View allAll Photos Tagged StoneWalling
photo date: June 29, 2008
several days of rioting at the stonewall beginning june 28, 1969 marked the birth of the modern day gay pride movement.
Stonewall Park CC - 1st XI Vs Bidborough CC - 2nd XI
Kent County Village League - Division 3
Saturday 16th June 2018
Stonewall Park
Sonewall Inn, West Village, New York
"Stonewall Inn
53 Christopher Street at Stonewall Place
Site of Stonewall Riots
June 27-29, 1969
Birth Of The Modern
Lesbian & Gay Rights Liberation"
51-53 Christopher Street, Manhattan
Built 1843 and 1846; remodeled 1930; site of the June 1969 Stonewall Rebellion
Designated: June 23, 2015
Photo: Christopher D. Brazee, June 2015
He was considered the confederates best and most tactical General behind Robert E Lee. He was accidently shot by his own soldiers at Chancelorsville in 1863 and would have his arm amputated. He would survive the surgery but died 8 days later of pneumonia. People considered this the biggest blow to the confederation to that point. It killed the moral of his soldiers and many of the southern supporters. He is Buried in Lexington, Va in a national cemetery that bares his name.
A colour photograph of a rusting iron pin and nut set in the black mortar joint of a stonewall. De-focused in the middle of the frame is the Bristol Channel at high tide and in the backdrop is Steepholm Island.
The Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street in the West Village - birthplace of the Gay Rights Movement in 1969.
[LX5-0518 acr(R)cs5]
The brick house dates back to 1800. The stone addition was added in 1848. The UDC purchased the home from the Jackson family in 1906 and for the next 47 years it was The Jackson Memorial Hospital.
OCT2015
0716-564-22
An area a few feet from the bed that General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson where his staff, doctor, and his wife would tend to his needs as he laid dying.
Since 1828, a small, unassuming building currently known as the Jackson Death Site has stood ten miles south of the city of Fredericksburg, Virginia. The building was once part of Fairfield, also known as the Chandler Plantation or Guinea Station. Other buildings that once stood within the vicinity of the Jackson Death Site included the farm home, outhouses, a smokehouse, and barns. Built not as a residence but as the farm's office, this building had no fixed purpose like most of the structures around it. Instead, the farm office was used for whatever the inhabitants needed at the time: that could mean simple storage or indoor workspace or file keeping. The farm complex was owned by John Thorton and later the Chandler family. After General Jackson's arm was amputated he was moved here for transport by train to Richmond. During that time he would develop pneumonia and become to ill to travel. He would die here turning this farm into a shrine to forever remember a great general and man.