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Leekewold L type "solid muscle" body posing and reference pictures

Cambridge University Botanical Gardens

Reference: APAAME_20191030_RHB-0511

Photographer: Robert Bewley

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-NoDerivative Works

Reference: APAAME_20160529_RHB-0029.dng

Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

Aldie, Virginia

Listed 12/8/2015

Reference Number: 15000878

Stoke is locally significant under Criterion B in the area of Agriculture for its association with Eleanor Truax Harris, who was internationally recognized for her horticultural pursuits and locally recognized for her leadership in developing a means for women to earn income during a time when it was socially unacceptable for middle- and upper-class women to work. Through her fieldstone-walled "Berkeley Gardens," Mrs. Harris and the ladies of the Aldie Horticultural Society sold cut narcissus and over thirty varieties of bulbs during the 1920s and 1930s as a means to support their families. Although Mrs. Harris was a lady of enormous wealth, understanding the financial plight of her neighbors during the Great Depression, she led this endeavor by making the initial investment into the importation of Dutch bulbs in advance of an embargo and thereby securing a place for the village of Aldie in the cut flower industry. Today, narcissuses dot the Aldie countryside in spring, as a testimony to Mrs. Harris's generous outreach. Stoke also is locally significant under Criterion C. Located at the western edge of the Bull Run Mountains, Stoke is a pristine example of an evolved Virginia plantation, dating from the early to mid-19th - century and representing two distinct periods of construction. Sited on 165 acres, which was once part of a 495-acre tract, the ca. 1840 manor house is an example of vernacular building practices when Loudoun County was settled by Tidewater families who migrated west to claim inheritances. The Landmark Ordinary, historic road traces, fieldstone walls, and the original manor house date to this settlement period. The Dower House, The Lodge and tenant house represent a very different period when Stoke was farmed by tenants, rather than the African American labor force it depended on prior to the Civil War. The property also is significant for its early-20th-century revitalization. The manor house, largely abandoned during the Civil War, was transformed by its visionary owners, Colonel Floyd and Mrs. Eleanor Truax Harris, and notable architect Nathan Wyeth, in the Renaissance Revival style. The architecture of the house stands as testimony to the economic regeneration after the Civil War as wealth, from outside of the South, was invested into old Virginia plantations. The manor house and encompassing formal gardens stand today as they did a century ago. In addition, the circa 1924 agricultural complex including the former dairy, milk house, and workhorse barn are illustrative of Loudoun County's former, vibrant dairy industry. Still owned by the same family who created the Renaissance Revival masterpiece, the farm is essentially unchanged since its early-20th-century transformation. Encompassed by protected farmland, the rural nature and vistas, which originally attracted Norborne Berkeley to the "Mountain House," remain much as they did in 1938 when Lewis Berkeley purchased the farm.

National Register of Historic Places Homepage

Stoke Summary Page

National Register of Historic Places on Facebook

af fabriek teveel kit tussen body en bocht...

On the left is Iplehouse fid high heel feet in normal skin (2018) and Iplehouse fid flat feet in glow normal skin made in 2021 on the right

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

Computer, lit, and languages.

Reference: APAAME_20160526_REB-0173.jpg

Photographer: Rebecca Elizabeth Banks

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

Reference Desk, Bowdoin College Library, Brunswick, Maine

This is a shot taken from midway up the elevator--call it two and a half stories up.

Reference: APAAME_20050518_RHB-0278

Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

Reference Photo for deicidenbf

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