View allAll Photos Tagged GuardTower

Guard tower on a steep rock with interior. My first Colossal Contest VI 2008 entry.

Guard tower on a steep rock with interior. My first Colossal Contest VI 2008 entry.

Photos of Port Arthur Historic Site - a former convict settlement on the Tasman Peninsula, Tasmania.

Berlin Wall Border Guard Tower - The Newseum - Washington DC

I got kicked out of the prison parking lot and into the waiting room just after I finished this. I was waiting for my passenger to finish her visit.

Napoleonic port defences in the citadel at Saint Louise, Brittany, France.

 

August 2014

Since I'm a big believer, I thought I'd make my normal discrete watermark a little bit more extravagent. A normal version of the picture follows tomorrow. ;-)

 

As promised

 

240202cz7-1908-2500

This well defended structure is located near the boundary of the former RAF Lindholme, but what is it's purpose?

Ruins of prisoner barracks, with what look like partly-destroyed fireplaces, stand silent in the cool March afternoon, while the death gate looms behind them.

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IMG_7034ap

Jupiter-11 135mm f4

A guard tower and search light at the Manzanar Internment Camp, one of 10 relocation camps established to house over 110,000 Japanese during WWII

 

From the train, I caught these resistant strata jutting from the hillside.

 

Check out the old guard tower deteriorating on top of the exposure. And I wonder how old the wall is below the house.

 

I'm about positive this is a tiny little community by the name "La Rochette, Hautes-Alps". It's just south of Lus-la-Croix-Haute, and north of La Faurie, France. It took some searching on the Rome2rio website - tracing the train route back & forth to find it. I now recommend Rome2rio!!

The restored guard tower on Alcatraz Island is a remnant of the Federal penitentiary era, during which six free standing towers were manned by armed guards.

 

Alcatraz Island, a 22-acre island located 1.5 miles offshore in San Francisco Bay, has served as a lighthouse, a military fortification, and a prison. In 1972, the island often referred to as The Rock, became a national recreation area operated by the National Park Service as part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA) and is currently open to tours.

 

The island was first discovered in 1775 by Spaniard Juan Manuel de Ayala, who charted the bay and named it "La Isla de los Alcatraces," or "The Island of the Pelicans." The island's earliest recorded owner is Julian Workman was the island's earliest recorded owner, given it by Mexican governor Pio Pico in 1846 to build a lighthouse. Following the acquisition of California in 1848, the United States fortified the island for positioning of coastal batteries. When the civil War broke out in 1861, the island mounted 85 cannons (increased to 105 by 1866) and served as the San Francisco Arsenal. Alcatraz never fired its guns but was used to imprison Confederate sympathizers. In 1867, a brick jailhouse was built and in 1868, Alcatraz was designated a long-term detention facility for military prisoners--a role it prominently played during the Spanish-American War.

 

After the 1906 Earthquake, civilian prisoners were transferred to Alcatraz, and the facilities were slowly expanded at the beginning of the century. Construction on Major Reuben Turner's huge concrete main cell block was completed in 1912. The Fortress was deactivated as a military prison in 1933 and transferred to the Department of Justice, becoming a Federal Bureau of Prisons federal prison the following year. During its 29 years of operation, the penitentiary claimed no prisoners had ever successfully escaped--36 prisoners were involved in 14 attempts; 23 were caught, six were shot and killed, and three were lost at sea and never found. Alcatraz held such notable criminals as Al Capone, Robert Franklin Stroud (better known as the "Birdman of Alcatraz"), George "Machine Gun" Kelly, James "Whitey" Bulger, and Alvin "Creepy Karpis" Karpowicz (who served more time at Alcatraz than any other inmate).

 

Far more expensive to operate than other prisons, Alcatraz was closed on March 21, 1963 by Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. From 1969-1971, the island was occupied by a multi-tribal group of Native Americans, culminating in the Trail of Broken Treaties.

