The borough was founded in the middle of a fertile agricultural area—once the heartlands of the Susquehannock Amerindian peoples—and much lumbering and coal-mining was carried out in the area from early in the 19th century. In the 1830s the region entered a boom period and began shipping coal by the Pennsylvania Canal, and by the 1840s even down the Lehigh Canal to Allentown, Philadelphia, Trenton, Wilmington, New York City, and other East Coast cities and ports via the connecting engineering works of the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company such as the upper Lehigh Canal, the Ashley Planes and the early Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad, along with other railroads that flocked to or were born in the area. After severe flooding ripped up the upper Lehigh Canal in the 1860s, the L&S was extended to the Delaware along the lower canal, keeping the big cities' markets connected to the still growing Wyoming Valley collieries and breakers. A second rail line was pushed up the Lehigh Gorge, the Lehigh Valley Railroad enabling a resurgent coal exportation to the East Coast cities and connecting the region to the Erie Railroad and Buffalo, New York.
By 1900, the population consisted of 1,948 persons; in 1910, 3,537 persons; and in 1940, 5,802 persons. The town lost usable lands in 1959 in the Knox Mine Disaster, when the river broke into the roof of sub-river anthracite mines and, in one moment, all but killed the local anthracite mining industry. Subsequently, despite the local loss of industry, the fact that the population was 5,652 at the 2010 census indicates that the former Indian and farmlands have been attractive to building developers.
The town of Exeter was formed in 1742 from the western part of North Kingstown. The name Exeter derives from the county town and cathedral city of Exeter in Devon, England. Numerous other places have also been given the name Exeter. Exeter is noted by folklorists as the site of one of the best documented examples of vampireexhumation: the Mercy Brown Vampire Incident of 1892.
Geography
According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 58.4 square miles (151km2), of which, 57.7 square miles (149km2) of it is land and 0.7 square miles (1.8km2) of it (1.15%) is water.
In the reign of King Henry I (1100–1135) the manor of Bicton, near Exeter, was granted by the king to John Janitor, who held the manor by the feudal tenure of grand serjeanty requiring him to provide a county jail, which was an honourable position of trust. The Latin noun Janitor means "door-keeper", generally understood in the sense janitor carceris, "door-keeper of a jail". Thus the tenant took his surname from his form of tenure. The county prison was later transferred to a building beneathExeter Castle in the county capital Exeter, but the feudal tenant of Bicton was nevertheless for many centuries required to meet part of the repair and maintenance costs of the newly sited jail. The Devon topographer John Swete (d.1821) stated that Dennis Rolle Esq. (d.1797), the proprietor of Bicton at the time of his visit, had paid the sum of £1,000 to the Treasury to be released in perpetuity from his vestigial feudal liabilities. The release was effected by an Act of Parliament in 1787, Public Act, 27 George III, c. 59 summarised as:
2010-present: The City of Exeter wards of Alphington, Cowick, Duryard, Exwick, Heavitree, Mincinglake, Newtown, Pennsylvania, Pinhoe, Polsloe, Priory, St David’s, St James, St Leonard’s, St Thomas, and Whipton and Barton.
The constituency covers most of the city of Exeter in Devon. Following a review of parliamentary representation in Devon by the Boundary Commission for England, which has increased the number of seats in the county from 11 to 12, two wards of the City of Exeter (St Loyes and Topsham) have been transferred to the neighbouring East Devon constituency.
Pennsylvania is Pere Ubu's eleventh studio album. The album marks Tom Herman's return to Pere Ubu's studio work after a twenty-year absence.
Director's Cut
In 2005, to celebrate Pere Ubu's 30th Anniversary, a "Director's Cut" was released which featured new mastering, alternate mixes, and two bonus tracks. David Thomas explains: "The point of doing a Director's Cut is to benefit from that older and wiser thing. I reviewed all alternate mixes from the session, sometimes discovering that an earlier mix turned out to be superior to the chosen mix. As well, 10 years later, we have access to improved mastering technology. Consequently, there is a greater clarity and cohesion to the Director's Cut. We are not going to make both versions available. The Director's Cut is the way it's supposed to be. Period."
