Example sentences of "in [num] he " in BNC.

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1 In 1875 he entered the newly established University College of Wales , Aberystwyth , where his contemporaries included many other nationally-minded young Welshmen .
2 In 1875 he was elected an associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects .
3 In 1875 he was awarded an exhibition in physical science newly created by the Clothworkers ' Company ; in the following year he was awarded an entrance scholarship at Christ 's College , Cambridge .
4 In 1875 he gave four lectures on his discoveries at the Royal Institution , and 1877 saw the publication of his book , Discoveries at Ephesus ; a second book , Discoveries on the Site of Ancient Ephesus , published posthumously in 1890 , added little to the earlier work .
5 In 1875 he published Diseases of the Hip , Knee , and Ankle Joints , with their Deformities , and for the rest of his life published many pamphlets setting out his ideas , but these were not widely distributed .
6 In 1875 he found that nitrosyl chloride could be used to characterize terpenes , compounds which are found in turpentine and other essential oils .
7 From 1873 to 1875 he was a draughtsman in the office of Charles Barry , and in 1875 he joined E. R. Robson 's office at the recently formed London School Board .
8 In 1875 he next married his children 's governess , Ethel Jane ( died 1910 ) , daughter of William Sanderson Wyman , a Kettering physician .
9 In 1875 he moved to the Great Southern and Western Railway of Ireland as the works manager and assistant locomotive superintendent at Inchicore near Dublin , where he was responsible for making improvements to the automatic vacuum brake .
10 In 1875 he married Annie ( died 1924 ) , the daughter of Thomas Tatam , farmer , of Little Eaton , Derbyshire .
11 Cook revelled in their spirit and tenacity and after a camping tour to the Holy Land in 1869 he wrote :
12 In 1869 he was elected to the Burntisland town council and chosen as provost .
13 His extraordinary conceit and capacity for intrigue spilled over into a genuine mental instability and in 1869 he was removed from Rome to a lunatic asylum in a convent at Passy , a suburb of Paris .
14 In 1869 he married Mary , daughter of Senator Robert Barry Dickey of Amherst , Nova Scotia .
15 In 1869 he sold his business and began preaching throughout Britain .
16 In 1869 he married Janet , daughter of Walter Sanderson , inspector of the poor , of Galashiels .
17 In 1869 he married his cousin , Maria Sarah ( died 1910 ) , daughter of Gordon Forbes of Ham Common .
18 In 1869 he married Charlotte Pither , daughter of Robert Bush of St Helier , Jersey .
19 In 1869 he presided over its annual general meeting , his last public engagement before he died , a week later .
20 In 1869 he married Isabella Mary Josephine ( ‘ Ella ’ ) , daughter of Lieutenant-General John Mackenzie Macintyre , Royal Artillery , of Fortrose , Ross-shire .
21 In 1869 he married Matilda ( died 1905 ) , daughter of the Revd Thomas Mitchell , vicar of Sancton and Holme-on-the-Wolds .
22 In 1869 he married Louise Ann ( died 1886 ) , daughter of William Mason , medical officer of health for Burton-on-Trent .
23 So in 1869 he came back to England and went to live in a large house in the country .
24 Then in 1771 he moved to Cromford ( q.v. ) in Derbyshire , and there built a large cotton mill powered by water , which led to his spinning machine being called the ‘ Water Frame ’ .
25 In 1771 he preached also at the flourishing society of Derryanville and at Kilmoriarty there was the largest congregation he had seen during the week .
26 In 1771 he proved another of Waring 's assertions suggested to Waring by one of his students , John ( later , Sir John ) Wilson .
27 The great propagandist for agricultural capitalism naturally fav-oured high cereal prices , but in 1771 he also made the link with high wages , insisting that " great earnings " caused many workers to offer only four or five days ' labour .
28 In 1655–6 he engaged in discussions with some disaffected Commonwealthsmen about a possible basis for an alternative government , but he steered clear of active conspiracy or rebellion .
29 In 1272 he acted as a justice of the general eyre in Herefordshire , Staffordshire , and Shropshire .
30 Eliot had known Lawrence 's work for some time , but in 1931–2 he had grown particularly interested in that writer , whose ‘ travels to more primitive lands ’ and use of Mexican divinities in The Plumed Serpent were physical embodiment of Eliot 's anthropological reading and a likely reason for that title , After Strange Gods .
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