View allAll Photos Tagged Clinton,

Baddesley Clinton was the home of the Ferrers family for 500 years.

 

Much of the house you see today was built by Henry Ferrers, a lawyer, diarist and antiquarian, in the late 1500s.

 

The house was a sanctuary not only for the Ferrers family, but also for persecuted Catholics who were hidden from priest hunters in its secret hiding places during the 1590s.

Ford Thunderbird - T-Bird

1965 Ford Thunderbird 390 CID 6.4 litre

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Thunderbird

Clinton CTA Green Line station in the West Loop. Chicago, Illinois.

L585 departs Clinton for Gilman on a hazy August morning. The Clinton local has not had a deathstar leader for quite some time. Hopefully this changes sometime soon.

CPKC's K60 local is normally an overnight flip from Clinton to Nahant, but the floods have thrown all schedules out of the window. A trio of rebuild GP's bring a sizeable train through the flooded Mississippi River in downtown Davenport, IA.

 

May 2, 2023

Clinton-Walker House by

Frank Lloyd Wright

Baddesley Clinton house, moat and dog pool, National Trust, Warwickshire

2 February 2018

www.nationaltrust.org.uk/baddesley-clinton

Montana Rail Link ML cruises through Clinton, Montana, on September 2, 2003 with F45 No. 391 leading the way.

CC01 returns to Clinton across the Clinch River.

The first rays of golden light striking frosty hills near the small town of Clinton. Clinton is under the forested hill top left. That road lower left goes to the town of Gore (behind us) and is known by locals as "The Presidential Highway". Clinton (population 280) was named for Henry Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle, former British Secretary of State for the Colonies 1852 – 1854.

A sunny Monday morning here and thanks for visiting.

CSX B724 is seen passing Clinton, MA this afternoon

Windows in the south-west wall of the house

2 February 2018, Baddesley Clinton National Trust, Warwickshire

www.nationaltrust.org.uk/baddesley-clinton

The Jefferson Clinton Hotel was built in 1927 and designed by Syracuse architect Gustavus Young. It was one of approximately 20 hotels in the Armory Square area that serviced the railroads. With 11 floors, it was the tallest structure of its time. When standing on the western corner, the building’s unusual shape presents the illusion of a façade with nothing behind it. Now the hotel features 60 well-appointed luxury suites.

Opened in 1927 as the Hotel Jefferson Clinton, this hotel has undergone a few name changes over its lifetime. The hotel fell into tough times during the Great Depression and had a series of failed ownerships over several decades.

It had fallen into disrepair and was operating as the Dome Hotel (Syracuse University’s Carrier Dome is visible from its top floors) when the hotel closed in 1987. It reopened in June 2001 after a complete renovation as the Hawthorn Suites, in affiliation with the Hyatt-owned Hawthorn Suites chain.

CSX 6245 (ex-B&O GP40-2) and 6230 lead train B724 past the former Clinton station, which opened in 1914. The train is running on former New Haven rails, and will cross over the ex-B&M, now Pan Am, on the bridge in the foreground.

Now on Rock Island rails, the Farmrail Stone Train heads west out of Clinton, Oklahoma towards its final destination, Elk City. It's almost like a scene on the IAIS 4th Sub twenty years ago!

Baddesley Clinton is a moated manor house, about 8 miles north-west of the town of Warwick, in the village of Baddesley Clinton, Warwickshire, England. The house probably originated in the 13th century, when large areas of the Forest of Arden were cleared for farmland.

 

In 1438 John Brome, Under-Treasurer of England, purchased the manor, which passed to his son, Nicholas Brome (d.1517), who rebuilt the nearby parish church dedicated to St Michael, as a penance for having murdered the parish priest, a crime reputed to have been committed inside the house. The house from this period was equipped with gun-ports, and possibly a drawbridge over the moat.

 

When Nicholas Brome died in 1517, the house passed to his daughter, who in 1500 had married Sir Edward Ferrers, Sheriff of Warwickshire.

