Definition, Meaning & Anagrams | English word HECLA


HECLA

Definitions of HECLA

  1. Alternative form of Hekla.
  2. A unincorporated community in Hopkins County, Kentucky, USA.
  3. A unincorporated community in Linn County, Missouri, USA.
  4. A ghost town in Beaverhead County, Montana, USA.
  5. A city in Brown County, South Dakota, USA.
  6. A ghost town in Laramie County, Wyoming, USA.

5

Number of letters

5

Is palindrome

No

6
CL
CLA
EC
ECL
HE
LA

1

2

96
AC
ACE
ACH
ACL
AE
AEC
AEL
AH
AHL
AL
ALC

Examples of Using HECLA in a Sentence

  • On the east it is connected with the Arctic Ocean (Davis Strait) by Hudson Strait; on the north, with the Arctic Ocean by Foxe Basin (which is not considered part of the bay), and Fury and Hecla Strait.
  • South of the western end of the island is the Fury and Hecla Strait, which separates the island from the Melville Peninsula on the mainland.
  • Lake Linden was the site of a large plant to process the copper ore of the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company.
  • The unincorporated communities of East Brunswick include Drehersville, which is also in West Brunswick, Hecla, Kepner, which is in West Penn, McKeansburg, Rauschs, and Rene Mont.
  • The township includes the following communities: Bridgeport, Brinkerton, Calumet, Carpentertown, Hecla, Kecksburg, Mammoth, Mellingertown, Mt.
  • First contact with Europeans came when the British Royal Navy ships HMS Fury and HMS Hecla, under the command of Captain William Edward Parry, wintered in Igloolik in 1822.
  • The shopping centre was built by Bovis on the site previously occupied by Hadfields' East Hecla steelworks.
  • Early in 1884 the Hecla was sent to Trinkitat on the Red Sea coast of Sudan to support British troops defending Suakin during the Mahdist War.
  • Thompson either owned or had access to a very comprehensive ornithological library exemplared by the Ornithological Dictionary, Le Règne Animal, Selby's Illustrations of British Ornithology, Coenraad Jacob Temminck's Manuel d'ornithologie ou Tableau systématique des oiseaux qui se trouvent en Europe (Sepps & Dufour, Amsterdam, Paris 1815–40), William Edward Parry, 1821 Journal of a Voyage for the Discovery of a North-West Passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific; Performed in the years 1819–'20, in His Majecty's Ships Hecla and Griper.
  • The extreme western end of the viaduct is located on a granite and limestone abutment; the roadway retains its original ornamental iron railings designed by Hecla Iron Works, with a tall chain-link fence above.
  • Documents captured at the end of the war showed the targets for the raids included the Atlas Steelworks, Brown Bayley Steelworks, Meadowhall Iron Works, River Don Works, Darnall Wagon Works, Tinsley Park Collieries, East Hecla Works and Orgreave Coke Ovens.
  • Traveling the road from end to end, one will cross Symmes Creek five times and pass through several communities including Ironton, Hecla, Kitts Hill, Aid, Wilgus, Arabia, Waterloo, Cadmus, Gage, Centenary, and Gallipolis.
  • The train was made up of the broad-gauge locomotive Hecla, a tender, three third-class passenger carriages, and some heavily laden goods waggons.
  • The railway accident at Sonning Cutting (1841) was a particularly notorious example, in which deodands of £1,100 (equivalent to £92,000 in 2016) in total were made on the engine (Hecla), and the trucks.
  • The train comprised the Leo class broad-gauge locomotive Hecla and its tender, three third-class passenger waggons and some heavily laden goods waggons.
  • The stonework came from William Bradley & Sons; the ornamental ironwork from Hecla Iron Works; the terracotta and other tilework from the National Fireproofing Company; the plumbing from Wells and Newton; and the marble work from J.
  • Under their direction, Triskelion Arts had grown from one studio/theater to five spaces in the landmarked Hecla Iron Works factory in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
  • The building was home to Hecla Iron Works, founded in 1876 by Scandinavians Neils Poulson (1843-1911) and Charles Eger (1843-1916).
  • Thomas Playfair joined the British Royal Navy at the age of 12 in 1845, and served on a number of ships including Hecla, Tyne, Rattler, Hecate, Asia, Swift, Brisk, and Pelorus, on which ship he travelled to Melbourne as Wardroom Steward, arriving on 30 September 1859.



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