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Fitzwalter Associates Ltd.

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16 Winchester Way
Bedlington
Northumberland
NE22 5AA



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Fitzwalter Associates Ltd. Details:

Business And Management Consultancy

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associates

1. to connect or bring into relation, as thought, feeling, memory, etc.: Many people associate dark clouds with gloom and depression
2. to join as a companion, partner, or ally: to associate oneself with a cause.
3. to unite or combine: coal associated with shale.
1. associate, peer, equal, match, compeer
usage: a person who joins with others in some activity; "he had to consult his associate before continuing"
2. companion, comrade, fellow, familiar, associate, friend
usage: a person who is frequently in the company of another; "drinking companions"; "comrades in arms"
3. associate, accompaniment, concomitant, co-occurrence
usage: any event that usually accompanies or is closely connected with another; "first was the lightning and then its thunderous associate"
4. associate degree, associate, academic degree, degree
usage: a degree granted by a two-year college on successful completion of the undergraduates course of studies
1. associate, tie in, relate, link, colligate, link up, connect, think, cogitate, cerebrate
usage: make a logical or causal connection; "I cannot connect these two pieces of evidence in my mind"; "colligate these facts"; "I cannot relate these events at all"
2. consort, associate, affiliate, assort, interact
usage: keep company with; hang out with; "He associates with strange people"; "She affiliates with her colleagues"
3. consociate, associate, unite, unify
usage: bring or come into association or action; "The churches consociated to fight their dissolution"

bedlington

Bedlington is a town in Northumberland, to the north of the Tyne and Wear urban area. It lies 10 miles (16 km) north of Newcastle and 4.5 miles (7 km) southeast of the county town of Morpeth. Other nearby places include Ashington to the north northeast, Blyth to the east and Cramlington to the south.

The parish of Bedlington constituted the historic exclave of County Durham called Bedlingtonshire. It is famous for giving its name to a breed of dog, the bedlington terrier, which was said to be first seen in the countryside town of Rothbury in 1825 supposedly having been bred by gypsies.

Bedlington was an industrial town with an iron works and several coal mines. However in more recent times the town has undergone many changes, and is now more of a Dormitory town.

Bedlington and the hamlets belonging to it were bought by Cutheard, bishop of Durham, between 900 and 915, and although locally situated in the county of Northumberland became part of the county palatine (from Lat. palatium, a palace) of Durham over which Bishop Walcher was granted royal rights by William the Conqueror.