Pennsylvania wine refers to wine made from grapes grown in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. The climate in Pennsylvania is mild compared to surrounding states, with the moderating effects of Lake Erie to the north and the Atlantic Ocean to the east. 119 wineries are located in all parts of the state, including five designated American Viticultural Areas. Pennsylvania is the eighth-largest wine producing state in the country.
There were 21 drivers on the grid; all of them were American-born males. Frank Tanner received the last-place finish due to an oil pressure issue on lap 2 out of the 200 laps that made up the regulation length of the race. There were only two lead changes; David Pearson managed to defeat Richard Petty by 11 seconds in only one hour and twelve minutes. While Pearson achieved a pole position with a speed of 86.289 miles per hour (138.869km/h), the average speed of the race was only 82.586 miles per hour (132.909km/h).Bob Welborn would retire from NASCAR after this race; having gone winless since the 1959 Western North Carolina 500.
Wendell Scott managed to charge ahead from a disappointing 21st place to a respectable fourth place during the course of the race.
The race car drivers still had to commute to the races using the same stock cars that competed in a typical weekend's race through a policy of homologation (and under their own power). This policy was in effect until roughly 1975. By 1980, NASCAR had completely stopped tracking the year model of all the vehicles and most teams did not take stock cars to the track under their own power anymore.
Between the year 2000 and 2008 I spent lots of time in and out of Exeter Prison.
You spend a lot of time stuck in a very small space with someone who could be unpredictable. It's not a bad prison on the whole, but I was always glad to get outta there!
I made a diary of my time in and out of prison. It's here if you want to listen :
https://youtu.be/0b8KaUCUpnM
published: 31 Jan 2021
Exeter Prison (Part 1)
published: 09 Feb 2022
HMP Exeter - Prison Officers Try To Stop Us Filming
Videos from the Live Free back catalogue, edited to bring you the highlights of the visit or encounter.
Live Free is a British auditor bringing entertaining content and highlighting corruption and failings within prisons and the public services.
Original
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDJM3lYAYzs
Live Free Channel
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwgGS8SFBVWdw-KZZ-cc2yg
published: 13 Feb 2022
HM Prison Exeter is a category B
HM Prison Exeter is a category B local and resettlement men's prison, located in Exeter in the county of Devon, England. It holds men sentenced by the courts of Devon, Cornwall, Dorset and Somerset. There are also prisoners from further afield who have been transferred from other prisons. Exeter Prison is operated by His Majesty's Prison Service.In the reign of King Henry I (1100–1135) the manor of Bicton, near Exeter, was granted by the king to John Janitor, who held the manor by the feudal tenure of grand serjeanty requiring him to provide a county jail, which was an honourable position of trust. The Latin noun Janitor means "door-keeper", generally understood in the sense janitor carceris, "door-keeper of a jail" Thus the tenant took his surname from his form of tenure.The county prison...
published: 19 Nov 2022
Get That Camera OUT My Face 😤 📸⚠️🙄💥
Visit to HMP Exeter in Devon, staff are rude and not nice here, we examine the brickwork with the zoom camera.
published: 22 Mar 2024
Diary of an Armed Robber Episode 1 Exeter Prison
My small time drug dealing and petty crime ended up on a dangerous path that led me to robbing a petrol station at knife point. I escaped with less than a thousand pounds and was sentenced to 4 years in Prison. I have arranged my memories of what happened and recorded them for you. I hope you find enjoyment listening to them. It has been therapeutic to unbox some of these memories.
I was asked if I wanted to speak to a comedian about my previous life as a criminal. He is doing a series of Podcasts talking to criminals about their various exploits.
I thought why not, Its been ten years since I was last in jail and I'm not the same person anymore. As long as I could do it anonymously I would be happy to speak to him.
He came to see me at my home and we spoke all evening about my life...
published: 11 Nov 2019
William Bonney Weekly 03: Why are conditions at HMP EXETER so bad right now?
This week's episode looks at conditions at HMP Exeter and why things are so bad right now.
published: 02 Nov 2021
The Departure Lounge at HMP Exeter
The Departure Lounge is a multi-agency event that helps to meet the immediate needs of prisoners returning to their communities
published: 17 Jun 2019
A day in the life of a prison officer
Jade is a Supervising Officer at HMP Manchester and previously served in the Armed Forces. She joined the Prison Service in 2020 through the Unlocked Graduates scheme. In January 2023 we followed Jade carrying out her duties on an early shift at HMP Manchester. The video was shot over one day and filmed via GoPro and hand-held camera.
An extraordinary job. Done by someone like you.
Apply now ⬇️
https://bit.ly/3PX21gQ
*Chapters*
0:00 Intro
0:14 Driving to work and thinking about my day
1:16 Getting through security, and shift patterns
2:20 Leading the morning briefing
3:38 Searching prisoners
5:53 Supervising prisoners to work or education
6:27 Prisoners working in the bakery
7:23 Engaging with prisoners and building relationships
9:25 Support you receive as a prison officer
10:32 Servi...
Between the year 2000 and 2008 I spent lots of time in and out of Exeter Prison.
You spend a lot of time stuck in a very small space with someone who could be ...
Between the year 2000 and 2008 I spent lots of time in and out of Exeter Prison.
You spend a lot of time stuck in a very small space with someone who could be unpredictable. It's not a bad prison on the whole, but I was always glad to get outta there!
I made a diary of my time in and out of prison. It's here if you want to listen :
https://youtu.be/0b8KaUCUpnM
Between the year 2000 and 2008 I spent lots of time in and out of Exeter Prison.
You spend a lot of time stuck in a very small space with someone who could be unpredictable. It's not a bad prison on the whole, but I was always glad to get outta there!
I made a diary of my time in and out of prison. It's here if you want to listen :
https://youtu.be/0b8KaUCUpnM
Videos from the Live Free back catalogue, edited to bring you the highlights of the visit or encounter.
Live Free is a British auditor bringing entertaining co...
Videos from the Live Free back catalogue, edited to bring you the highlights of the visit or encounter.
Live Free is a British auditor bringing entertaining content and highlighting corruption and failings within prisons and the public services.
Original
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDJM3lYAYzs
Live Free Channel
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwgGS8SFBVWdw-KZZ-cc2yg
Videos from the Live Free back catalogue, edited to bring you the highlights of the visit or encounter.
Live Free is a British auditor bringing entertaining content and highlighting corruption and failings within prisons and the public services.
Original
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDJM3lYAYzs
Live Free Channel
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwgGS8SFBVWdw-KZZ-cc2yg
HM Prison Exeter is a category B local and resettlement men's prison, located in Exeter in the county of Devon, England. It holds men sentenced by the courts of...
HM Prison Exeter is a category B local and resettlement men's prison, located in Exeter in the county of Devon, England. It holds men sentenced by the courts of Devon, Cornwall, Dorset and Somerset. There are also prisoners from further afield who have been transferred from other prisons. Exeter Prison is operated by His Majesty's Prison Service.In the reign of King Henry I (1100–1135) the manor of Bicton, near Exeter, was granted by the king to John Janitor, who held the manor by the feudal tenure of grand serjeanty requiring him to provide a county jail, which was an honourable position of trust. The Latin noun Janitor means "door-keeper", generally understood in the sense janitor carceris, "door-keeper of a jail" Thus the tenant took his surname from his form of tenure.The county prison was later transferred to a building beneath Exeter Castle in the county capital Exeter, but the feudal tenant of Bicton was nevertheless for many centuries required to meet part of the repair and maintenance costs of the newly sited jail. The Devon topographer John Swete (d.1821) stated that Dennis Rolle Esq. (d.1797), the proprietor of Bicton at the time of his visit, had paid the sum of £1,000 to the Treasury to be released in perpetuity from his vestigial feudal liabilities.[10] The release was effected by an Act of Parliament in 1787, Public Act, 27 George III, c. 59 summarised as:
