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Meadow Morning
"Hope is a walk through a flowering meadow. One does not require that it lead anywhere."
--Robert Breault
Sunrise on the meadow along the Lapham Peak segment of Wisconsin's Ice Age Trail near Delafield.
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Driving West on I-94 at around 6pm June 8, 2008.
Read about the drive on my blog Snippets of Gratitude
A view of the beautiful Holy Hill Basilica on the horizon, shot from the Lapham Peak Tower, approximately 20 miles away.
randy-scherkenbach.artistwebsites.com/featured/holy-hill-...
A view of the fall colors of Delafield from the Lapham Peak Tower, looking east towards downtown Milwaukee.
sexy police cruiser ever made. brought to you by JP-AUTOMOTIVE Studio and Police department of Delafield WI.
I took some shots of the inside of Fort Taber to get some promos for the upcoming Legend Trips ghost hunting event. Absolutely beautiful and haunting. I highly recommend a stop over to the museum as well. It is a wealth of military history.
Info:
"In 1840, when a Board of Engineers met in Boston to plan a defense operation of the Atlantic Coast, New Bedford was considered important because of its fine harbor and industrial base. Major R. Delafield, (considered the "Father of America Seacoast Artillery") and Captain Robert E. Lee (later to become Commander-in-Chief of the Confederate Land Forces) drew up plans for a granite fortress at Clark's Point. The amount of $50,000 was authorized for the construction of a pentagonal-shaped, three-tier fort, which was designed for 70 guns. In 1857, the government paid $7000 for Edward Wing Howland's farm as the site for the fort. Building began in 1857 after construction of a stone pier on the east side of the Point, used for unloading the granite. Old whale ships were used to transport the stone from Sullivan, Maine. At the outbreak of the Civil War, the fort's walls had only a few courses in place. On May 1, 1862, Lt. Henry Martyn Robert (author of Robert's Rules of Order) was appointed Superintendent of Construction.
The first cannon were installed in 1863. In June 15, 1869, a lighthouse was built on the northeast bastion to replace the original Clark's Point Light. The end of the Civil War in 1865 rendered the stone fort obsolete and by 1871, its construction was halted. The third tier was never completed and the unused blocks may still be seen along the shore.
The Army officially named the fort in honor of New Bedford native, Lt. Colonel Logan Rodman, of the 38th Massachusetts Infantry, who fell at the head of his Regiment in the assault on Port Hudson, LA in 1863. However, during its construction, the fort was locally dubbed "Fort Taber" after Isaac C. Taber, New Bedford's Mayor during the Civil War. To this day, local residents call it Fort Taber. Although the fort never "saw the flame of battle," it served as a deterrent to those who may have envisioned New Bedford and its valuable whaling fleet as a rich target."
SOURCE: www.newbedford-ma.gov/Tourism/Attractions/FortTaberPark.html
Maker: James Robertson (1813 -1888)/Felice Beato (1830-1906)
Born: UK
Active: Turkey/Crimea
Medium: salted paper print
Size: 9 1/8" x 11 1/8"
Location: Crimea
Object No. 2015.113
Shelf: A-48
Publication: Report on the art of war in Europe in 1854, 1855, and 1856. / By Major Richard Delafield, Corps of engineers, from his notes and observations made as a member of a "Military commission to the theater of war in Europe," under the orders of the Hon. Jefferson Davis, secretary of War. Washington: George W. Bowman, 1861., fig 38
Crimée 1854-1856 premiers reportages de guerre exposition du 24 octobre 1994 au 8 janvier 1995 musée de l armée hôtel national des invalides, paris, 1994, pg 33
Helmut and Alison Gernsheim - Roger Fenton, Photographer of the Crimean War, Secker & Warburg, London, 1954, fig 83
David Harris, Of Battle and Beauty, Felice Beato's Photograhs of China, Santa Barbara Museum of Art,Santa Barbara, 1999,fig 4-6
Lawrence James, Crimea 1854-56: The War With Russia from Contemporary Photographs, Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 1981, pl 64
James Borcomen, 19th Century French Photographs from the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, 2010, fig. 42-1
Heinz K. Henisch and Bridget A. Henisch, The Photographic Experience, 1839-1914, Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, 1994, fig 13-13
Alles Wahrheit! Alles Luge!, Photographie und Wirklichkeit im 19. Jahrhundert, Museen de Stadt Koln, 1996, pg 223
Robert A. Sobieszek, Masterpieces of Photography from the George Eastman House Collections, Abbeville Press, New York, 1985, pg 123
Other Collections: National Gallery of Canada, GEM
Provenance: Dr Jens Mattow
Rank: 725
Notes: Recent research suggests that this was taken by Felice Beato, who at the time was Robertson's assistant at the time. For more information, visit: James Robertson and Felice Beato In the Crimea: Recent Findings
To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS
For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE
City of Delafield, Wisconsin Police Department Ford police Interceptor Utility. Delafield is in Waukesha County.
I have no idea why they decided to call this strip mall Wal-Mart Center, other than Walmart was up the hill. The strip mall actually has quite a bit of chains located here. DQ Grill & Chill, Dollar Tree, Petco, AutoZone, Subway, Office Max, and Rocky Rococo.
Every Halloween our little town (Delafield, Wisconsin) puts together a charming pumpkin display. They almost appear to be chatting amongst each other as they await the photographer.
Maker: James Robertson (1813-1888)
Born: UK
Active: Turkey/Crimea
Medium: lithograph from an salted paper print
Size: 9" x 11 1/4"
Location: Crimea
Object No. 2018.670
Shelf: A-48
Publication: Report on the art of war in Europe in 1854, 1855, and 1856. / By Major Richard Delafield, Corps of engineers, from his notes and observations made as a member of a "Military commission to the theater of war in Europe," under the orders of the Hon. Jefferson Davis, secretary of War. Washington: George W. Bowman, 1861., fig 59
Other Collections:
Provenance:
Notes: Recent research suggests that this was taken by Felice Beato, who at the time was Robertson's assistant at the time. For more information, visit: James Robertson and Felice Beato In the Crimea: Recent Findings
To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS
For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE