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The Portland High School was constructed in 1919-20 to replace the former high school destroyed by fire in 1918. With an addition constructed in 1936, the school meets national register criterion A for housing the entire Portland public school student population from Kindergarten through twelfth grade from 1920 when it was completed until 1953, when the student population could no longer be contained in the single building. In the 1950s two elementary schools were constructed to house the growing Portland school population, and in 1967 the 1919-20 building was converted into the junior high school when a new high school was constructed. In 1969 the auditorium stage ceased to be used, although the gymnasium continued to serve the junior high school students. In 1991 the 1919-20 building was vacated and sold when a newer high school was constructed and the 1967 high school was converted to the middle school. The Portland High School period of significance is 1919 when construction of the building began until 1963 when it ceased to function as the high school building. The Portland High School is also significant under criterion A because the school’s auditorium/gymnasium

during the building’s early years provided the community’s largest gathering space, used not only for graduation ceremonies and other school-related functions, performances, and sporting events but also for local events of all kinds during the building’s first thirty-five years from the early 1920s to around 1956. The Portland High School’s 1936 addition also meets criterion A as an important local Depression-relief project carried out using assistance from the federal Works

Progress Administration (WPA). School-related lectures, concerts, plays, and commencements were primarily conducted at the

Portland Opera House from 1885 until around 1918, because the previous 1881 high school that

burned could not accommodate large gatherings. The 1920 Portland High School’s combined auditorium/gymnasium could seat up to 500 and provided a place for the whole school to meet together for general sessions, announcements, or lectures by visiting speakers, as well as for commencement exercises. The new High School Auditorium also served as an important

meeting place for local events during the building’s first thirty-five years from the early 1920s until around 1956.

The 1936 Portland High School addition is significant under Criterion A for its association with the Works Progress Administration (WPA). The WPA was one of the largest New Deal agencies

developed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to mitigate the effects of the Great Depression. The WPA program created jobs, and paid unemployed workers to carry out public projects such

as schools. The Portland High School addition presents an important record of the federal relief programs administered in small communities throughout Michigan during the Great Depression.

It was a stunning night down on the Eastside Esplanade. Burnside Bridge shows off in the glassy Willamette River.

Portland snowstorm (December 2008)

View of a Portland construction project shut down in early April after developer Tom Moyer's financing fell through. The Fox Tower, also built by Moyer, is seen in the left center. The brick building to the left of the Fox is the downtown Nordstrom store. The Paramount Hotel is at right.

Portland, Oregon

PortlandSundayParkways.com

 

(c) Photos by Ayleen Crotty

AyleenCrotty.com

- Portland, OR - 2/27/15

Portland Pride Parade, June 15th 2014

Portland Maine April 2010

Sign warning people not to contaminate the city of Portland's drinking water reservoir at Mount Tabor. Water comes from the Bull Run watershed east of Portland.

 

Portland Head Lighthouse, Cape Elizabeth, Maine.

Photos from 2017 Kumoricon, Oregon Convention Center, Portland.

 

MORE PHOTOS will be added to this album as they are processed.

 

#kumoricon2017 #kumoricon

 

My photos are not for sale or commercial use - you can download any of my Comic Con photos for FREE here at Flickr

 

These photos are for you!

 

Thank you for all your fantastic costume creations!

 

I am gradually posting photos to my Instagram page at

 

instagram.com/coldstreams

 

I am also be posting all the photos to my Flickr page where you can download the

originals and use them for what ever you want - these really are for you!

 

flickr.com/edwardmitchell

 

This album will be gradually updated as I select, process and edit over 1,000 photos.

 

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I asked permission to take photos in almost all cases, and in all photos where I was aware of a child in the photo, I asked permission to take the photo and post here.

 

I did not ask permission for many group photos, where poses were being done for photos, assuming that taking those photos was implied okay. If you have any questions please message me through my Flickr page. Thank you!

 

Some times I include photos of both front and back because often times cosplayers have created something elaborate on the back side - and they never get to see what it looks like!

 

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Camera details

Olympus E-M10 and Olympus E-M10 Mk II

 

Most photos taken with

Olympus 45mm

Lumix 25mm

 

Some photos taken with

Lumix 14mm (if its a wide shot its this lens) or a 40 year old Minolta 50mm lens.