HM Prison Exeter is a category B local and resettlement men's prison, located in Exeter in the county of Devon, England. It holds men sentenced by the courts of Devon, Cornwall, Dorset and Somerset. There are also prisoners from further afield who have been transferred from other prisons. Exeter Prison is operated by His Majesty's Prison Service.In the reign of King Henry I (1100–1135) the manor of Bicton, near Exeter, was granted by the king to John Janitor, who held the manor by the feudal tenure of grand serjeanty requiring him to provide a county jail, which was an honourable position of trust. The Latin noun Janitor means "door-keeper", generally understood in the sense janitor carceris, "door-keeper of a jail" Thus the tenant took his surname from his form of tenure.The county prison was later transferred to a building beneath Exeter Castle in the county capital Exeter, but the feudal tenant of Bicton was nevertheless for many centuries required to meet part of the repair and maintenance costs of the newly sited jail. The Devon topographer John Swete (d.1821) stated that Dennis Rolle Esq. (d.1797), the proprietor of Bicton at the time of his visit, had paid the sum of £1,000 to the Treasury to be released in perpetuity from his vestigial feudal liabilities.[10] The release was effected by an Act of Parliament in 1787, Public Act, 27 George III, c. 59 summarised as:
My small time drug dealing and petty crime ended up on a dangerous path that led me to robbing a petrol station at knife point. I escaped with less than a thou...
My small time drug dealing and petty crime ended up on a dangerous path that led me to robbing a petrol station at knife point. I escaped with less than a thousand pounds and was sentenced to 4 years in Prison. I have arranged my memories of what happened and recorded them for you. I hope you find enjoyment listening to them. It has been therapeutic to unbox some of these memories.
I was asked if I wanted to speak to a comedian about my previous life as a criminal. He is doing a series of Podcasts talking to criminals about their various exploits.
I thought why not, Its been ten years since I was last in jail and I'm not the same person anymore. As long as I could do it anonymously I would be happy to speak to him.
He came to see me at my home and we spoke all evening about my life in and out of jail.
After he left I held my head in my hands regretting being so candid with him, I'd revisited parts of my life I have spent many years suppressing. I have had counseling to deal with the mental scars of the decade I spent in and out of prison.
It was received much better than I thought and people seem to be interested in the story I had to tell.
So here it is in more detail.
Here's Matt's podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/conversations-with-criminals/id1458291430?mt=2
My small time drug dealing and petty crime ended up on a dangerous path that led me to robbing a petrol station at knife point. I escaped with less than a thousand pounds and was sentenced to 4 years in Prison. I have arranged my memories of what happened and recorded them for you. I hope you find enjoyment listening to them. It has been therapeutic to unbox some of these memories.
I was asked if I wanted to speak to a comedian about my previous life as a criminal. He is doing a series of Podcasts talking to criminals about their various exploits.
I thought why not, Its been ten years since I was last in jail and I'm not the same person anymore. As long as I could do it anonymously I would be happy to speak to him.
He came to see me at my home and we spoke all evening about my life in and out of jail.
After he left I held my head in my hands regretting being so candid with him, I'd revisited parts of my life I have spent many years suppressing. I have had counseling to deal with the mental scars of the decade I spent in and out of prison.
It was received much better than I thought and people seem to be interested in the story I had to tell.
So here it is in more detail.
Here's Matt's podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/conversations-with-criminals/id1458291430?mt=2
Jade is a Supervising Officer at HMP Manchester and previously served in the Armed Forces. She joined the Prison Service in 2020 through the Unlocked Graduates ...
Jade is a Supervising Officer at HMP Manchester and previously served in the Armed Forces. She joined the Prison Service in 2020 through the Unlocked Graduates scheme. In January 2023 we followed Jade carrying out her duties on an early shift at HMP Manchester. The video was shot over one day and filmed via GoPro and hand-held camera.
An extraordinary job. Done by someone like you.
