personality, nearby resident, Patrick Moore was party chairman.
Following a drunken argument with his son (David West Jr), he died from a single knife wound to the heart on 12 December 2014, though his jugular vein had also been cut. His son was arrested and subsequently charged with his murder.Dave West: Businessman who became a trailblazer in the booze-cruise market then expanded into PR and lap-dancing clubsTelegraph. Dave West Obituary Nearby resident Stephen Fry said that he heard "horrifying screams" coming from the house and later saw West's body being carried out.
By another account, Adams was shot twice in the chest, one bullet collapsing a lung and another tearing through the bottom of his heart. Adams was not wearing his bulletproof vest at the time. The killer took Adams' gun, ran to his patrol car, ripped out its microphone and took the keys before driving away in his own car. A nearby resident found the mortally wounded Adams, who told her that he did not know his attacker and that he thought he was not going to live.
With the establishment of the airport, an extra township was built for families of airport staff, its three streets being named after RNZAF airmen who received the Victoria Cross: James Allen Ward, Lloyd Trigg, and Leonard Henry Trent. New Zealand's lowest point, at below sea level, is located on Kirk's Drain Road just to the southwest of Momona. The road was named after John Kirk, a nearby resident, who was the grandfather of the Rt. Hon. Norman Kirk, Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1972 to 1974.
Bloomsbury Farm was added to the National Register of Historic Places in May 2000. The house was demolished in December 2014 by Leonard Atkins, a nearby resident who purchased the property in November 2014 ostensibly to restore it. Atkins cited the building's supposedly poor condition and public safety as the reasons for the abrupt demolition, and he planned to replace the historic house with a new one commensurate in style and value with the modern houses in the surrounding development in which he lives. The farm was removed from the National Register in 2017..
Bigelow Bridge (regionally known as Axe Handle Road Bridge) is one of six historic covered bridges in Union County, Ohio. It is located at ,Bridge Hunter - Axe Handle Road Bridge on Axe Handle Road just north of Ohio State Route 161 between Irwin and Chuckery, and crosses over the Little Darby Creek. The wooden truss bridge was built in 1873 by Reuben Partridge, and named for Eliphas Bigelow, a nearby resident. It was refurbished including the addition of internal steel supports in 1990, and repainted in July 2008.
Rizzolo chose to continue construction, as he believed he would be approved for a variance; he said he would likely sue if he was denied. In January 1999, the expansion was approved by the city's Board of Zoning Adjustments. However, the vote was appealed by a nearby resident and a business, with claims that the expansion would increase traffic and cause parking problems. Another complaint was that hundreds of local children would be exposed to an increased number of drug dealers and drug seekers who would visit the expanded club.
Nathan displays more uncharacteristic rage and locks Lavinia in the attic with Theresa and Jack, who have turned into an aggressive mutated monster. Ward and the sheriff are brought to the farm after a nearby resident discovers a fused mass of animals, and arrive just in time to break into the attic. Nathan shoots and kills the monster, saving Lavinia. After rushing outside, Nathan attempts to shoot the Color emerging from the well, but the sheriff mistakes Nathan's aim for Ward and shoots him, who dies in Lavinia's arms.
The park features a 114-foot fountain designed by local artist Elyn Zimmerman which refers to the canal which formerly ran along the path of Canal Street. In 2007 the design concept was recognized for Excellence in Design by the New York City Public Design Commission. The original name, CaVaLa, referred to the streets surrounding the park ("Canal-Varick-Laight"), and was described by one nearby resident as "kitschy". A few months after it opened, a movement was started to rename the park after Tribeca restaurateur and community activist Albert Capsouto who had recently died.
County Route 13 between Morris and New Berlin is referred to as "the turnpike" by locals, originally constructed in 1832, it was the last section to operate a tollgate due to being the most expensive to build. Ebenezer Chapel, near the southwest border, was coincidentally named after a nearby resident, and was a small settlement originally known as "Hayti" at one time. In 1956, a nearby house made statewide news when a moonshine still was busted up. The Beardslee Farm was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.
The collision severed most of the left wing of the Swift, threw the small plane over the fuselage of the DC-6, thus damaging the airliner's antenna, and sent the craft spiraling into a northwest Dallas street. A nearby resident, Leo Zeock, heard the crash from inside his home and ran to render aid, but he found Brower and Walker already dead. The wreck subsequently caught fire and had to be extinguished by Dallas firefighters; however, the blaze was attributed to leaking avgas ignited by a cigarette discarded by a spectator, not to the crash itself.
While trying to swim to his bandmates who were not able to free themselves from the fuselage, Cauley witnessed their cries for help before they were pulled under the frigid water. A nearby resident of Lake Monona heard the crash and called the authorities who responded quickly with a police boat. Approximately 20 minutes after the crash, Cauley was pulled into the police boat, suffering from hypothermia and shock. According to Jet magazine, which interviewed Cauley and the authorities who assisted in the rescue attempt, the rescue divers could not be in the water for more than 15 minutes at a time due to the freezing temperature of the water.
It is believed to be the only Federal period church in the state that retains the rear pulpit position, which was often altered due to changing tastes in the 19th century. The building was constructed by a "Religious Toleration Society", and was made available to several local church congregations. The building's condition declined in the late 19th century, as the town's population also declined, and it was given an early restoration in 1892 through the work of nearby resident John Hay. In 1932, the building was turned over to a poorly funded board of trustees, and again declined in condition in the 20th century.
Later investigations led to suspicion of a nearby resident, Quimby Clark, who fled the area before he could be questioned. Eventually, it was determined that "the store showed plainly that the robbery and murder had been committed by a white man, for things which Indians would have taken were left and those which a white man would have taken were gone." Notably, Campbell, as previously mentioned the founder of the first trading post along the Skagit forks, once journeyed upriver along the Skagit on an 1874 canoe trip. It was said that one night, he had "slipped off" into the forest across the river.
The incident was videotaped by a nearby resident, George Holliday, who sold it to local TV station KTLA, with the videotape showing King on all fours on the ground while the officers, taking turns tasering and beating King with their batons. As a result of the incident, King was hospitalized with a fractured skull, broken leg, and burn marks from the taser. The station aired parts of the video and CNN aired it the next day. The trial was moved out of Los Angeles to the largely white suburb of Simi Valley, after the judge ruled that untainted jurors could not be found in Los Angeles.
Some elements of Powell's version of the events, however, have been disputed by both drummer Artimus Pyle and Van Zant's widow Judy Van Zant Jenness, who posted the autopsy reports on the band's web site in early 1998, while confirming other aspects of Powell's account.Brant 2002, p. 155. Pyle suffered broken ribs but managed to leave the crash site and notify a nearby resident. Another member of the band's trio of back-up singers (collectively known as the "Honkettes"), JoJo Billingsley, was not on the plane, as she was under a doctor's care in Senatobia, Mississippi, dealing with health problems brought about by drug and alcohol abuse.
Fielder Station is situated on the Puffing Billy Railway in Australia. It opened as a Stopping Place on Monday 10 September 1928,Victorian Railways Weekly Notice No. 37/28 dated 1/9/28 as part of the Gembrook railway line. It was originally an unnamed platform, with time tables noting a station at . In 1929, local Harry Watson constructed a Mallee shed and unofficially named it Ancaster after his home town in Lincolnshire, England, but this was quickly changed by some children to Laura, who was a young local girl. The Victorian Railways officially named it Fielder from Tuesday 5 February 1929,Victorian Railways Weekly Notice No. 6/29 dated 5/2/29 after a nearby resident.
Entrance to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Cooperstown is best known as the home of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, which was founded in 1939 by Stephen Carlton Clark. According to an interview conducted in 1906 by the Mills Commission, nearby resident Abner Graves attributed the game's invention to his deceased friend, Abner Doubleday. Graves stated that Doubleday invented baseball on a cow pasture within the village in 1839, the present site of Doubleday Field, but this claim is universally discounted by baseball historians. Even so, as the site of the Hall of Fame, Cooperstown retains a close connection with the baseball world, and "Cooperstown" had become synonymous with the Hall.
On September 2, 1938 the new station was dedicated with the ceremonies being broadcast nationally over the radio. The Hiram Percy Maxim Memorial Station building appears much as it did when first built in 1938 and is now located next to the ARRL headquarters which was built much later, in 1963. The station was constructed on what was then rural in Newington, Connecticut, purchased for $2,200 from Ms. Elsie Starr (the only nearby resident and namesake of today's HQ framing Starr Avenue). The station's dedication on September 2, 1938 was of such significance in its day that it was carried live nationally on the CBS radio network; this was accomplished with the aid of Connecticut powerhouses WTIC and WDRC.
After World War II, Royal Columbian Hospital in New Westminster began limiting access to residents from the growing suburban communities such as the then-District of Surrey which included the future (established in 1957) City of White Rock. In 1948, the White Rock Hospital Society formed to fundraise and advocate for government support for creation of a local hospital, while residents of North Surrey and Cloverdale advocated for a hospital in the northern part of the district, which ended up being Surrey Memorial Hospital. The society's fundraising goal was $150,000, one-third of the construction costs as required by the provincial government. Photograph displayed in Peace Arch Hospital of the 1951 sod-turning Construction began in 1951 on land donated by a nearby resident.
Chess players in the southwest corner of the park In 1888, Robert Louis Stevenson, visiting the U.S. to seek medical help for his battle with consumption, talked to Mark Twain in the park. In the years before and after World War I, the park was a center for many American artists, writers, and activists, including the photographer André Kertész, who photographed the square during winter. Later, the park was a gathering area for the Beat generation, folk, and hippie movements in the 1950s and 1960s; in 1958, musician Buddy Holly, a nearby resident of Greenwich Village, spent time in the park both listening to people play and helping guitarists with musical chords. In the mid-1960s, A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada sat beneath a tree in the park and chanted Hare Krishna to the people there.
Approaching exit S1W and the Sunken Meadow State Parkway changeover on the northbound Sagtikos Parkway in Commack The Sagtikos State Parkway was first proposed in the 1920s as a connector between the Northern and Southern state parkways. In order to construct the freeway, the heirs of the late David Gardiner, who owned the historic Sagtikos Manor in West Bay Shore, donated of land to the Long Island State Park Commission (LISPC). This donation was considered unusual by the commission as it would break up the family's estate, which had been constructed in 1692 and served George Washington in 1780. In addition to this donation, James Fisher, a nearby resident, gave the commission of land north of the Gardiner property and another north of the Fisher property to ensure that LISPC had the necessary right-of-way for the new parkway.

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