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Butler's Barracks was the home of Loyalist military officer John Butler (1728–1796), in what was then Newark, Upper Canada; present day Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario. Butler is most famous for leading an irregular military unit known as Butler's Rangers on the northern frontier during the American Revolutionary War.

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]

2014 Texas Swimming Invitational

www.flickr.com/photos/aringo/sets/72157649613088815/

Day 2 Preliminaries

 

Lee and Joe Jamail Texas Swimming Center

The University of Texas at Austin

Austin, Texas

 

December 5, 2014

Amy Butler Cosmo bag, made from a pattern using Amy Butler fabrics. Sized as an overnight bag - it has two pockets on the sides, and four pockets in the interior. Very roomy and stylish - though time-consuming to put together.

I give the name Haruna

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.

Professor Judith Butler speaks at the University of Pennsylvania's Philomathean Annual Oration.

 

Rights belong to The Daily Pennsylvanian

Gerard butler in 300 wallpaper

Organ - Church of St Peter & St Paul, Butlers Marston, Warwickshire

Pics of the Butler Bulldogs playing at Hinkle Fieldhouse on the Butler University campus.

Wimpole Hall, National Trust, Royston, Cambridgeshire

John Butler Trio

@ The Observatory

Santa Ana, CA

July 3, 2015

 

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

Shots from around campus in the spring time at Butler University

Mike Butler, NABCEP Certified Solar PV Installer, HERS Rater & Energy Efficiency Specialist

John Butler Trio

@ The Fonda Theatre

Los Angeles, CA

February 21, 2014

 

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

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.

(_A031850.orf)

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

Two matching Claud Butler bicycle framesets, a road and a track bike, from 1956. Same lugs, head badges, wrapover stays.

Road frame is 24in, track frame is one full size smaller (23in) just as it is supposed to be for same rider size.

 

Frame lugs resemble to Nervex Pro, though they even more alike lugs from Oscar Egg. In the CB catalogue of the year however, they are described as cutaway lugs, a proprietary design of the CB manufactory.

E19PCT - Scania K340 / Berkhof Axial.

New to Premier Connections, Luton Airport as YN07LCW.

ex Pats of Wrexham.

BUTLER BROTHERS of Kirkby-in-Ashfield, Notts.

Seen in Cleethorpes coach park.

Pics of the Butler Bulldogs playing at Hinkle Fieldhouse on the Butler University campus.

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]

eis um ator q estou viciada...até agora o único filme q n assistir por incrível q pareça eh 300...o resto ja assistir...minto...falta código de conduta tb...adoroooooooo....

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.

Gerard Butler in 300 wallpaper

Butler forward Gordon Hayward, left, is defended by Youngstown State guard DeAndre Mays during the second half of an NCAA college men's basketball game in Indianapolis, Thursday, Feb. 26, 2009. Butler won 78-57. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

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]

pra minha mãe HSAUHSUSHUSHAUH

John Butler Trio

@ The Wiltern Theater

Los Angeles, CA

December 2, 2010

 

All Photos © Kaley Nelson - www.KaleyNelson.com

Shots from around campus in the spring time at Butler University

Fits a travel wipe case and a couple diapers. Amy Butler fabric.

Basketmaker Anasazi Petroglyphs decorate the cliffs near the confluence of Butler Wash and the San Juan River. Comb Ridge

From Wikipedia.

 

Butler's Wharf is an English historic building on the south bank of the River Thames, just east of London's Tower Bridge, now housing luxury flats and restaurants. Lying between the picturesque street Shad Thames and the Thames Path, it overlooks both the bridge and St Katharine Docks on the other side of the river. Butler's Wharf is also used as a term for the surrounding area.

 

Originally a chocolate biscuit factory, Butler's Wharf was built between 1865-73 as a shipping wharf and warehouse complex, accommodating goods unloaded from ships using the port of London. It contained what was reputedly the largest tea warehouse in the world. During the 20th century, Butler's Wharf and other warehouses in the area fell into disuse.

A Thai artillery section fires a 155mm light towed howitzer Feb. 14 at Pong Nam Ron, Kingdom of Thailand, during the Cobra Gold 2013 field training exercises. During the FTX, Royal Thai and U.S. Marines participated in bilateral training with the hopes of learning best practices from each force’s military occupational specialty counterparts. U.S. Marines are with M Battery, 3rd Battalion, 12th Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, III Marine Expeditionary Force. (U.S. Marine Corps photo courtesy of Lance Cpl. Paul J. Butcher) 130214-M-XX000-345

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