Apply now ⬇️
https://bit.ly/3PX21gQ
*Chapters*
0:00 Intro
0:14 Driving to work and thinking about my day
1:16 Getting through security, and shift patterns
2:20 Leading the morning briefing
3:38 Searching prisoners
5:53 Supervising prisoners to work or education
6:27 Prisoners working in the bakery
7:23 Engaging with prisoners and building relationships
9:25 Support you receive as a prison officer
10:32 Serving lunch
11:04 Sensing danger and dealing with incidents
13:28 Ending the shift
14:07 Thinking about becoming prison officer?
Jade is a Supervising Officer at HMP Manchester and previously served in the Armed Forces. She joined the Prison Service in 2020 through the Unlocked Graduates scheme. In January 2023 we followed Jade carrying out her duties on an early shift at HMP Manchester. The video was shot over one day and filmed via GoPro and hand-held camera.
An extraordinary job. Done by someone like you.
Apply now ⬇️
https://bit.ly/3PX21gQ
*Chapters*
0:00 Intro
0:14 Driving to work and thinking about my day
1:16 Getting through security, and shift patterns
2:20 Leading the morning briefing
3:38 Searching prisoners
5:53 Supervising prisoners to work or education
6:27 Prisoners working in the bakery
7:23 Engaging with prisoners and building relationships
9:25 Support you receive as a prison officer
10:32 Serving lunch
11:04 Sensing danger and dealing with incidents
13:28 Ending the shift
14:07 Thinking about becoming prison officer?
Between the year 2000 and 2008 I spent lots of time in and out of Exeter Prison.
You spend a lot of time stuck in a very small space with someone who could be unpredictable. It's not a bad prison on the whole, but I was always glad to get outta there!
I made a diary of my time in and out of prison. It's here if you want to listen :
https://youtu.be/0b8KaUCUpnM
Videos from the Live Free back catalogue, edited to bring you the highlights of the visit or encounter.
Live Free is a British auditor bringing entertaining content and highlighting corruption and failings within prisons and the public services.
Original
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDJM3lYAYzs
Live Free Channel
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwgGS8SFBVWdw-KZZ-cc2yg
HM Prison Exeter is a category B local and resettlement men's prison, located in Exeter in the county of Devon, England. It holds men sentenced by the courts of Devon, Cornwall, Dorset and Somerset. There are also prisoners from further afield who have been transferred from other prisons. Exeter Prison is operated by His Majesty's Prison Service.In the reign of King Henry I (1100–1135) the manor of Bicton, near Exeter, was granted by the king to John Janitor, who held the manor by the feudal tenure of grand serjeanty requiring him to provide a county jail, which was an honourable position of trust. The Latin noun Janitor means "door-keeper", generally understood in the sense janitor carceris, "door-keeper of a jail" Thus the tenant took his surname from his form of tenure.The county prison was later transferred to a building beneath Exeter Castle in the county capital Exeter, but the feudal tenant of Bicton was nevertheless for many centuries required to meet part of the repair and maintenance costs of the newly sited jail. The Devon topographer John Swete (d.1821) stated that Dennis Rolle Esq. (d.1797), the proprietor of Bicton at the time of his visit, had paid the sum of £1,000 to the Treasury to be released in perpetuity from his vestigial feudal liabilities.[10] The release was effected by an Act of Parliament in 1787, Public Act, 27 George III, c. 59 summarised as:
My small time drug dealing and petty crime ended up on a dangerous path that led me to robbing a petrol station at knife point. I escaped with less than a thousand pounds and was sentenced to 4 years in Prison. I have arranged my memories of what happened and recorded them for you. I hope you find enjoyment listening to them. It has been therapeutic to unbox some of these memories.
I was asked if I wanted to speak to a comedian about my previous life as a criminal. He is doing a series of Podcasts talking to criminals about their various exploits.
I thought why not, Its been ten years since I was last in jail and I'm not the same person anymore. As long as I could do it anonymously I would be happy to speak to him.
He came to see me at my home and we spoke all evening about my life in and out of jail.
After he left I held my head in my hands regretting being so candid with him, I'd revisited parts of my life I have spent many years suppressing. I have had counseling to deal with the mental scars of the decade I spent in and out of prison.
It was received much better than I thought and people seem to be interested in the story I had to tell.
So here it is in more detail.