The Ferrers appear to have remained Roman Catholic recusants after the Reformation, along with many other members of the Warwickshire gentry. They sheltered Catholic priests, who were under threat of a death sentence if discovered, and made special arrangements to hide and protect them. Several priest holes were built, secret passages to hide people in the event of a search by the authorities. One such priest hole is off the Moat Room, and is simply a small room with a door hidden in the wood panelling. A second, leading into the ceiling, is reputed to hold six people. A third is hidden in an old privy. Fugitives were able to slide down a rope from the first floor through the old garderobe shaft into the house's sewers, which run the length of the building, which could probably hold a dozen people. These priest holes are said to have been built by Saint Nicholas Owen, a lay-brother of the Jesuits who constructed many masterful hides, notably at nearby Harvington Hall. He was eventually caught and tortured to death by the Protestant English government.

 

The priest holes came into use at least once, in 1591 when a conference of Jesuit priests was raided by local authorities. They proved effective as no-one was caught.

 

The northbound Farmrail road freight builds its train in Clinton, Oklahoma before departing north towards the BNSF interchange at Enid.

2 Canadian Pacific SD40-2s lead a northbound ballast train through Clinton, IA.

Baddesley Clinton is a moated house with beautiful gardens in gorgeous Warwickshire Country Side. Owned by the National Trust it is fun this year seeing the gardens literally spring into action.

One of New Jersey’s most picturesque and photographed locations is located in western New Jersey alongside the Raritan River in the town of Clinton is a grist mill referred to as the ‘Red Mill’. When Ralph Hunt built this mill in 1810 on land he received in inheritance from his father Daniel Hunt its original purpose was that of a wool processing plant. Unfortunately, foreign cloth was relatively low cost so eventually even though some of the surrounding farmers would get their wool manufactured, Hunt’s business dried up and the mill came to a grinding halt. It was around 1828 to 1834 that John Bray and John B. Taylor (the Taylor family had taken ownership of the property began production wool in the mill again. The new owner John W. Snyder stopped the wool processing altogether and converted the mill in to a grist mill. Before all production stopped, it was a graphite mill and finally a talc mill when all activity stopped. Today it is a museum and is on the National Register of Historic Places. Captured this image while with my west coast damsel, returning from a wonderous weekend in Lehigh Valley Pennsylvania. I particularly like the distorted reflection of the mill in water just before it cascades on the dam. #developportdev @gothamtomato @developphotonewsletter @omsystem.cameras #excellent_america #omsystem @bheventspace @bhphoto @adorama @tamracphoto @tiffencompany #usaprimeshot #tamractales @kehcamera @mpbcom @visitclintonnj @newjerseyisntboring @newjerseyisbeautiful #newjerseyisntboring #newjerseyisbeautiful @visit_nj #omd #olympus #microfourthirds #micro43 #micro43photography

Almost perfect camouflage of a majestic blue heron on top of falls, in Clinton in Hunterdon County New Jersey where the Mulhockaway Creek converges with the South Branch of the Raritan River right by the Red Mill Museum, one of the most photographed locations in New Jersey. It was the mill I was photographing accompanied by my west coast damsel when I spotted the beautiful blue heron and put my longest lens on my OM-D EM-1 with a 2X convertor to capture this image. As opposed to the great white heron with is abundant in New Jersey as well, the blues and grays of the blue heron make it blend into its surroundings. #developportdev @gothamtomato @developphotonewsletter @omsystem.cameras #excellent_america#omsystem @bheventspace @bhphoto @adorama @tamracphoto @tiffencompany #usaprimeshot #tamractales @kehcamera @mpbcom @newjerseyisntboring @newjerseyisbeautiful #omd #olympus #microfourthirds #micro43 #micro43photography @visitclintonnj

Seagull hanging at the Fisherman's Wharf in Port Clinton Ohio

A late Pan Am Railways Q427 is seen trundling west down the Pan Am Worcester Mainline at Clinton West. Unfortunately the crew was unable to spin the power in Ayer last night so they had to run long hood forward to Worcester where CSX has a westward facing locomotive staged to lead the rest of the way to Selkirk. The Worcester Main is going to be seeing many positive changes in the near future if the Pan Am sale is approved. Traffic will increase, likely bringing up track speeds and much needed brush cutting. There will also be undercutting in several locations to accommodate future double stacked intermodal traffic.

