View allAll Photos Tagged Fulton
In Fulton, Texas ..;) Now I'm wondering which came first. Probably the town. It's a great place to get sunrise shots as well as Shrimp boat shots.
Yesterday was fairly eventful. Went to the hospital clinic to do a stress test and ended up in the emergency room for half a day. While I was there a lady next to me died. When I left the nurse said, you're one of the lucky
ones ..;)
Anyway, hope your week went a little smother
Happy weekend everyone
This magnificent 20,000-square-foot mansion was built in 1899-1901 for self-made millionaire and Senator George Taylor Fulford I (1852-1905) and his family. The house was designed by noted American architect Albert W. Fuller, with landscaping design by the prestigious Olmsted Brothers firm.
Fulford Place and its collection were donated to the Ontario Heritage Trust by the Fulford family in 1991. Many items from the family’s collection are exhibited in the house just as they were over 100 years ago. The Ontario Heritage Trust’s extensive restoration of Fulford Place brings to life the glamorous lifestyle of the early 20th century’s new aristocracy: the business tycoon
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I saw someone's posted this building on instagram, And I almost forgot I've been there, too. and it is so gorgeous!!
Picture from 200 Broadway level 2, New York City.
Bay windows with decorative details adorn this charming apartment building built in 1926, in the Alamo Square neighbourhood of San Francisco.
One of the many inbound morning rush trains, with an incredibly cool SD70MACH, meets one of the many deadhead moves to Western Ave, with a less cool F59PH, under the signal bridge between Clinton and Desplaines Street.
It's been just about a year that the SD70MACHs have been in service, but they never get old. Easily the coolest engine in the passenger side of the industry.
This shot is of the Fulton mansion in Fulton, Texas. George W. Fulton, an East Coast entrepreneur, married Harriet Smith in 1840. After Harriet's father died, Fulton turned Harriet's land inheritance on Aransas Bay into a ranching and meatpacking empire as part of the Coleman-Fulton Pasture Company. During the 1870s, the Fultons made their fortune shipping cattle tallow and hides between Rockport and New Orleans. To symbolize their success, they built a mansion called Oakhurst. The mansion was built over a period of three years, 1874-1877, and was the showplace of the town named for them. The mansion has 29 rooms and is now a Texas Historical Commission property.
While not we intended to shoot on the West Tennessee Railroad, it still turned out to be a good show from these old General Electric four axles. Three B40-8's and two B23-7's lug a 150 car train south from the CN interchange at Fulton, KY somewhere near Greenfield, TN.
Built by George Fulton (one of the engineers who built the Brooklyn Bridge) and completed in 1873 in rockport, Texas. He retired there and took up cattle ranching, one of the richest men in South Texas. It is in the French Second Empire style, very stylish for the time (and rmeains so), and contains many innovations brought west. It had running water and indoor toilets, extremely rare for that time, especially in this part of the country. The Fultons prided themselves on having all the latest Victorian gadgets, including one of the first two telephones in South Texas (the other was in the ranch house of his ranch partner). For 117 pictures in 2017 #100, stylish.
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It's been a while since I was inside Fulton Center. There are actually some shops inside now and I see signs for a future Shake Shack on the upper level.
Three WM SD35s lead what is likely SB-3, the westbound "Stone Train" at Fulton Junction in Baltimore. WM used trackage rights over the PRR to gain access to Sparrow's Point and it's large Bethlehem Steel facility. Prior to this routing, cars were floated over the bay via Port Covington.
Just ahead lays Walbrook Junction, and the train will take the East Sub towards Emory Grove, where it will diverge again to the Dutch Line. Walbrook Jct is where the Tide Sub also connected, which was the line into Port Covington.
No date or photographer on this dupe, but it should be prior to 1970 when the SD35s got red/white/black. JL Sessa collection.
The Fulton Centre is a transport and shopping hub in the heart of Manhattan, it was this amazing atrium which looks very sci-fi. I didn't quite get the shot I wanted because it was a busy day and the area was full of police and national guard patrolling the station area, I think a nighttime visit would be better on my next trip.
Today a Renaissance Hotel and on the National Register of Historic Places, it was originally known as the Fulton Building when completed in 1906 and a continued stately presence on the corner of 6th Street and Fort Duquesne Boulevard. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Hoy un hotel Renaissance y en el Registro Nacional de Lugares Históricos, originalmente se lo conocía como el Edificio Fulton cuando se completó en 1906 y su presencia elegante continua en la esquina de 6th Street y Fort Duquesne Boulevard. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, EEUU.