Lane Bradbury (gebore 17 Junie 1938) is 'n Amerikaanse aktrise, skryfster, en vervaardiger. The Roman Catholic faith is ministered to by the Church of Our Lady and St Christopher at Barrack Hill, which was erected in 1932. Bradford played the historical figure, Sequoyah, the namesake of Sequoia National Park, in the 1954 episode "Sequoia" of the western anthology series Death Valley Days hosted by Stanley Andrews. She is a critically acclaimed Broadway performer, having received seven nominations for Tony Awards, winning two, and nine nominations for Drama Desk Awards, winning three. In 1959, the urban district council intervened over an application by Manchester City Council for a compulsory purchase order to build an overspill estate on 60 acres (24 ha) of land at Bredbury Green, offering two other sites instead. These lands remained in the possession of the Davenports for several generations The manor house of the Davenports in Bredbury was Goyt Hall on the banks of the River Goyt. "May We" is performed by Baby June and Baby Louise, while "Let Me" is performed by Louise. In 1948, the tramway along the A560 from Stockport to Hyde and beyond was abandoned after less than 50 years use. ], a Roman coin was dug up on the edge of the road between Bredbury railway station and St Mark's Church. In the latter year, the "Meeting Place" at Chadkirk was certified as a licensed place for religious worship shortly after the passing of the Toleration Act. A schedule of owners of lands in the township shows that two lords of the manor in 1661 were Sir Fulke Lucy of Henbury and John Arderne of Bredbury, and that in 1672 Sir John Arderne owned Arden Hall, whilst Sir Fulke Lucy owned Goyt Hall. In 1638, the hall was occupied by a branch of the Davenports, a connection of the Bredburys. See full bio » The coming of the railways led to further industrial development, a steady growth of population and the fusing of the separate settlements into the village of Bredbury. Bredbury and Romiley Urban District was created in 1894, and was extended to include the former Compstall Urban District in 1936. She was given the nickname of "Lolly-Legs Lamond" by fellow performer Noel Ferrier after being voted as having the second-best pair of legs in television while appearing on In Melbourne Tonight. After the repairs it was leased to Romiley Little Theatre as their club house, and the surrounding land was let as allotments. In November 2012, NLB's Bredbury site was closed and its braille, giant print, Moon books and braille sheet music collections were re-located to the RNIB's Peterborough site. A large bakery was erected on Ashton Road in 1951. On 1 February 1867, Midland Railway trains began to run through the village, as part of the Sheffield and Midland Railway Companies' Committee, to Manchester London Road, at first via Hyde and later via Reddish. Bredbury seems to have been an exception, for reasons which are unclear, but the army apparently crossed the hill into Romiley, which although not on the direct route, is duly described as "waste" in the Domesday Book of 1086. At the 2011 census, it had a population of 13,593.[1]. The company was later acquired by GKN and closed down in 1985. The segment covers Sequoyah from earliest years to his development of the Cherokee alphabet. Bredbury is served by Bredbury railway station on the Hope Valley Line from Sheffield to Manchester Piccadilly. The district was until quite late in the 19th century little more than a group of hamlets, including Barrack Hill, Harrytown and Hatherlow, but the Industrial Revolution brought a number of cotton mills, some of which depended on the water power provided by the head-streams of the River Mersey, and the Peak Forest Canal along which more mills were built. Known for appearances on various television shows from the 1960s through the 2010s, Colón was perhaps best known for her role as Mama Montana in the 1983 crime film Scarface.