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Neill Wyche Duncan

JONESBOROUGH — Neill Wyche Duncan, 83, died peacefully in his sleep on May 16th, in Jonesborough, TN and with his family by his side. He is survived by his sons Bill (wife Carmen) and Shaw (wife Caroline), three cherished grandchildren (Felix, Ruby and Graham), his sister Sara Lee Lower and brother Bill Duncan, along with his nieces and nephews (Roy Lower, Randy Lower, Janet Cundiff, Rhett Hamiter, Todd Hamiter, Brad Duncan, Patti Russell, and Libby Bond), and a host of dear in-laws. He was preceded in death by his loving wife of 50 years, Margaret Elliott, his parents, Ira and Julia Duncan, and his sister Louise Hamiter.

Fairbury City Council discusses swimming pool, other matters

By Kent Casson For The Daily Leader FAIRBURY Preparations are underway for the swimming season in Fairbury as members of the Fairbury City Council received an update on the Stafford Community Swimming Pool during Wednesday’s regular meeting held at City Hall. Street Superintendent Martin Steidinger said it is the hope to finish the painting work early next week and that the new diving boards are in. The city will not start filling the pool until around May 10. The pool will be fully staffed with lifeguards and a manager and is set to open Saturday, May 29, during Memorial Day weekend.

Una tormenta dejó al descubierto un impresionante barco del siglo XIX escondido en la arena

Una tormenta dejó al descubierto un impresionante barco del siglo XIX escondido en la arena
lanacion.com.ar - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lanacion.com.ar Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Shipwreck Buster exposed in full by wild weather in NSW

Shipwreck Buster exposed in full by wild weather in NSW updated 2 AprApril 2021 at 2:25am The Buster shipwreck at Woolgoolga, north of Coffs Harbour, has been exposed to a degree some locals say they ve never seen. ( Print text only Cancel Storms on the NSW Mid North Coast have fully exposed one of the best-preserved shipwrecks in the country, 128 years after it washed ashore. Key points: Buster ran aground at Woolgoolga in 1893 after its moorings broke in high seas Parts of the shipwreck are often visible but locals say they ve never seen so much of it at once before People are flocking to the beach to see it before it s covered again

Wild weather uncovers a fossilised boat buried beneath the sand

The wild weather that lashed New South Wales has uncovered a 19th Century ship that washed ashore during storms over 130 years ago. A famed 39m shipwreck on Woolgoolga s main beach, a town just north of Coffs Harbour on the state s mid-north coast, became completely exposed after heavy rain dislodged the sand that usually blankets it. The ship, named The Buster, travelled from Nova Scotia, Canada, to Woolgoolga in 1893 to load timber bound for New Zealand before treacherous seas wrecked it on the sand. The wild weather that lashed New South Wales has uncovered a 19th century ship that washed ashore during storms over 130 years ago

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