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Seaton (other)
Seaton can refer to: Places Antarctica * Seaton Glacier Australia * Seaton, South Australia * Seaton, Victoria Canada * Seaton, Ontario * Seaton House, one of the largest men's homeless shelters located in Toronto, Ontario England * Seaton, Cornwall * Seaton, County Durham * Seaton, Cumbria * Seaton, Devon * Seaton, East Riding of Yorkshire * Seaton, Rutland * Seaton Burn, Tyne and Wear * Seaton Carew, County Durham * Seaton Delaval, Northumberland * Seaton Ross, East Riding of Yorkshire * Seaton Sluice, Northumberland * Seaton Valley, Northumberland Scotland * Seaton Park, Aberdeen United States * Seaton, Illinois People * Alexander Seaton (1626–1649), Scottish soldier * Andy Seaton (born 1977), Scottish footballer * Brad Seaton (born 1993), American football player * Fred Andrew Seaton (1909–1974), United States Secretary of the Interior, 1956–1961 * George Seaton (1911–1979), American playwright and film director * Gordon Seaton ( ...
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Seaton Glacier
Seaton Glacier () is a glacier 17 miles (27 km) long, flowing southeast into Edward VIII Ice Shelf at the northwest part of Edward VIII Bay. It was mapped by Norwegian cartographers from aerial photos taken by the Lars Christensen Expedition, 1936–37, remapped, 1954–58, by ANARE (Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions) and named by Antarctic Names Committee of Australia, ANCA in 1958 for Flight Lt. John Seaton, RAAF, pilot with ANARE at Mawson in 1956. See also *List of glaciers in the Antarctic * Glaciology References

* Glaciers of Enderby Land {{Antarctica-glacier-stub ...
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Seaton Park
Seaton Park is a public park in the Old Aberdeen area of Aberdeen, Scotland. One of the city's biggest parks, it was bought by the city for use as a public park in 1947 from Major Malcolm Vivian Hay, a cryptographer during the First World War and a historian of Catholic and Jewish history. It was formerly the grounds of Seaton House, which had been the Hay family home for centuries, but was gradually wound down as a family house due to inheritance tax, the contents were sold off in 1959 and the already dilapidated house burnt down in 1963. The River Don passes through the edge of the park, and there are paths running along both sides of the river. There are well-maintained flower beds on the lawns that run down the centre of one of the park's main pathways, with flowers that are tended daily and planted annually. There is also a secluded set of walled gardens next to a small private housing mews called Seaton Stables. The park is low-lying and has a tendency to flood. In 2016, ...
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Seaton (Cumbria) Railway Station
Seaton railway station served the village of Seaton, near Workington in Cumberland (now in Cumbria), England. The station was opened by the Cleator and Workington Junction Railway (C&WJR) in 1888 on its new "Northern Extension" from Calva Junction on the northern edge of Workington to the Maryport and Carlisle Railway's Derwent Branch at . The C&WJR built this line to connect the C&WJR with Carlisle and beyond. The line was double track from Workington to Seaton, then single to Linefoot Junction. Most stations on C&WJR lines had heavy industrial neighbours, such as ironworks next to Cleator Moor West, or served primarily industrial workforces, such as Keekle Colliers' Platform. Seaton, however, was a fairly isolated country village. History The C&WJR was built in the late 1870s, being one of the fruits of the rapid industrialisation of West Cumberland in the second half of the nineteenth century, specifically being born as a reaction to oligopolistic behaviour by the L ...
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Seaton Railway Station (Cornwall)
Seaton railway station was a proposed railway station in Seaton, Cornwall which would have formed one of four stations on the St Germans & Looe Railway The St Germans & Looe Railway was a proposed new railway in Cornwall by the Great Western Railway, providing a direct connection between St Germans and Looe. The railway was proposed in 1935 and authorised in 1936, and work commenced in 1937. .... The railway was proposed in 1935 and authorised by the Great Western Railway (Additional Powers) Act 1936 (c. ci), and work commenced in 1937. By the time that war began in 1939 only a small amount of work had been completed, and it was abandoned. Seaton station itself was unbuilt. References Unbuilt railway stations in the United Kingdom {{SouthWestEngland-railstation-stub ...
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Seaton Schroeder
Seaton Schroeder (August 17, 1849 – October 19, 1922) was an admiral of the United States Navy. He contributed to the development of the Driggs-Schroeder rapid-fire gun. Biography Schroeder was born in Washington, D.C., the son of Francis Schroeder, the Resident Minister to Sweden. His mother was the daughter of William Winston Seaton, who, with his brother-in-law, Joseph Gales, owned and edited the National Intelligencer. Seaton served as the Mayor of Washington, D.C., from 1840 to 1850. He entered the United States Naval Academy in 1864, which, because of the American Civil War, was in Newport, Rhode Island. After graduating in June 1868 he served with the Pacific Fleet in 186869 under Admiral John Rodgers in screw sloop, , and fought in the Salt River near Seoul, Korea. His sea tours took him to Alaska, Japan, and the Philippines in , to the West Indies in , and on a world cruise on . Marriage and family Schroeder married Maria Campbell Bache Wainwright on January ...
