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Butler's Wharf on the south side of the Thames next to the Tower Bridge.
The Thames' London section has been lined with warehouses and wharves for centuries. Until the 1950s or so, freight ships delivered goods all the way to Central London via the famous river. The Thames is now considered too shallow and narrow for the super container freighters of the day, and cargoes are loaded much further downstream along the English Coast.
Butler Pantry with Homer Laughlin fruit bowl on a 30’s hand towel, McCoy cookie jar and late 50’s Sunbeam mixer (works great!)
Although the story of guitarist/vocalist Jonathan Butler is one narrative, it tends to be told in two parts. His followers in North America where Butler is now based know that he is from South Africa but with little knowledge of his background. Those who appreciate his music locally know how he used his voice/guitar to escape the abject conditions around him. Although they know that he is big in the US, there is little knowledge of the many musical projects he involved in across the Atlantic. On the weekend of 02-03 April, Butler will appear at the Cape Town International Jazz Festival with two guests, trumpeter Rick Braun and saxophonist Richard Elliot. Since 2005, the three have performed together as members of a band known as Jazz Attack. As individual artists, all three unquestionably belong to the premier smooth jazz league. Butler has won Grammy nominations twice for his African-brewed vocalising and guitar playing. Both Braun and Elliot are leading innovative smooth jazz artists. Having them in Cape Town will be an opportunity to see their skill and will help to square the Jonathan Butler story as local audiences will have first hand experience of what the vocalist/guitarist does in the US.
Photo by Danny Wild -- Duke beat Butler, 82-70, in an NCAA Division 1 college basketball game at the IZOD Center in the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford, N.J. on December 4, 2010. The game was a rematch of the 2010 NCAA national championship game and served as the second game of the CARQUEST Auto Parts Classic.
The plantation was abandoned when the Civil War began. In 1866, Butler's daughter Frances returned with her father to attempt to restore the plantation to its former glory. Unlike her younger sister Sarah who was aligned with her mother, Frances had adopted her father's pro-slavery views and kept a diary like her mother. She published it in 1883, titled Ten Years on a Georgia Plantation (ISBN 1-498-15893-5).[9] It is considered the best account of what it was like for whites who were former plantation owners in Georgia during Reconstruction. In Frances' view, blacks fared better under slavery than freedom. Due to the lack of slave labor, and the postwar depression in the South, plantations were doomed to fail, and the fifth generation of Butlers sold the remains of their lands in 1923.[10]
A description of the plantation from November 1873:
I am monarch of all I survey, which is an island of about 1,600 acres, surrounded by a muddy-looking river, called the romantic-sounding Indian name of the Altamaha. ... Our castle is a neat but not gaudy little frame house, with a piazza in front of it, from which you descend by six steps to a garden, or rather a small grove of orange trees, palmettoes, oleanders, and roses. The first-named are laden with golden fruit, of a quality unsurpassed anywhere in the world, I am bold to say, for size and sweetness. We are hard at work now packing them up for market, and shall have over 100 barrels for sale. The interior of the mansion is in accordance with its modest exterior; a small dining-room, a small drawing-room, a very small office or study, a small hall, a pantry, and two comfortable bedrooms on the ground-floor, and two more comfortable bedrooms over the dining and drawing-rooms. At the rear of the house about twelve yards, is what is called the colony, where are situated the kitchen, servants' sitting-room and bedrooms, the laundry and dairy, and in a corner of the yard is a turkey-house, full of prime Christmas fowl.
Behind the colony is Settlement No. 1, where the coloured people (I believe this is the correct term) reside. It consists of an avenue of orange trees, on each side of which are rows of wooden houses, and at the end of which, facing the avenue, is what was the old hospital, but which is now half of it the church. ... Immediately in front of our garden is the Altamaha river, with the landing-place for the boats, and from which all the water-supply is drawn. On the left of us is the overseer's house, a larger and more imposing edifice, although not so comfortable as ours. On the right are the barns and the threshing mill and engine, which are very nearly finished, and present a magnificent appearance from the river. The old mill, with all the valuable machinery, was burnt down a year ago. The rest of the island consists of rice-fields, of which about 1,000 acres are under cultivation or cultivable, some marsh land covered with thick bamboo and reeds, in which the wild duck do congregate, and some scrubby brushwood; also Settlements Nos. 2 and 3, an old rickety, but very large barn, a ruined mill, a ruined sugar-house.[11]
Beautiful country around Butlers pond. I was pleased to get a decent exposure because is was midday and the light was a little harsh.
Student and alumni entrepreneurs in the Butler Launch Pad access valuable resources and events, meet with expert advisers, and get the guidance they need to move their businesses from Point A to Point B faster. A cohort of these entrepreneurs showcased their ventures and pitched to the Babson community at the Fast Track Showcase.
