View allAll Photos Tagged Paulding
The structures seen here are stylolites, pressure dissolution features that frequently have the appearance of hospital EKG readings. These occur in many limestones, dolostones, and some marbles, especially in or near orogenic belts.
Stratigraphy: loose block derived from the Dundee Limestone or Lucas Dolomite, Devonian
Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)
Site of the Battle of New Hope Church during the War Between the States, Paulding County, Georgia.
See more at: www.confederatedigest.com/2010/08/confederate-avenue-and-...
John Paulding Engine Company No. 1
2012 Ford F550/Swab
Appearing in the 2023 HVVFA Dress Parade held in West Glens Falls, New York on June 17th.
Photo By Derek J. Ewing
Copyright 2023 - All Rights Reserved.
File name: 08_06_006836
Title: USS Paulding on Navy Yard Marine Railway after Bow was torn off when she rammed the S-4 off Provincetown. Sub crew was lost.
Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)
Date created: 1927-12-24
Physical description: 1 negative : glass, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.
Genre: Glass negatives
Subjects: Paulding (Destroyer : DD-22); Government vessels; Marine accidents; Naval yards & naval stations
Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.
Collection: Leslie Jones Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: Copyright © Leslie Jones.
Preferred citation: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.
On Saturday, September 23, 2017 the Old Van Cortlandtville Cemetery Association held a Plaque Dedication to unveil a new marker for the John Paulding gravesite. I was honored to be a part of the ceremony and also to secure the funds needed to create the plaque. Knowing of my interest and involvement in promoting history and being a Revolutionary War Reenactor for over 40 years, members of the association approached me hoping I would help in the creation of the plaque. I was glad to have the opportunity to have a hand in the initiative to create the plaque and was able to obtain the funding required to have the plaque created and installed.
The act of John Paulding and his comrades Isaac Van Wart and David Williams capturing British spy Major John Andre was a turning point in our nation’s history. In recent years, the story has a renewed interest due the background setting of West Point, George Washington, Benedict Arnold and especially the new details regarding the spy ring involved in the war. A number of books and even a television series has appeared in just the last few years giving renewed interest in the story.
John Paulding, the lead figure in the capture of Andre, is buried in the Old Van Cortlandt Cemetery just yards from the historic Revolutionary War Era Old St. Peter’s Church. He died in 1818 at the age of 60 and was honored with a prominent site and stone/obelisk structure. Over time, the words engraved into the marble monument have faded and it is just a matter of time until they are lost forever. The new plague that was installed replicates the engraved words exactly so as to preserve them for generations to come.
Limestones and dolostones in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.
This is an active quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. We were forbidden from closely approaching the walls. Large, loose blocks of rock were piled on the quarry floor for close examination and mineral collecting.
Many of the gray-colored rocks are from the the Dundee Limestone, a Middle Devonian unit equivalent to the upper Columbus Limestone and Delaware Limestone elsewhere in Ohio. At this site, the Dundee is principally light gray to gray-brown micrite and dismicrite. These lithologies are sometimes referred to as lithographic limestone and sublithographic limestone. Stylolites are present, as are numerous patches of coarsely-crystalline calcite.
The brownish-colored rocks are from the Lucas Dolomite of the upper Detroit River Group. The Lucas appears to consist of both dolostone and limestone. Finely-laminated, brown dolostone is a common lithology in this unit. Lack of stratigraphic control in the loose quarry blocks makes specific lithologic assessments difficult. Stylolites are also present in the Lucas.
Stratigraphy: Dundee Limestone & Lucas Dolomite, Middle Devonian
Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)
Hexagonaria sp. - fossil coral in limestone in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.
Corals are essentially sea anemones (polyps) that make a skeleton, which is usually mineralized. Most corals are colonial, but some are solitary. This particular fossil is Hexagonaria, a colonial rugose coral having many hexagonally-shaped corallites, as seen in plan view.