 

National Register #76000209 (1976)

July 9, 2021

 

When Tropical Storm, Elsa blazed by just to the west of us, we found ourselves on the "dry side" of the storm. The dry side is also the windy side, and the outer beaches of Cape Cod got the full brunt.

 

Nauset Beach

Orleans, Massachusetts

Cape Cod - USA

 

Photo by brucetopher

© Bruce Christopher 2021

All Rights Reserved

 

...always learning - critiques welcome.

Tools: Canon 7D & iPhone 11.

No use without permission.

Please email for usage info.

Camp Westerbork was built in 1939 as a central refugee camp, but was taken over in 1942 by the Germans to become a "processing camp" for transportation to the destruction camps Sobidor, Auschwitz,Bergen-Belsen.

 

Westerbork was not a destruction camp and compared to the camps in the east the living condition where good (considering the situation) and killing or torture was a rarity.

 

From 15 July 1942 till 13 September 1944, 93 trains left Westerbork to the camps in the east. Transporting a total of 107.000 prisoners. Of those 107.000 only 5032 would survive! One of those transported from Westerbork was Anna Frank and her family.

 

Camp Westerbork was freed on 12 April 1945 by Canadian forces. After the war it was used as prison camp for NSB members and Dutch inhabitants that had worked with the German army. It has also been used as a living arrangement for KNIL military members and Moluccan people that fled Indonesia.

 

Nowadays it as a memorial, with a 102.000 stones, one for every person that died.

Sunset at Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, Poland. Taken on a very cold November day as the sun went down. For me, a very emotional photo. One of the most moving experiences I have ever had. And at the time I took this photo a dog was howling in background far away.

Oświęcim, Poland |

Camp fence and guard tower: the typical fence post was 3,3 m high and fitted with 24 ceramic insulators. There were concrete slabs underneath the fence to prevent prisoners from tunneling. Electricity for the fence was supplied by a high tension line from Siersza Wodna power plant to the main substation in Babice, from which two separate feeders ran to Auschwitz I and Birkenau, where it was connected to the fencing (400 volts at Auschwitz and 760 volts at Birkenau).

At the end of 1943, guard towers were replaced by new ones, fully walled and fitted with windows. Construction was completed in the spring of 1944.

panorama.auschwitz.org

Reconstructed Guard Tower

 

In February 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066. It authorized the relocation of all Japanese-Americans living on the West Coast of the United States. Over 120,000 people were sent to 10 war relocation centers. One of them was Manzanar, located in the harsh but beautiful Owens Valley of eastern California. Eventually over 10,000 Japanese-Americans were forced to live in this 500 acre compound for the duration of World War II. Today the National Park Service oversees the site.

One of several guard towers still standing around the perimeter of the camp. (No more machine guns, though.) Seen from the camp's gateway at the jourhaus.

Construction continues on road repairs and improvements to an access control point at Longare in Italy. Construction on the $950,000 project is expected to continue through May 2010. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Europe District is managing the project. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers photo by Mark Nedzbala)

Brzezinka, Poland |

Deutsche Reichsbahn wagon, camp unloading ramp, fence, guard tower and ruins of the men's camp.

After I got a few pictures of Auschwitz's notorious entrance gate, I looked around and got a sense of how big Birkenau really was -- or tried to. It was enormous. I couldn't even describe it in terms of football fields. And no wonder. Yesterday I looked it up on ChatGPT. Auschwitz II - Birkenau is about the same size as 322 football fields.

 

322 football fields' worth of space devoted to humiliating, enslaving, and killing over a million people.

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IMG_7003ap

Guard tower out by the alert pads on Blytheville - Eaker AFB. Anybody home?

Auschwitz Birkenau

Poland

  

DSC_5389

Wal-Mart,

Mexicali,

Baja California, México

Photo facing East Berlin.