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Thomas Seaton Scott
Thomas Seaton Scott (16 August 1826 – 15 or 16 June 1895) was an English-born Canadians, Canadian architect. Born in Birkenhead, England he immigrated to Canada as a young man first settling in Montreal. He was hired by the Grand Trunk Railway and worked for them on a number of structures including the Toronto Union Station (1873), Union Station in Toronto and Bonaventure Station (1887–1952), Bonaventure Station in Montreal. In 1871 he was hired by the Department of Public Works and he designed a number of Ottawa's new government buildings in the years after Canadian Confederation. Among his works are the West Block of the Parliament of Canada, the Cartier Square Drill Hall, and the now demolished Dominion Post Office. From 1872 to 1881 he held the position of Chief Dominion Architect and thus played at least a supervisory role in all major government projects. He is considered one of the creators of the ''Dominion Style'' that dominated Canadian institutional architectur ...
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Thomas Seaton
The Reverend Thomas Seaton (baptised 2 October 1684, Stamford, Lincolnshire, died 18 August 1741 at Ravenstone, Buckinghamshire), was a Church of England clergyman and religious writer. Seaton died unmarried in 1741 at Ravenstone and is buried there. Education He was educated at Stamford School and Clare College, Cambridge, graduating a BA in 1705 and a MA in 1708. Career Seaton was elected a fellow of Clare College in 1706 and continued as a Fellow until 1721. He was ordained as a deacon in 1707 and priest of the Church of England in 1709. He became chaplain to Daniel Finch, 2nd Earl of Nottingham. In 1713, he gained the vicarage of Madingley, Cambridgeshire, and in 1721 the city of Nottingham gave him the vicarage of Ravenstone in Buckinghamshire, which enabled him to give up his college fellowship with which he retained until his death. In one of his works, ''The Conduct of Servants in Great Families'' (1720), he advised employers to oversee the moral conduct of their ser ...
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Philippa Seaton
Philippa Seaton is a New Zealand academic, and is a full professor at the University of Otago, specialising in nursing education. Academic career Seaton completed a Master's degree titled ''The experiences of registered nurses in polytechnic baccalaureat degree programmes: an interpretive phenomenological study'' at Massey University in 1998. She completed a PhD at Griffith University on Australian nursing education. Seaton then joined the faculty of the University of Otago, rising to associate professor in 2018 and full professor in 2022. She is the director of the Centre for Postgraduate Nursing Studies at Otago, and is based in Christchurch. Seaton's research focuses on nursing education, and the nursing workforce. She is interested in how technology such as telehealth can be used to improve service delivery, but also how technology can be used to improve health worker education. Seaton has researched post-disaster recovery in education, based on recovery of nursing students ...
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Gordon Seaton
Gordon Seaton (born 1 September 1945) is a footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Chester Chester is a cathedral city in Cheshire, England, on the River Dee, Wales, River Dee, close to the England–Wales border. With a built-up area population of 92,760 in 2021, it is the most populous settlement in the borough of Cheshire West an .... References 1945 births Living people People from Highland (council area) Men's association football midfielders Scottish men's footballers Hibernian F.C. players Berwick Rangers F.C. players Rhyl F.C. players Chester City F.C. players Runcorn F.C. Halton players Scottish Football League players English Football League players {{Scotland-footy-midfielder-1940s-stub ...
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George Seaton
George Seaton (April 17, 1911 – July 28, 1979) was an American screenwriter, playwright, film director and producer, and theater director. Seaton led several industry organizations, serving as a three-time president of the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences, president of the Writers Guild of America West and the Screen Directors Guild, and vice president of Motion Picture Relief Fund. He won two Academy Awards for his screenplays. Life and career Early life Seaton was born George Edward Stenius in South Bend, Indiana, of Swedish descent, the son of Olga (Berglund) and Charles Stenius, who was a chef and restaurant manager. He was baptized as Roman Catholic. He grew up in a Detroit Jewish neighborhood, and described himself as a "Shabbos goy, Shabas goy". He went on to learn Hebrew in an Orthodox Jewish Yeshiva and was even bar mitzvahed. Seaton attended Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter Academy and was meant to go to Yale but instead auditioned for Jesse Bonstelle's dr ...
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Fred Andrew Seaton
Frederick Andrew Seaton (December 11, 1909 – January 16, 1974) was an American newspaperman and politician. He represented the U.S. state of Nebraska in the U.S. Senate and served as U.S. Secretary of the Interior during Dwight D. Eisenhower's administration. Early life Seaton was born in Washington, D.C., on December 11, 1909, the son of Dorothea Elizabeth (''née'' Schmidt) and Fay Noble Seaton. He attended the Manhattan High School in Manhattan, Kansas. He graduated from Kansas State University in 1931, and married Gladys Hope Dowd (November 5, 1910 – January 5, 1999) in the same year. They had four children: Donald Richard, Alfred Noble, Johanna Christine, and Monica Margaret Seaton. In 1937, Seaton moved to Hastings, Nebraska, where he was for many years the publisher of the '' Hastings Tribune''. Political career Seaton was active in Republican politics. He served in the unicameral Nebraska Legislature from 1945 to 1949. He was appointed to the U.S. ...
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Brad Seaton
Bradley Seaton (born November 23, 1993) is an American former professional football player who was an offensive tackle in the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Villanova Wildcats. Professional career Tennessee Titans Seaton was selected by the Tennessee Titans in the seventh round, 236th overall, in the 2017 NFL draft. He was waived on September 2, 2017. He was re-signed to the practice squad on September 20, 2017. He was released on November 9, 2017. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (first stint) On November 29, 2017, Seaton was signed to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' practice squad. He signed a reserve/future contract with the Buccaneers on January 3, 2018. Cleveland Browns The Cleveland Browns signed Seaton to their practice squad on September 4, 2018. The Browns signed Seaton to a futures contract on January 2, 2019. Seaton was waived by the Browns on August 31, 2019. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (second stint) On September 1, 2019, Seaton was signed to the Bucca ...
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