Classification: Animalia, Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Rugosa, Phillipsastraeidae
Stratigraphy: loose quarry block possibly derived from the Dundee Limestone, Middle Devonian
Locality: Paulding Quarry (= Lafarge Paulding Quarry), north-northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 57.96" North latitude, 84° 37' 21.23" West longitude)
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See info. at:
and
This is part of a large, loose block at an active quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. We were forbidden from closely approaching the walls. Rock piles on the quarry floor were available for close examination and mineral collecting.
This rock is from the Lucas Dolomite of the Detroit River Group. The Lucas appears to consist of both dolostone and limestone. Finely-laminated, brown dolostone is a common lithology in this unit (see the very top & bottom of this block). Lack of stratigraphic control in the loose quarry blocks makes additional, specific lithologic assessments difficult. Stylolites are also present in the Lucas.
The finely laminated portions of the Lucas have been identified by other workers as microbial mats.
The gray, non-bedded portion of this rock (= most of photo) is a breccia with vugs.
Stratigraphy: Lucas Dolomite, upper Detroit River Group, Middle Devonian
Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)
Paulding County, GA
2024 Freightliner M2-106 Plus/Spencer
750gal/1500gpm
Job #17021224
Engine 2 serves the City of Hiram.
Paulding County Fire Station 2:
535 Seaboard AVE
Hiram, GA 30141
Fossiliferous chert nodule in carbonate in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.
The irregularly-concentrically zoned mass in the photo is a chert nodule representing partially silicified carbonate rock. This is an out-of-place quarry block of either limestone or dolostone. Just to the left of the black/dark brown portion of the nodule is a silicified fossil coral.
Classification: Animalia, Cnidaria, Anthozoa
Stratigraphy: loose quarry block of Dundee Limestone or Lucas Dolomite, Middle Devonian
Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)
September 18, 2024. Engines 5 & 10, Rescue 4, and Battalion 2 of the Paulding County Fire/Rescue tackle a small structure fire in the Nebo Community.
File name: 08_06_006846
Title: USS Paulding on Navy Yard Marine Railway with damaged bow after sinking sub S-4
Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)
Date created: 1927-12-24
Physical description: 1 negative : glass, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.
Genre: Glass negatives
Subjects: Paulding (Destroyer : DD-22); Government vessels; Marine accidents; Naval yards & naval stations
Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.
Collection: Leslie Jones Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: Copyright © Leslie Jones.
Preferred citation: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.
What a weirdo! Hey there, weirdo.
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In Paulding, Ohio, on October 15th, 2022, Flatrock Creek as viewed from the south side of East Perry Street (U.S. Route 127).
Flatrock Creek flows to the Auglaize River, which flows to the Maumee River, which flows to Maumee Bay in Lake Erie.
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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:
• Flatrock Creek (1133218)
• Paulding (2081335)
• Paulding (county) (1002776)
Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:
• autumn (300133093)
• cultural landscapes (300008932)
• power lines (300008603)
• riverine landscapes (300435110)
• rivers (300008707)
• temperate deciduous forests (300387649)
Wikidata items:
• 15 October 2022 (Q69306585)
• coarse woody debris (Q1413705)
• Flatrock Creek (Q1427373)
• Huron/Erie Lake Plains (Q56683276)
• Lake Erie drainage basin (Q6475771)
• Maumee Lake Plain (Q56685650)
• Maumee River drainage basin (Q96633634)
• North and East of the First Principal Meridian (Q7057481)
• Northwest Ohio (Q7060133)
• October 15 (Q2919)
• October 2022 (Q61313014)
• riparian forest (Q11177275)
• river engineering (Q1187134)
• Southern Great Lakes forests (Q16201663)
• Treaty of Fort Meigs (Q1713044)
• U.S. Route 127 (Q2493039)
Library of Congress Subject Headings:
• Dead trees (sh98006031)
• Rivers—Ohio (sh85114372)
welcome to paulding county, southern by the grace of god.
the weather today was quite dark & depressive, like it's been for the past few days. I was bored in the petsmart parking lot & stumbled upon an all-to-familiar sight.
