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This extraordinary display of facial hair was now known far and wide as "burnsides," and much imitated.
Which had the whiskers, which the burnsides; which was which?"
Chris Burnsides - drums, percussion (2008 - present)
Burnsides may refer to:
Bugger grips is his intriguing term for what others might call muttonchops or burnsides; he believes that fulsome means exuberant.
Burnsides (disambiguation)
The Burnsides lived a honeymoon life in Manhattan, vacationing often in the Caribbean and on the slopes.
Burnsides is an unincorporated community in Pocahontas County, West Virginia, United States.
Bracken is also abundant while broad-leaved trees grow in the deeply cut burnsides and in the vicinity of abandoned settlements.
"Burnsides" became "sideburns" because of their location on the face and for the somewhat incompetent Burnside's tendency to "get things the wrong way 'round".
The Charles Burnsides located by the records search were not the social worker's Charles Burnside.
Mr. Pegler, a jolly man with thick Burnsides whiskers, was the owner of a thriving plastics manufacturing company.
Having heard Mooses cannons, it made steam and soon brought up Burnsides' "amphibious infantry" (M. F. Jenkins 1999).
Burnsides Switch - siding on the Delaware & Hudson RR near Potato Creek Dip.
They recorded a single entitled, "The Birdland", a novelty dance record in 1956, which gained some interest resulting in a tour with drummer Vi Burnsides.
For much of the Victorian era, chins were clean and cheeks were hairy, with "mutton chops," "Piccadilly weepers" and "burnsides."
Soon after, Eric Grey was replaced by drummer Chris Burnsides formerly of Unknown Origin and One Eye Witness.
Also, in the episode "My Therapeutic Month", he claims that his great-grandfather was the Civil War general Ambrose Burnside (mispronounced "Burnsides").
Others of note are Dr. Eleanor E. Burnsides, Roscoe B. Martin, and Cyrus D. Angell.
Burnside was noted for his unusual facial hair, joining strips of hair in front of his ears to his mustache but with chin clean-shaven; the word burnsides was coined to describe this style.
The term sideburns is a 19th-century corruption of the original burnsides, named after American Civil War general Ambrose Burnside, a man known for his unusual facial hairstyle that connected thick sideburns by way of a moustache, but left the chin clean-shaven.
About 1909 until 1912 an extensive lumber operation by Emmons L. Peck of Carbondale, Pennsylvania, utilizing a steam tramway straddled the county line on South Hill east of Mud Lake, shipping finished lumber from Burnsides Switch on the D&HRR.