 

#kumoricon #Kumoricon2017

#oregon #convention #center #anime

#characters #comic #comiccon #con #cosplay

#costumes #costume #people #popculture

#cosplayer #cosplayers

Time to head back to the Children's Museum

Portland Square Bristol & St Pauls Church. Picture dated about 1945. The buildings date from the 1780's (Scan from a poor condition archive print)

Our hostess for another great Portland TOGA.

Sun. the 9th and walkabout to Eastside Esplanade on the Willamette River.

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XC15 - Nike Portland XC September 26th, 2015. Portland Meadows.

A return daytrip into Portland, Maine, aboard the earliest Casco Bay Lines boat from Chebeague Island, let me enjoy the waterfront scenery again in a whole different light. I spent an hour or so strolling the different wharfs with my camera. This shot is looking toward Custom House Wharf.

 

I feel so "alive" here, and never tire of the draw of the ocean, whether on a quiet island or the busy waterfronts of the harbor.

 

This image is not in the public domain. It is copyrighted © and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in any other media without explicit advance permission from Daryl Ann Anderson.

Portraits from Portland's Monday Funday in Colonel Summers Park

"Hey, I want a Timbers Army No Pity scarf."

"Do you know where I can buy one?"

 

"Yes, On the corner of SW 20th & SW Morrison."

The Portland High School was constructed in 1919-20 to replace the former high school destroyed by fire in 1918. With an addition constructed in 1936, the school meets national register criterion A for housing the entire Portland public school student population from Kindergarten through twelfth grade from 1920 when it was completed until 1953, when the student population could no longer be contained in the single building. In the 1950s two elementary schools were constructed to house the growing Portland school population, and in 1967 the 1919-20 building was converted into the junior high school when a new high school was constructed. In 1969 the auditorium stage ceased to be used, although the gymnasium continued to serve the junior high school students. In 1991 the 1919-20 building was vacated and sold when a newer high school was constructed and the 1967 high school was converted to the middle school. The Portland High School period of significance is 1919 when construction of the building began until 1963 when it ceased to function as the high school building. The Portland High School is also significant under criterion A because the school’s auditorium/gymnasium

during the building’s early years provided the community’s largest gathering space, used not only for graduation ceremonies and other school-related functions, performances, and sporting events but also for local events of all kinds during the building’s first thirty-five years from the early 1920s to around 1956. The Portland High School’s 1936 addition also meets criterion A as an important local Depression-relief project carried out using assistance from the federal Works

Progress Administration (WPA). School-related lectures, concerts, plays, and commencements were primarily conducted at the

Portland Opera House from 1885 until around 1918, because the previous 1881 high school that

burned could not accommodate large gatherings. The 1920 Portland High School’s combined auditorium/gymnasium could seat up to 500 and provided a place for the whole school to meet together for general sessions, announcements, or lectures by visiting speakers, as well as for commencement exercises. The new High School Auditorium also served as an important

meeting place for local events during the building’s first thirty-five years from the early 1920s until around 1956.

The 1936 Portland High School addition is significant under Criterion A for its association with the Works Progress Administration (WPA). The WPA was one of the largest New Deal agencies

developed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to mitigate the effects of the Great Depression. The WPA program created jobs, and paid unemployed workers to carry out public projects such

as schools. The Portland High School addition presents an important record of the federal relief programs administered in small communities throughout Michigan during the Great Depression.

summer solstice 2012

Portland

iPhone 4s

Portland Bureau of Transportation crews prepare for winter weather at the Kerby maintenance yard. By Ryan Kost

The Pittock Mansion is a French Renaissance château in the West Hills of Portland, Oregon originally built as a private home for The Oregonian publisher Henry Pittock and his wife, Georgiana. It is a 22 room estate situated on 46 acres that is now owned by the city's Bureau of Parks and Recreation and open for touring. In addition, the grounds provide panoramic views of Downtown Portland.

  

The Kennedy School is a hotel housed in an old elementary school. It also has a movie theatre, and several bar and places to eat there.

 

Art in the Kennedy school

The Rose Garden is built in the shape of a wide amphitheater, where the edges are marked by these blooming slopes.

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