This is the Paulding Quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. The quarry opened in 1949 and the rocks are used to make cement on-site. The target unit is the Middle Devonian Dundee Limestone (not visible in this picture). Overlying the Dundee at this locality is the Silica Formation (also Middle Devonian), which consists of richly fossiliferous interbedded limestones and shales. The fossils are typical mid-Paleozoic marine invertebrates such as brachiopods, bryozoans, corals, crinoids, and trilobites.
Locality: Paulding Quarry (= Lafarge Paulding Quarry), north-northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 57.96" North latitude, 84° 37' 21.23" West longitude)
Machaeracanthus sp. - fossil fish spine from the Devonian of Ohio, USA. (Dave Mielke collection; temporary public display, Ohio Geological Survey, Columbus, Ohio, USA)
Machaeracanthus was a type of acanthodian fish, an extinct group of jawed fish that had spines along the anterior margin of each fin. The root word “acanth” means “spine”. Acanthodians were the first fish to evolve jaws and scales.
Classification: Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Acanthodii
Stratigraphy: Silica Formation (also known as the Silica Shale), Givetian Stage, upper Middle Devonian
Locality: quarry northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 52.55" North latitude, 84° 37' 19.32" West longitude)
-----------------------------------
See info. at:
Historical Marker near the site of the Battle of New Hope Church in the War Between the States, Paulding County, Georgia.
Built in 2006-08 using the designs of Facility Group of Smyrna, the Paulding County Courthouse is located on the southwestern edge of Dallas, Georgia.
Built in 1972, this structure serves the 1st District of Jasper County. It is located in one of the state's smallest county seats.
The other Jasper County seat is Bay Springs.
Paulding is a tiny village that once had a much larger population but has seen much decline ever since the Reconstruction Era. It is today Mississippi's only unincorporated county seats.
Paulding Exempted Village Schools 17 - 2012 Blue Bird All American FE; Cardinal Bus Sales - Lima, Ohio
Located in Oak Grove Cemetery in Paducah, Kentucky, this World War I Monument was designed by John Paulding. For more information about this statue and Mr. Paulding, please see this website: doughboysearcher.weebly.com/john-pauldings-doughboys.html
Outgoing State Bar President Patrick T. "Pat" O'Connor presents the Best New Entry Award to Matthew Momtahan and Martin Valbuena of the Paulding County Bar Association.
The Best New Entry Award is presented to recognize the excellent efforts of those local and voluntary bar associations that have entered the Award of Merit or Law Day Award competitions for the first time in four years. (Photo credit: Sarah I. Coole)
The statue of one of the militiamen who apprehended John Andre atop the Captors Monument in Patriots Park.
This is threebirds orchid. I missed the large bloom the day before. Blooming is provoked by cooler than average nighttime temperatures for two consecutive nights. For more information:http://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=TRTR3
#NWGA #Fox5 Missing Paulding County teen t.co/zCBgGz7JXo (via Twitter twitter.com/RedneckGremlin/status/971134143798153218)
Bethanyphyllum robustum (Hall, 1876) - fossil coral from the Devonian of Ohio, USA. (Dave Mielke collection; temporary public display, Ohio Geological Survey, Columbus, Ohio, USA)
This is a well-preserved rugose coral, commonly known as a "horn coral". Rugosans are an extinct group - they only occur in Paleozoic rocks. The soft parts were sea anemone-like creatures called polyps. The polyps made calcareous hard-part skeletons. Most rugosans were solitary, but some were colonial. This specimen is a solitary rugose coral - it has a solid, tapering skeleton of calcite.
