Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

28 Sentences With "place of interment"

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

Henderson died in Summitville, Tennessee. The date of his death and the place of interment is unknown.
His obituary does not indicate his cause of death, place of interment, nor his year of retirement from his law practice.
Moore's place of interment is unknown. His papers are deposited in special collections at the Howard-Tilton Memorial Library on the Tulane campus.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for re-election in 1832. He died in Winchester, Tennessee. The location of his place of interment is unknown.
He was interred at a private residence in Winnsboro. Place of interment is now the Bethel A.R.P Cemetery located on North Vanderhorst Street, Winnsboro, SC.
While his death date and place of interment is unknown, he contributed a part of his wealth to the establishment of Jackson College at Columbia, Tennessee.
Knewstub died at Cockfield, where he was buried 31 May 1624. His epitaph, which has disappeared from his place of interment, has been preserved by Francis Peck.Desiderata Curiosa, p. 216. He does not appear to have been married.
John Lodge Esq. – Baker Esq.Brand Hollis Esq. When within a mile of the place of interment, the field pieces being moved continued firing minute guns till the procession arrived at the church, where the Burial Service was performed in the most impressive and solemn manner, by the Rev.
After the death of his first wife, Leontine Troy in 1895, Turner remarried Lillian Porter Turner sometime between 1907 and 1908. The two remained married until Turner's death in 1923. He died on February 14, 1923 from acute myocarditis in Chicago. His place of interment is Lincoln Cemetery in Chicago.
He had other wives, who were also of mixed Creek and European ancestry. Lachlan McGillivray died in his native Scotland in 1799 at around 80 years of age. Neither his will nor his place of interment are known. Alleck and Mary McGillivray were still living with him in Scotland at that time.
Many of these structures featured a top platform upon which a smaller dedicatory building was constructed, associated with a particular Maya deity. Maya pyramid-like structures were also erected to serve as a place of interment for powerful rulers. Maya pyramidal structures occur in a great variety of forms and functions, bounded by regional and periodical differences.
The whole of the troops at the presidency to parade this afternoon, at half past four o'clock, in front of the Government-house, to attend the remains of the honourable Philip Dundas, late Governor &c.;, &c.;, &c.;, of this island, to the place of interment, with all military honours due to his high rank and station.
Alan Harper. A brass plate on the church's font tells states that it was used by Dean Swift when he was in Ballynure Church during his incumbency in 1695. The churchyard has probably been used as a place of interment since the medieval period. Within the churchyard is a Spanish chestnut tree, locally known as the “Spanish Armada Tree”.
The whole of the troops at the presidency to parade this afternoon, at half past four o'clock, in front of the Government- house, to attend the remains of the honourable Philip Dundas, late Governor &c.;, &c.;, &c.;, of this island, to the place of interment, with all military honours due to his high rank and station.
The Mparo Tombs are a historical cultural site. The royal tombs are the burial site of Omukama (‘King’) Chwa II Kabalega who reigned in Bunyoro Kitara in the late 19th century. He was exiled to the Seychelles in 1899, by the British colonialists. Inside are his spears, bowls, throne and other personal effects on display above the actual place of interment.
Howley, The Follies and Garden Buildings of Ireland, 2004, p.171 Lord Sunderlin also built a large mausoleum next to the church: Sunderlin's brother, the celebrated Shakespearean scholar Edmond Malone, is also buried there. In the 19th century, St Bigseach's churchyard still remained a favoured place of interment for local Catholic families, as well as Anglicans.O'Hanlon, Lives of the Irish Saints, vol X, p.
A view of Winchester Cathedral. Winchester Cathedral was originally built in 1079 and remains the longest Gothic cathedral in Europe. It contains much fine architecture spanning the 11th to the 16th centuries and is the place of interment of numerous Bishops of Winchester (such as William of Wykeham), Anglo-Saxon monarchs (such as Egbert of Wessex) and later monarchs such as King Canute and William Rufus. It was once an important pilgrimage centre and housed the shrine of Saint Swithun.
In early 4th-century, their relics were translated, probably by the Bishop of Milan Maternus from their place of interment to a place outside the walls of Milan, placed a few hundred meters north of the present Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio. A church (Basilica Naboriana) was built over their new tomb, as recorded by Paulinus of Milan in his life of Saint Ambrose. Tradition states that Savina of Milan died while praying at the tomb of Nabor and Felix. Saint Ambrose wrote a hymn about them.
Lauricella married his college sweetheart, the former Betty Valker, who survives him. In addition to Louis Lauricella and wife Connie Jo, the couple has four other children, Francis Lauricella Jr., and wife Mary of San Francisco, California, Elizabeth Lauricella McStravick and husband Peter of Katy, Texas, Marc and wife Kyle Lauricella of Wilton, Connecticut, and Christopher Lauricella and wife Ellen of Los Angeles. A funeral mass for Lauricella was held on April 2, 2014 at St. Rita's Catholic Church, 7100 Jefferson Highway in Harahan. The obituary does not list a place of interment.
A pit quarried just inside the second corridor might have functioned as a place of interment. The first corridor has decoration and texts indicating the occupant was a prince. It seems likely that KV19 was originally intended for the burial of prince Ramesses Setherkhepeshef but its construction was abandoned when he ascended the throne as Ramesses VIII. The tomb was later taken over for the burial of prince Ramesses Mentuherkhepshef but his remains have not been found, neither in KV19 nor in either of the two royal caches.
A special five-day ceremony, which is conducted by the shaman and closely involves the surviving family members, marks the end of a life on earth and concludes with the driving of the soul out from the body and into heaven. In this capacity as funeral director, the shaman's role has been interpreted as that of a practitioner whose principal responsibility is to prevent the soul from coming back to its corporeal home. The usual place of interment of the dead is the village burial ground, which is commonly located in the churchyard.
To avoid, as a Protestant, seizure of his goods on his death, he sold his effects to Pierre Soubeyran a few days before he died, to settle his debts. He died in Paris on 8 July 1747, in the arms of Nicholas Blakey, and was buried in a timber-yard outside the Porte Saint-Antoine, then the usual place of interment for heretics. His copper plates were bought by Thomas Major and taken to England in 1753. Major left in manuscript a memoir of Lawrence, written in 1785.
The Old Newton Burial Ground was established as a part of Jonathan Hamptons Town Plot (1762) which formed the historic core of the Town of Newton including properties around the county's courthouse (built 1762–65) and town green. The burial ground was expanded twice. In 1820, Daniel Stuart (died 1822) deeded a 0.4-acre (0.16 ha) parcel along the graveyard's northeast. In 1837, Job and Ann Halstead conveyed a parcel of to the town's Presbyterian church "for a place of interment of the dead free for all persons desirous of Burying upon the said lot of land".
There is a statue to Samuel Morley in Bristol, and a second memorial above his place of interment in Dr Watts' Walk, Abney Park Cemetery, Stoke Newington, London. The latter is designed with elegant simplicity, as a large raised tomb, with a plain pediment to each end for nonconformists, even those as wealthy as Samuel Morley, generally resisted ostentatious memorials. A bust of Morley, by Joseph Else, is to be found at the Waverley Street entrance to The Arboretum, Nottingham with lettering beneath his likeness describing him as an MP, merchant and philanthropist. A Primitive Methodist chapel was erected in 1889 in Blue Bell Hill, Nottingham, and named in his memory the Morley Memorial Chapel.
A silver gilt white boar, Richard III's own badge, given in large numbers to his supporters, was discovered at Fen Hole outside Dadlington in 2010. There is a theory that the Battle of Bosworth took place at Dadlington, not at Ambion Hill.. On Sunday 22 March 2015, the funeral cortège of King Richard III paused in Dadlington en route to his burial in Leicester Cathedral. In 1511 the wardens of St. James' chapel at Dadlington petitioned King Henry VIII for a chantry foundation in memory of those who fell at the Battle of Bosworth, 1485 (the churchyard being the main place of interment for the dead). A 'Letter of Confraternity' was published and the chantry was established in a minimal form but dissolved in 1547 under Edward VI with the general abolition of such foundations.
At the time she had four living children: John, a doctor of medicine, who was married and living in England; Isaac, who was married and living in New England; Bridget, who had married William Lee as her 2nd husband; and Fear, who later married John Jennings, Jr. The date of her death and place of interment is not of known record. Marble marker on the former location of John Robinson's home at Leiden In 1865, a marble marker was placed on the building occupying the former site of Robinson's home. It is inscribed: > “On this spot, lived, taught, and died John Robinson, 1611–1625.” Metal marker in memory of John Robinson on the outside of the Pieterskerk at Leiden On 24 July 1891 under auspices of the National Council of the Congregational Churches of the United States, a bronze marker in his memory was placed on the wall of the Pieterskerk.
In addition to being the final resting place of American soldiers, Fort Bliss National Cemetery was chosen by the Chinese government as the place of interment for 52 Republic of China Air Force cadets who died while training at the fort in 1944. Several German prisoners of war, and three Japanese civilians who were transferred from a cemetery in Lordsburg, New Mexico were also interred here, as were a German scientist who died while participating in research projects at Fort Bliss during World War II and an officer of the British Royal Air Force who served during that same war. CWGC casualty report. In order to make way for new construction in the central business district in New Orleans, Louisiana in 1955, the remains of the Fort's namesake Lieutenant Colonel William Wallace Smith Bliss (1815-1853) were disinterred from Girod Street Cemetery in New Orleans and brought to Fort Bliss, along with the monument erected in his memory. In June 1973, the Veterans Administration took over operational duties of the cemetery.
Abraham Lincoln's funeral train. A funeral train carries a coffin or coffins (caskets) to a place of interment. Funeral trains today are often reserved for leaders, national heroes, or government officials, as part of a state funeral, but in the past were sometimes the chief means of transporting coffins and mourners to graveyards. Many modern era funeral trains are hauled by operationally restored steam locomotives, due to the more romantic image of the steam train against more modern diesel or electric locomotives, however non-steam powered funeral trains have grown in popularity in recent years, with notable examples being the 1968 funeral of Robert F. Kennedy, hauled by two Pennsylvania Railroad GG1 electrics, or the funeral train of George H.W. Bush in 2018, with the Union Pacific Railroad sponsoring the event, and his train was led by Union Pacific 4141, an EMD SD70ACe diesel locomotive that had been previously painted in a "George Bush 41" scheme in the style of Air Force One, and dedicated to Bush with him and Barbara touring the locomotive unit at its unveiling ceremony in 2005.

No results under this filter, show 28 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.