Baddesley Clinton is a moated manor house, about 8 miles north-west from the town of Warwick, in the village of Baddesley Clinton. The house probably originated in the 13th century, when large areas of the Forest of Arden were cleared for farmland. The house, park and gardens are now owned by the National Trust.

The band played some good tunes at the Clinton Bar-b-q cook off. Good times.

Baddesley Clinton (grid reference SP199714) is a moated manor house, about 8 miles (13 km) north-west of the town of Warwick, in the village of Baddesley Clinton, Warwickshire, England. The house probably originated in the 13th century, when large areas of the Forest of Arden were cleared for farmland. The site is a Scheduled Ancient Monument[1] and the house is a Grade I listed building.[2] The house, park and gardens are owned by the National Trust and open to the public; they lie in a civil parish of the same name.

Baddesley Clinton is a moated manor house, about 8 miles north-west of the town of Warwick, in the village of Baddesley Clinton. The house probably originated in the 13th century, when large areas of the Forest of Arden were cleared for farmland. The house, park and gardens are now owned by the National Trust.

Baddesley Clinton is a remarkable survival of a medieval moated manor house and was home of the Ferrers family for 500 years. At one time an artists' retreat, at another a haven for the persecuted, the house nevertheless passed from father to son for 12 generations before finally being sold in 1940. (National Trust)

 

This shot was made directly into the hazy morning sun as an experiment to see how the new 19mm PC Nikkor would cope.

I love the result!

The Milford Track is widely regarded as one of the greatest hiking trails in the world. And I can't dispute that - it was epic! The weather can be appalling, but as landscape photographers can attest, terrible weather can make for dynamic light and wonderful images. This image of Clinton Valley, dappled with rain showers and waterfalls, was captured in ferocious winds and driving rain atop MacKinnon Pass near the beginning of what was to be one of the wettest in my life, in which "trail" was turned into gushing creek.

The view of the Clinton Presidential Library, from the Clinton Park Bridge in downtown Little Rock, Arkansas.

Small town of Clinton, Indiana.

I was hoping for sun since the curve just east of here is spectacular and perfectly lit, but alas I had no luck. So in an attempt to make something of the situation I decided on this angle that I'd never actually done that only works on a cloudy day.

 

CSXT local B724 from Framingham is making its tri-weekly journey out to the end of the line on what is CSXT's last true branchline in all of New England that they still own outright.

 

They are crossing over Pan Am's Worcester mainline and passing the dual level former Union Station that was built in 1918.The structure was designed by architect Robert C. Reamer better known for his work in the Western US including the grand wooden Old Faithful Inn. Serving trains of the New Haven on the upper level and the Boston and Maine on the lower, it saw its last B&M commuter train leave for Boston in 1958, with the last New Haven train having called decades earlier. Today the one time three tracks overhead have been reduced to one on what is now CSXT's Fitchburg Branch at about MP QBU13.4. To see what this same train looks like from the lower level a few years prior check out this shot: flic.kr/p/2kQgNdV

 

Clinton, Massachusetts

Thursday October 14, 2021

2012 was a goo year to catch SOO SD60s along the River between St. Paul and Davenport. Here, 474 is seen heading through Clinton with a pair of red n' whites plus an ICE SD40-2. In about 30min, they will meet 475 at Le Claire with another pair of red n' white SD60s. Mar 18, 2012

CSX B724-02 (right) is seen running around CSX B724-01 (outlawed to the left) on the Clinton runaround this afternoon. As far as I know, this is the first time in at least a decade where 2 seperate trains have occupied the Clinton runaround, making this a unique photo.

There's a touch of fall color in the trees as MAWA rolls downgrade into Clinton behind the usual set of power for this job, a trio of GP40 variants. So far, none of Pan Am's GEs have come east of Waterville, leaving the Keag jobs and the Rumford jobs as the last major trains that are still running with just EMDs. The 319 is leading a blue dipped GP40-2LW, the 517, and another Guilford GP40, the 316, with about forty-five cars.

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80