Classification: Animalia, Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Rugosa, Bethanyphyllidae
Stratigraphy: Silica Formation (also known as the Silica Shale), Givetian Stage, upper Middle Devonian
Locality: quarry northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 52.55" North latitude, 84° 37' 19.32" West longitude)
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See info. at:
The LCC basketball team gathers in a circle prior to the game between the Lima Central Catholic Thunderbirds and Paulding Panthers at LCC on Friday night, Jan. 11, 2008.
Paulding Exempted Village Schools 1 - 2006 Blue Bird Vision - Retired; Cardinal Bus Sales - Lima, Ohio. One of many Blue Birds in the fleet.
File name: 08_06_006829
Title: USS Paulding with bow torn away after hitting and sinking the S-4 off Provincetown on Dec 17, 1927
Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)
Date created: 1927-12-24
Physical description: 1 negative : glass, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.
Genre: Glass negatives
Subjects: Paulding (Destroyer : DD-22); Government vessels; Marine accidents; Naval yards & naval stations
Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.
Collection: Leslie Jones Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: Copyright © Leslie Jones.
Preferred citation: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.
Limestones and dolostones in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.
This is an active quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. We were forbidden from closely approaching the walls. Large, loose blocks of rock were piled on the quarry floor for close examination and mineral collecting.
Many of the gray-colored rocks are from the the Dundee Limestone, a Middle Devonian unit equivalent to the upper Columbus Limestone and Delaware Limestone elsewhere in Ohio. At this site, the Dundee is principally light gray to gray-brown micrite and dismicrite. These lithologies are sometimes referred to as lithographic limestone and sublithographic limestone. Stylolites are present, as are numerous patches of coarsely-crystalline calcite.
The brownish-colored rocks are from the Lucas Dolomite of the upper Detroit River Group. The Lucas appears to consist of both dolostone and limestone. Finely-laminated, brown dolostone is a common lithology in this unit. Lack of stratigraphic control in the loose quarry blocks makes specific lithologic assessments difficult. Stylolites are also present in the Lucas.
Stratigraphy: Dundee Limestone & Lucas Dolomite, Middle Devonian
Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)
Apr. 17, 2024, Paulding, Ohio. Doug Goyings, a 5th generation farmer in northwestern Ohio, received a Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) grant in 2023 to install a 288 panel solar array at his family grain farm, meeting 100 percent of the farm's energy needs and saving money that he can re-invest back into the operation. USDA media by Mark McCann.
Located in front of the Norfolk Junior High School in, this World War I Monument was designed by John Paulding. For more information about this statue and Mr. Paulding, please see this website: doughboysearcher.weebly.com/john-pauldings-doughboys.html
Norfolk, Nebraska is located in the northeastern quarter of the state to the northwest of Omaha and to the southwest of Sioux City, Iowa. It is the largest city in Madison County.
"Dedicated to the Confederate soldiers who fought and died defending these lines at New Hope Church, May-June, 1864
By: Gen. Wm. J. Hardee Camp #1397
Sons of Confederate Veterans
File name: 08_06_006727
Title: Sub S-8 at the Navy Yard after standing by S-4 off Provincetown when she was rammed and sent to the bottom by USS Paulding
Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)
Date created: 1928
Physical description: 1 negative : glass, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.
Genre: Glass negatives
Subjects: Submarines; Naval yards & naval stations
Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.
Collection: Leslie Jones Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: Copyright © Leslie Jones.
Preferred citation: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.
Located at in Valley Park on Colerain Avenue, this monument was erected in 1920 using the designs of sculptor John Paulding.
Please refer to this website for more information on the Paulding Doughboy statues located around the nation: doughboysearcher.weebly.com/e-m-viquesney-vs-john-pauldin...
Located at the confluence of the Licking and Ohio rivers in the southwest corner of Ohio, Cincinnati is an historically significant riverport and the anchor of one of the largest metropolitan areas in the Midwestern and Southern U.S. It serves as the seat of Hamilton County, and as of 2020, is the third largest municipality (designated as a city) in Ohio. The southern portion of the metro area extends into northern Kentucky, while the east extends into southeastern Indiana, making Cincinnati an economic hub for three states.