Taken May, 1982

Federal Correctional Institute, Terminal Island

Federal Bureau of Prisons

 

FCI Terminal Island:

www.bop.gov/locations/institutions/trm/

 

Port of Long Beach:

polb.com

June 25, 2016

 

A guard station at one of Cape Cod's ocean-side beaches, Nauset Beach. The sign warns beach-goers of the inherent hazards of swimming or wading in the wild North Atlantic Ocean.

 

Included on the sign is a warning about dangerous marine life. and the most significant creature here is the white shark, or great white shark. The white sharks patrol the length of seashore, hunting seals. Sometimes people are mistaken for seals!

 

Nauset Beach

Orleans, Massachusetts

Cape Cod - USA

 

Photo by brucetopher

© Bruce Christopher 2016

All Rights Reserved

 

No use without permission.

Please email for usage info.

Folsom Prison, North side near the American River, Folsom, CA

The Tennessee Tennessee State Prison was built in 1898 on a plan from another prison in New York. It was designed to scare the prisoner. Abandoned since 1992, the prison opened overcrowded and now is deteriorating rapidly. Visitors are not welcome. During the rain of May 1, 2010.

 

Interesting unknown tidbit: James Earl Ray was housed here on death row (for his own protection).

Roscar Siminski and the Central Highlands skyline, in 1971.

 

This is the road between 71st Evac and Tropo Hill, as shown on this map; we're looking toward Engineer Hill. (Map courtesy of Ray Smith; Tropo Hill photo from Ray Browning's website--my photo, though.) This is the first photograph I ever took with a quality camera, and it came out quite well.

 

Ray Browning's site includes this photo--I think it's by Rick Stolz--which I've always found painfully like my memory of the view from 71st Evac. The first building in the foreground, with the red cross on top, was Ward One, and was my home for most of my tour....

 

Camera: Minolta SR-T 101

 

New scan (from negative) posted on 12/29/05.

The Tennessee Tennessee State Prison was built in 1898 on a plan from another prison in New York. It was designed to scare the prisoner. Abandoned since 1992, the prison opened overcrowded and now is deteriorating rapidly. Visitors are not welcome. During the rain of May 1, 2010.

 

Interesting unknown tidbit: James Earl Ray was housed here on death row (for his own protection).

Brzezinka, Poland |

Camp fence and guard towers: unlike the Auschwitz I camp which was surrounded by two rows of barbed wire fence, the Birkenau camp had only one line and a ditch full of water inside the camp. The typical fence post was 3,3 m high and fitted with 24 ceramic insulators. There were concrete slabs underneath the fence to prevent prisoners from tunneling. Electricity for the fence was supplied by a high tension line from Siersza Wodna power plant to the main substation in Babice, from which two separate feeders ran to Auschwitz I and Birkenau, where it was connected to the fencing (400 volts at Auschwitz and 760 volts at Birkenau).

panorama.auschwitz.org

sachsenhausen concentration camp

san francisco bay, california

1971

 

alcatraz island

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

san francisco bay, california

1971

 

alcatraz island

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Having avoided a visit to the historic site of Port Arthur during my previous visits to Hobart (nearby) I succumbed at last and feel obliged to myself to post a picture from there.

 

However a quick look around Flickr shows there are plenty of pictures of the outstanding heritage buildings from that unfortunate place, so mine is to be a view looking out from inside the Guard Tower with a little artistic licence to enhancment tools.

 

It is a fascinating place and steeped in sadness both at its original purpose as a penal colony for the hardest nuts of the time (1800s) and also for the massacre which occurred there in 1996 when 35 people were shot dead and 19 wounded by a local idiot from Hobart.

A view from the dock at Alcatraz Island. The remains of the Warden's house are visible on the upper part of the hill, the large building was a former barracks and a guard tower can also be seen.

San Juan, Puerto Rico

The Tennessee Tennessee State Prison was built in 1898 on a plan from another prison in New York. It was designed to scare the prisoner. Abandoned since 1992, the prison opened overcrowded and now is deteriorating rapidly. Visitors are not welcome.

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