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"Griffin Heights is a neighborhood in northwestern Tallahassee, Florida. The area has had problems with gun violence and drugs. It is historically African American. It is home to apartments serving students from Florida State University. The area is also home to the New Birth Tabernacle of Praise church.https://www.wtxl.com/news/insiders-griffin-heights-works-to-improve- neighborhood/article_83305c4e-20fe-11e5-9d92-5fc530904601.html Griffin Middle School is also located in the neighborhood. Griffin Heights and Greater Frenchtown were part of the City of Tallahassee's Greater Safety Initiative in 2018. In 2019, Rosalind Bentley, a writer for the Atlanta Journal Constitution who is from Griffin Heights, wrote about white people moving into the area as Florida State University expands its footprint. References Category:Neighborhoods in Tallahassee, Florida "
"DeSean or Desean is a given name. People with the name include: *DeSean Jackson (born 1986), American football player *Desean Terry, American actor *Kentrell DeSean Gaulden, better known as YoungBoy Never Broke Again, American rapper *Andre DeSean Wicker, better known as Dresta, American rapper See also *"Te Desean", a song by Mexican singer Luis Miguel *Deshun Category:Masculine given names "
"Ty-coch Halt railway station, Ty Coch Halt railway station or Tycoch Halt railway station had been opened by 1927 to passenger services for miners use only. Carmarthenshire, LIII.8, Revised: 1913, Published: 1915 A halt is however marked on the 1913 OS map. It was opened by the Great Western Railway and served the colliers from the Kidwelly area working at the collieries in the Gwendraeth Valley between 1927 and 1949; several basic halts were opened on the Burry Port and Gwendraeth Valley Railway in Carmarthenshire, Wales, however most were also opened to public use. History Ty-coch was opened for use by miners by the Great Western Railway on the route of the Burry Port and Gwendraeth Valley Railway on the Kidwelly and Cwmmawr section of the line and was closed by the Great Western Railway by May 1949. It was on the route of the old canal with Kidwelly located to the south and Trimsaran Road to the north. The railway was originally a freight only line apart from passenger trains for miners,1:1 million - 1:1 10K, 1900s but stations were established due to pressure from the public. The freight service continued for coal traffic until 1996 by which time the last of the local collieries had closed down.Colonel Stephens SocietySN40SW - A, Surveyed / Revised:Pre-1930 to 1963, Published:1964 The line was carrying traffic from the washeries at Cwmmawr and Carway until closure. Infrastructure The halt had a single short platform with a small shelter on the northern side of the line at the dwellings of Ty- coch near Bryn-morfa. Ty-coch Junction stood to the west and several sidings were located on the other side of the road overbridge. A path led down from a gate in the wall of the overbridge. A short siding nearly running up to the overbridge on the north side of the line was present. The line was partly built on the old Kidwelly and Llanelly Canal however incline planes existed at sites such as Ponthenri.Bowen, R.E. (2001). The Burry Port & Gwendreath Valley Railway and its Antecedent Canals. Usk : The Oakwood Press. . p. 156. The BP&GVR; system in 1909. Remnants The section south of Pinged, between Burry Port and Craiglon Bridge Halt is now a footpath and cycleway, however other sections of the line have formal and informal footpaths on the old trackbed. The access through the wall to the halt is still present but unused. Routes See also * West Wales lines References Category:Disused railway stations in Carmarthenshire Category:Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1927 Category:Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1949 Category:Former Great Western Railway stations "