On Saturday, September 23, 2017 the Old Van Cortlandtville Cemetery Association held a Plaque Dedication to unveil a new marker for the John Paulding gravesite. I was honored to be a part of the ceremony and also to secure the funds needed to create the plaque. Knowing of my interest and involvement in promoting history and being a Revolutionary War Reenactor for over 40 years, members of the association approached me hoping I would help in the creation of the plaque. I was glad to have the opportunity to have a hand in the initiative to create the plaque and was able to obtain the funding required to have the plaque created and installed.
The act of John Paulding and his comrades Isaac Van Wart and David Williams capturing British spy Major John Andre was a turning point in our nation’s history. In recent years, the story has a renewed interest due the background setting of West Point, George Washington, Benedict Arnold and especially the new details regarding the spy ring involved in the war. A number of books and even a television series has appeared in just the last few years giving renewed interest in the story.
John Paulding, the lead figure in the capture of Andre, is buried in the Old Van Cortlandt Cemetery just yards from the historic Revolutionary War Era Old St. Peter’s Church. He died in 1818 at the age of 60 and was honored with a prominent site and stone/obelisk structure. Over time, the words engraved into the marble monument have faded and it is just a matter of time until they are lost forever. The new plague that was installed replicates the engraved words exactly so as to preserve them for generations to come.
Paulding County, GA
2017 E-ONE Cyclone II Metro
500gal/1250gpm/100'
Job #141108
Truck 11 serves the North Paulding Communities.
Paulding County Fire Station 11:
61 Harmony Grove Church RD
Acworth, GA 30101
Arthrodire fossil fish piece from the Devonian of Ohio, USA. (Dave Mielke collection; temporary public display, Ohio Geological Survey, Columbus, Ohio, USA)
Classification: Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Placodermi, Arthrodira
Stratigraphy: Silica Formation (also known as the Silica Shale), Givetian Stage, upper Middle Devonian
Locality: quarry northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 52.55" North latitude, 84° 37' 19.32" West longitude)
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See info. at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthrodira
and
Paulding County, GA
2016 E-ONE Cyclone II
300gal/2400gpm/100'
Job #140305
Truck 2 serves the city of Hiram, and has just returned to service.
Paulding County Fire Station 2:
535 Seaboard AVE
Hiram, GA 30141
Paulding County, GA
2019 Rosenbaur Warrior
Job #42431
Squad 1 serves countywide.
Paulding County Fire Station 1:
169 Thomas B. Murphy DR
Dallas, GA 30132
Arthrodire fossil fish piece from the Devonian of Ohio, USA. (Dave Mielke collection; temporary public display, Ohio Geological Survey, Columbus, Ohio, USA)
Classification: Animalia, Chordata, Vertebrata, Placodermi, Arthrodira
Stratigraphy: Silica Formation (also known as the Silica Shale), Givetian Stage, upper Middle Devonian
Locality: quarry northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 52.55" North latitude, 84° 37' 19.32" West longitude)
-----------------------------------
See info. at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthrodira
and
Bethanyphyllum robustum (Hall, 1876) - fossil coral from the Devonian of Ohio, USA. (Dave Mielke collection; temporary public display, Ohio Geological Survey, Columbus, Ohio, USA)
This is a well-preserved rugose coral, commonly known as a "horn coral". Rugosans are an extinct group - they only occur in Paleozoic rocks. The soft parts were sea anemone-like creatures called polyps. The polyps made calcareous hard-part skeletons. Most rugosans were solitary, but some were colonial. This specimen is a solitary rugose coral - it has a solid, tapering skeleton of calcite.
Classification: Animalia, Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Rugosa, Bethanyphyllidae
Stratigraphy: Silica Formation (also known as the Silica Shale), Givetian Stage, upper Middle Devonian
Locality: quarry northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 52.55" North latitude, 84° 37' 19.32" West longitude)
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See info. at: