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・ Little CMS
・ Little Coates
・ Little Cockup
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・ Little Coliban River
・ Little collared fruit bat
・ Little by Little (Oasis song)
・ Little by Little (Robert Plant song)
・ Little by Little (The Rolling Stones song)
・ Little by Little...
・ Little Bytham
・ Little Bytham railway station
・ Little Cacapon
・ Little Cacapon Mountain
・ Little Cacapon River
Little Cacapon, West Virginia
・ Little Caesar
・ Little Caesar & the Romans
・ Little Caesar (band)
・ Little Caesar (film)
・ Little Caesar (Kiss song)
・ Little Caesar and the Consuls
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・ Little Caesars Championship Tennis Tournament
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Little Cacapon, West Virginia : ウィキペディア英語版
Little Cacapon, West Virginia

Little Cacapon is an unincorporated community in Hampshire County in the U.S. state of West Virginia. Little Cacapon is located at the mouth of the Little Cacapon River on the Potomac, east of Okonoko. Okonoko-Little Cacapon Road (West Virginia Secondary Route 2/7) and Spring Gap-Neals Run Road (West Virginia Secondary Route 2) converge south of Little Cacapon. Because of its key location at the mouth of the Little Cacapon and on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, Little Cacapon played important roles in both the French and Indian and American Civil Wars. Generally pronounced . Sometimes, despite the current spelling of the word (derived from local Native American for "medicine water") some locals say .
== Fort Cox ==
On April 4, 1765, a settler by the name of Balzar Stoker received a land grant of 232 acres (940,000 m²) from Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron along the Little Cacapon River and its mouth on the Potomac. Prior to receiving his land grant from Lord Fairfax, Stoker had also purchased 30 acres (120,000 m²) from John Cox. Located on these lands at the Little Cacapon's mouth was "Coxes Ferry," which crossed the Potomac to Maryland. It was at the river's mouth (referred to as "Ferry Field") that a relative of John Cox, Friend Cox, had constructed a stockade. Cox's Fort was erected prior to 1750 for the purposes of protecting and defending both the Potomac River and the Little Cacapon valley. George Washington had previously surveyed a tract of 240 acres (970,000 m²) of land at the Little Cacapon's mouth for Friend Cox on April 25, 1750. Cox's fort and ferry later served as a means of transportation for General Edward Braddock and his soldiers en route to Cumberland from Winchester during the French and Indian War.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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