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Photo by Rocco S. Cetera
Cooper Square
East Village, Lower Manhattan
New York City
August 19, 2012 3:00 PM
Zion National Park was first settled by Archaic Natives some 8000 years ago. Gradually by 300 CE they settled in the Virgin River Valley and began growing maize. The Virgin Ancestral Puebloans settled in the area around 500 CE and began small seasonal settlements, as did the Parowan Fremont culture. Both tended to settle near the mouth of the narrow canyon, with its danger of flash floods. The Ancestral Puebloans and the Fremont Culture disappeared from the area by the 1300s, replaced by the Southern Paiutes.
A prominent landmark near the entrance of Zion Canyon, East Temple is 2167m tall.
Zion Canyon, Zion National Park, Springdale, Utah
Suffolk Coast Path. I realise that I have walked all of this from Southwold to Bawdsey with the exception of one short section.
The East Lake Worth Neighborhood Association celebrated the centennial of Lake Worth on Saturday, September 20, 2014. Thank you to Patricia Hyer for inviting the Fort Worth Portrait Project to the event. This was just one of several events the neighborhood association is holding throughout this centennial year. Learn more at their website: www.lakeworthcentennial.org/.
This 9/20 event also featured the Metroplex Mavericks water skiing team. See those photos here: www.flickr.com/photos/75403842@N08/sets/72157647435732440/.
This album is part of the event coverage for the Fort Worth Portrait Project. The project aims to tell the story of Fort Worth from 2014 - 2044 one captioned portrait at a time, but I also enjoy covering events like this one too. In July 2014, I invited all 274 of the neighborhood associations in Forth Worth to participate in the Fort Worth Portrait Project. The East Lake Worth Neighborhood Association was one of several that responded, and I hope to cover more of your events in the future.
Please following the Fort Worth Portrait Project:
Website
www.redeemedexpressions.com/fort-worth-portrait-project/
www.facebook.com/fortworthportraitproject
www.twitter.com/FWPortraitProj
© All rights reserved. Images are copyrighted to myself. Photographs lifted from my photostream and being reused elsewhere without my permission or being credited, will not be tolerated and the user will be blocked and reported immediately
To view all 388 photos in this album from Durham & Newcastle, please click here - www.flickr.com/photos/mals_uk_buses/sets/72157654346513064
Possibly the figure of the founder Judge John Markham 1409 who rebuilt the nave, aisles and most of the tower followed by his son Chief Justice John Markham 1479 who erected the new chancel leaving the old chancel arch in place.
Judge John is buried here with his 2 wives. www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/9h7959
www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/Ly7ueb Could this figure be from a lost tomb ?
East Markham church
Jerusalem, July 27th, Demascus Gate, East Jerusalem. To prevent disturbances during a wedding of 72 couples(according to one Arab source) Israeli police disbursed a crowd gathering to enter the gate, allowing people in a few at a time. For 1300 years Jews and Christians were forbidden to ride on Horses in Jerusalem(except during the Crusades) because of their status as 'dhimmi' or secondary people under Shariah 'Islamic' law. Thus by riding on horses the Jewish police are invariably showing that they are no longer second class citizens.
East Anglian Field Ambulance 1/2 (in Egypt)
August 22, 1916
My grandfather, served 5 years overseas in WWI