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Antique phonograph record label. A close-up image showing a little bit of scratching and some details of the printing. Photographed in Two Rivers Wisconsin at the Historical Society, Washington House.
108 W. 2nd St., Ste. 101
Los Angeles, CA 90012
213.613.0000
Design by Kelly Architects
photo by Jack Coyier
The Edison Tower in Thomas Edison's hometown of Menlo Park, New Jersey. 6 1/2 by 10 inches, somewhere between paper and cardboard. The other side has stamps attached with Menlo Park, February 12, 1947 cancellations.
the new gallery, Three Ravens Gallery, 5718 Gilkey Avenue, Edison, WA 98232. Grand Opening Saturday, April 2, 2011
Named after Thomas Edison, the Edison Theatre opened in 1941 and showed movies until 1980. Although it has been remodeled into offices, it retains its wonderful exterior and is definitely one of the most architecturally-noteworthy buildings in Fort Myers.
Hendry at Main Street, Fort Myers.
The laboratory where (in the 1920's) Edison and his team of researchers tried to find a way to make rubber from plants other than the rubber tree. They succeeded -- sort of -- with goldenrod.
Named after Thomas Edison, the Edison Theatre opened in 1941 and showed movies until 1980. Although it has been remodeled into offices, it retains its wonderful exterior and is definitely one of the most architecturally-noteworthy buildings in Fort Myers.
Hendry at Main Street, Fort Myers.
In early 2012, my Uncle died. An unmarried man, he was the tinkerer of the town where he lived. He spent hours picking up old bits and pieces and making them work again.
This photo was taken on the day of the clearing sale for his estate. There was a variety of old audio equipment for sale. This was a box full of Edison Cylinders for an Edison Phonograph.
This was shot with a Minolta 7 Film camera on Ilford Delta 400, which was developed in D76 1:1. This was printed on Ilford MGIV RC stock as a 6x4. Print scanned with an Epson V700
Seniors who earned a tassel from Thomas Edison High School of Technology are greeted by principal Shawn Krasa. Covid-19 closed schools and cancelled graduation for 2020 seniors.
«En realidad no me preocupa que quieran robar mis ideas, me preocupa que ellos no las tengan». Nikola Tesla.
the new gallery, Three Ravens Gallery, 5718 Gilkey Avenue, Edison, WA 98232. Grand Opening Saturday, April 2, 2011
This electricity-generating boiler, from the original Edison company - the one that Thomas Edison founded, you know - is at Greenfield Village. The extreme dynamic range presented by this scene was well-captured by film - at the time this was taken, digital SLRs still cost over ten of thousand dollars per megapixel.
Progetto di cinema collettivo, Testimonial e curatori del progetto, il regista Gabriele Mainetti e il documentarista Andrea Segre.
Progetto di cinema collettivo, Testimonial e curatori del progetto, il regista Gabriele Mainetti e il documentarista Andrea Segre.
Thomas Edison and his early phonograph. Cropped from Library of Congress copy.
Source : Brady-Handy Photograph Collection (Library of Congress) - hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cwpbh.04044
Date: circa 1877 (probably 18 April 1878, based on the extremely similar photo [1])
Author: Levin C. Handy (per hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cwpbh.04326)
Public domain photograph (I got all of this from the Wikipedia).
"The Emery Estate"
Weymouth, MA
The Emery Estate is a 24-acre property located at the summit of King Oak Hill. The property was settled in the 1900's as a farm and single-family home. The Emery family - prominent wool merchants - owned and worked the property for nearly a century before selling it to the Town of Weymouth in 2011. The property was purchased with $1.9 million in Community Preservation funds.
The main house on the estate is a three-story colonial home modeled after George Washington’s Mount Vernon Estate. The home was constructed by William H. Binnian, Esq. on or around 1903. Its isolation, sweeping grounds, and outstanding views of the Boston skyline made the home one of the premier properties in Weymouth.
In 2018, the grounds of the estate were renovated to create a public park and outdoor events venue. The new King Oak Hill Park is open to the public for passive recreation during the hours of dawn to dusk or as otherwise posted. Any use of the park for an event requires permitting by the Town.
The Emery House is currently closed to the public.
Greenpeace activists demonstrate outside the Hilton Hotel in San Gabriel, Calif., April 26, 2012, where Edison International shareholders meet in their Annual General Meeting. Protesters, including neighbors of Edison's three coal plants in Illinois, are calling on Edison to finish what they started by announcing the closure of the dirty Fisk and Crawford plants in Chicago and shut down their remaining fleet of coal plants across the country. Photo by David McNew/Greenpeace
Thomas Edison and his family bought these 13 acres of land right alongside the Caloosahatchee River in 1885 because he really liked the warm weather in the region during the winter months. In 1886 he and his wife began living here for the next 60 winters.
Hawaii’s First Electric Lights
hdnpblog.wordpress.com/historical-articles/hawaiis-first-...
Edison Mazda Lamps
Honolulu star-bulletin, October 16, 1917, Page 3
chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82014682/1917-10-16/ed-...
Hawaii Digital Newspaper Project