The plantation was abandoned when the Civil War began. In 1866, Butler's daughter Frances returned with her father to attempt to restore the plantation to its former glory. Unlike her younger sister Sarah who was aligned with her mother, Frances had adopted her father's pro-slavery views and kept a diary like her mother. She published it in 1883, titled Ten Years on a Georgia Plantation (ISBN 1-498-15893-5).[9] It is considered the best account of what it was like for whites who were former plantation owners in Georgia during Reconstruction. In Frances' view, blacks fared better under slavery than freedom. Due to the lack of slave labor, and the postwar depression in the South, plantations were doomed to fail, and the fifth generation of Butlers sold the remains of their lands in 1923.[10]
A description of the plantation from November 1873:
I am monarch of all I survey, which is an island of about 1,600 acres, surrounded by a muddy-looking river, called the romantic-sounding Indian name of the Altamaha. ... Our castle is a neat but not gaudy little frame house, with a piazza in front of it, from which you descend by six steps to a garden, or rather a small grove of orange trees, palmettoes, oleanders, and roses. The first-named are laden with golden fruit, of a quality unsurpassed anywhere in the world, I am bold to say, for size and sweetness. We are hard at work now packing them up for market, and shall have over 100 barrels for sale. The interior of the mansion is in accordance with its modest exterior; a small dining-room, a small drawing-room, a very small office or study, a small hall, a pantry, and two comfortable bedrooms on the ground-floor, and two more comfortable bedrooms over the dining and drawing-rooms. At the rear of the house about twelve yards, is what is called the colony, where are situated the kitchen, servants' sitting-room and bedrooms, the laundry and dairy, and in a corner of the yard is a turkey-house, full of prime Christmas fowl.
Behind the colony is Settlement No. 1, where the coloured people (I believe this is the correct term) reside. It consists of an avenue of orange trees, on each side of which are rows of wooden houses, and at the end of which, facing the avenue, is what was the old hospital, but which is now half of it the church. ... Immediately in front of our garden is the Altamaha river, with the landing-place for the boats, and from which all the water-supply is drawn. On the left of us is the overseer's house, a larger and more imposing edifice, although not so comfortable as ours. On the right are the barns and the threshing mill and engine, which are very nearly finished, and present a magnificent appearance from the river. The old mill, with all the valuable machinery, was burnt down a year ago. The rest of the island consists of rice-fields, of which about 1,000 acres are under cultivation or cultivable, some marsh land covered with thick bamboo and reeds, in which the wild duck do congregate, and some scrubby brushwood; also Settlements Nos. 2 and 3, an old rickety, but very large barn, a ruined mill, a ruined sugar-house.[11]
Butler vs. Milwaukee in women's soccer, 8/30/2015 at the Butler Bowl, Indianapolis Indiana
The teams, players and fans are welcome to use the pictures for personal and team use but not commercial use. Please provide a photo credit if posted publicly. For other uses please see my profile page. www.flickr.com/people/jawijsman/
Rockwall Aquatics Center of Excellence Swim Team (RACE)
North Texas Swimming
USA Swimming
2013 SPEEDO Championship Series
Southern Zone
Sectional Short Course Championships
Day 4 Preliminaries
Texas A&M Student Recreation Center Natatorium
College Station, Texas
March 3, 2013
Rockwall Aquatics Center of Excellence Swim Team
www.flickr.com/photos/aringo/sets/72157630255032976/
North Texas Swimming
USA Swimming
Butler's Gordon Hayward speaks during a news conference about his team meeting Duke in the NCAA Final Four championship college basketball game in Indianapolis, Indiana, April 4, 2010. REUTERS/Mark Blinch (UNITED STATES - Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)
Image Taken at the Oklahoma State Cowgirls vs Butler CC Grizzlies Softball Game, Wednesday, October 07, 2015, Cowgirl Softball Complex, Stillwater, OK. Bruce Waterfield/OSU Athletics
Pictures from around the campus of Butler University.
Pictures from around the campus of Butler University.
Current terminus of Perth's Northern Suburbs railway line which was first built in the Mitchell Freeway to Joondalup in 1992. The line was later extended one stop to Currambine in 1993, Clarkson in 2004 and Butler in 2014.
The last stage of the line operates more as a traditional suburban railway with the station in a town centre rather than a high speed commuter rail in the freeway median with the stations distant from activity centres. The WA McGown Government's 'Metronet' will see the line extended another 13.8km to Yanchep with stations at Alkimos and Eglinton with construction starting in 2019
Butlers Wharf formed part of the once busy Port of London. Today the buildings has been converted into resturants, offices and very expensive apartments.
Butlers Wharf is on the south bank of the River Thames just to the east of Tower Bridge.
17th August 2006
Published 12th June 2007 - BBCi Britain in Pictures digital television service.
Mary Anne Butler speaking at the 2016 Wondercon, for "The Legacy and Future of Battlestar Galactica", at the Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California.
Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.
Scania/Berkhof Axial
Bannerman Road, Kirkby-in-Ashfield
E19PCT last saw service with Pat's Coaches near Wrexham, whose livery it still retains. It departs Butlers' Kirkby Depot to work an Ashfield Post 16 School contract on 7th October 2024 and was originally registered YN07LCW.
I went to Butler Gulch, near Berthoud Pass, today and the conditions were excellent. I was a bit surprised because the snow has been late this year in Colorado. This shot is from near treeline where the view starts to open up. The nice thing about Butler Gulch is that the trail below treeline is well protected from wind and the snow stays on the trail. If you are itching to get out and try some back country skiing, this is the place to go.