View allAll Photos Tagged Butler

The Former Butlers Wharf, seen from over the river at Hermitage Riverside Memorial Garden.

 

Flickr, No not Bermondsey, That is it over the river.

Gerard Butler. How to train your dragon, press conference, Beverly Hills, 20 March, 2010

WSU Wright State Soccer Butler "Horizon League" NCAA

Austin Butler leaving a yoga Class in Studio City - January 2nd 2016

Photographer: Charles Butler Photography

Model: Melissa (MM #896367)

Designer & Stylist: StellaBonds

 

Location: Union 206 Studios

Single Exposure Trickery

  

SOOC

Butler and Anthony frame Megan and Lynn.

Newquay, United Kingdom. 25 August 2015 John Butler Trio performing at Lusty Glaze beach Newquay Cornwall © Steve Lewington / Alamy Live News

A Timeline Events Night shoot at Barrow Hill Roundhouse near Chesterfield using the D49, Morayshire. It was on its way back to Scotland after visiting the Nene Valley Railway and the North Norfolk Railway. As with a lot of Timeline Events charters, Central Scenes brought the scenes to life with their re-enactments. As Central Scenes are largely based at the Great Central at Loughborough, it would have been a shame not to pose them on Butler Henderson, a Great Central locomotive which has spent some time at Loughborough prior to its boiler certificate expiring.

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]

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]

黑執事 Black Butler くろしつじ 謝爾 凡多姆海伍 シエル ファントムハイヴ Ciel Phantomhive 賽巴斯欽 セバスチャン Sebastian Cosplay

 

I am a cosplay photographer from Hong Kong.

----------

More information on my facebook page :

www.facebook.com/eefai.photo

www.eefai.com

The Butler Mine is not too hard to find off the west side of the Hoeferlin Memorial Trail. The trail itself goes over some trench/drainage work, so if you follow that back a few feet, you'll see one of the pits. The others are to the northeast, parallelling the trail.

 

My book says the mine existed before 1868, and that they got 50 tons of good quality iron ore out of it in the late 1870s. The mine closed, the reopened for a single month in 1880. In that one month, it produced 280 tons of iron ore. Then they gave up, and it was over.

 

Iron Mine Trails by Edward J. Lenik

Foto: Erica "panda-desu" Lindberg

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]

Headstone of my great-grandparents, Horace Ray Butler and Mary Etta Richardson Butler. Nearby are my Grandma's brother and sister, Lessie Butler Roberts and Clayton Butler.

On our last trip to Utah (Sept. 2007) we stopped by Butler Wash and took a few pictures. The light was really not ideal so I haven't posted much of it, this is the first. Compare to my earlier scan of ancient print film (from 1991ish I think). With this photo everything was in shade so it's possible to see further into the cave.

Butler Wash Petroglyphs, Utah

Wallpaper from my vídeo about Gerard Butler: GERRY BUTLER MOMENTS www.youtube.com/user/evitart

BUT2B .

Butler Brothers Coaches, Kirkby in Ashfield, Nottingham .

  

Scarborough coach park.

Photographer: Charles Butler Photography - www.charlesbutlerphotography.com

Model: Melissa (MM #896367)

Stylist: StellaBonds www.stellabonds.com

 

Location: Union 206 Studios

Accountants' identity.

 

www.robertmilam.com

 

Designed for ShapiroWalker Design

Stuart Butler speaking at the Values Voter Summit in Washington, DC.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.

Butler Shaffer speaking at Ron Paul's "We Are the Future" rally in Tampa, Florida.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.

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]

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]

2015 BUTLER BULLDOGS ROSTER

 

1 Drew Small

2 Brodie Meyer

3 Cole Malloy

4 Michael Hartnagel

5 Tyler Houston

6 Michael Fries

7 Michael DiViesti

8 Chris Marras

9 Nick Bartolone

10 Mike Kseniak

11 Jeff Schank

12 Alex Horowitz

13 Austin Miller

14 Luke Johnson

15 Quincy Quintero

18 Chris Maranto

20 Dan Busch

21 Ryan Wojciechowski

22 Garrett Christman

23 Kyle Allen

24 Chip Bouchard

26 Peter Nyznyk

27 Austin Jetel

28 Will Amador

29 Nick Morton

30 Josh Goldberg

31 Tyler Rathjen

33 Gehrig Parker

36 Bobby Napoleon

38 River Pitlock

40 Connor Mitchell

41 Chris Myjak

43 Danny Pobereyko

 

2015 VILLANOVA WILDCATS

 

1 Brady Acton

3 Adam Goss

4 Zander Retamar

6 Brandon Campos

8 Hunter Schryver

9 Todd Czinege

10 Woody Bryson

11 B.J. Bochicchio

14 Andrew Owen

15 Trevino Rodriguez

16 Derrick May, Jr.

17 David Gulati

18 Jimmy Coyne

19 John Fabriziani

20 Lukas DeRenzi

21 Kagan Richardson

22 Eric Lowe

23 Conor McCarthy

24 John Santoianni

25 Jeff Courter

26 Donovan May

27 Joe Siringo

28 Kevin Jewitt

29 Louis Beck

30 Josh Harris

31 Brian Trabulsi

32 Jake Kellman

33 Mike Sgaramella

36 Chris Haggarty

37 Ryan Doty

42 Emmanuel Morris

44 Max Beermann

45 Max Almonte

 

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A nature trail that follows Butler Canyon and then loops around a knoll on the north side of the canyon.

RAW file processed with Olympus Viewer 3.

(_A031865.orf)

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

Amy Butler Frenchy Bag

 

fabrics are Amy Butler, Morning Glory and Full Moon Dots

John Butler Trio

@ The Fonda Theatre

Los Angeles, CA

February 21, 2014

 

All photos © Kaley Nelson Photography - www.KaleyNelson.com

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