Here's Matt's podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/conversations-with-criminals/id1458291430?mt=2
Jade is a Supervising Officer at HMP Manchester and previously served in the Armed Forces. She joined the Prison Service in 2020 through the Unlocked Graduates scheme. In January 2023 we followed Jade carrying out her duties on an early shift at HMP Manchester. The video was shot over one day and filmed via GoPro and hand-held camera.
An extraordinary job. Done by someone like you.
Apply now ⬇️
https://bit.ly/3PX21gQ
*Chapters*
0:00 Intro
0:14 Driving to work and thinking about my day
1:16 Getting through security, and shift patterns
2:20 Leading the morning briefing
3:38 Searching prisoners
5:53 Supervising prisoners to work or education
6:27 Prisoners working in the bakery
7:23 Engaging with prisoners and building relationships
9:25 Support you receive as a prison officer
10:32 Serving lunch
11:04 Sensing danger and dealing with incidents
13:28 Ending the shift
14:07 Thinking about becoming prison officer?
The borough was founded in the middle of a fertile agricultural area—once the heartlands of the Susquehannock Amerindian peoples—and much lumbering and coal-mining was carried out in the area from early in the 19th century. In the 1830s the region entered a boom period and began shipping coal by the Pennsylvania Canal, and by the 1840s even down the Lehigh Canal to Allentown, Philadelphia, Trenton, Wilmington, New York City, and other East Coast cities and ports via the connecting engineering works of the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company such as the upper Lehigh Canal, the Ashley Planes and the early Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad, along with other railroads that flocked to or were born in the area. After severe flooding ripped up the upper Lehigh Canal in the 1860s, the L&S was extended to the Delaware along the lower canal, keeping the big cities' markets connected to the still growing Wyoming Valley collieries and breakers. A second rail line was pushed up the Lehigh Gorge, the Lehigh Valley Railroad enabling a resurgent coal exportation to the East Coast cities and connecting the region to the Erie Railroad and Buffalo, New York.
By 1900, the population consisted of 1,948 persons; in 1910, 3,537 persons; and in 1940, 5,802 persons. The town lost usable lands in 1959 in the Knox Mine Disaster, when the river broke into the roof of sub-river anthracite mines and, in one moment, all but killed the local anthracite mining industry. Subsequently, despite the local loss of industry, the fact that the population was 5,652 at the 2010 census indicates that the former Indian and farmlands have been attractive to building developers.
July 7, 1931 – December 2, 2024. JeanneEllen Willman, 93, passed away peacefully on December 2, 2024. Born on July 7, 1931, in Exeter, Pennsylvania, she was a beloved mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, sister, and friend ... .
Geis Companies, which broke ground on the structure in 2020 and completed it in 2022, recently sold it to EQTExeter, a ... Exeter, based in Pennsylvania, is the nation's third largest private equity firm.
On Saturday afternoon at ExeterHigh School, the Bulldogs girls volleyball team was turned away by Big Spring, 3-0 (26-24, 25-14, 25-23), to end its season at 18-3.
“There is no mathematical way that Congressman Cartwright can catch up to us,” Bresnahan told supporters at his Exeter campaign headquarters ...Thank you for giving me a chance to represent NortheasternPennsylvania.”.
businessman who built a reputation locally as the young CEO of Exeter-based Kuharchik Construction, visited polling places throughout NortheastPennsylvania on Election Day, rallying supporters and ...
Edward Romanosky, 86, of Exeter, Pennsylvania, died peacefully in his home on October 29, 2024, surrounded by the love of his family. Edward was born January 5, 1938, in Exeter, to Mary Masley (Vacula) and Eugene Romanosky.
The Exeter, Pennsylvania man is also accused of verbally threatening to kill his wife, strangling her to unconsciousness, slicing her stomach with a folding knife, using a closed fist to punch her ...
First State's finest ... First State's finest ... The 5-foot-11, 190-pound Cupitt is from Reading, Pennsylvania, and was kicker and punter for Exeter Township High, graduating a couple years before Blue Hens offensive lineman Anthony Caccese ... “ . .