View allAll Photos Tagged Tuthill

Albumen carte de visite, Tuthill, Moravia, NY.

(From left) U.S. Air Force Master Sgt. Richard Malloy and U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Bradly Tuthill, both ground transportation specialists with the 175the Logistics Readiness Squadron, prepare and load pallets of medical supplies and equipment March 19, 2020, at the Maryland Strategic National Stockpile location. All assets provided were prioritized for health care workers and hospitals in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Christopher Schepers)

Leeward Community College celebrated spring 2018 commencement on Friday, May 11, 2018 at Tuthill Courtyard.

 

For more photos from Leeward Community College’s spring 2017 commencement go to: www.flickr.com/photos/leewardcc/albums/72157696110155634

June 11, 2008 - 2:56 pm

 

This picture shows some destroyed habitat up near the end of the dirt road I live on, and just off one of the main roads on the Island. This area was not that visible from any of the roads. It was private property, and had no structures on it. For years it has just been left to nature.

 

What happened here is the native Little Bluestem grasses were stripped from it by a hired landscaper to provide a billionaire landowner an instant native Bluestem meadow for his 30 acre property on the North Shore of the Island, rather than wait the time needed to establish one from seed, or seedlings. The meadow that was in the spot shown in this picture was removed almost entirely.

 

Two other areas were stripped also, and these were actually on conservation lands, the Caroline Tuthill preserve in Edgartown and the Priscilla Hancock Meadow in Chilmark, which has created an even greater uproar. All of these conservation lands are listed as priority habitat. To quote Mike Seccombe in his breaking article on this in the May 16, 2008 issue of the Vineyard Gazette, "priority habitat, a state designation appllied to places which harbor rare or endangered animal and plant species."

 

Walking through this area, which is larger than this photo reveals, was just so disheartening. What used to be a wonderful natural meadow was all gone. When I was there, it looked like they had made some attempt to start to restore the area, given the amount of straw strewn around on the surface, so I can only assume that they have reseeded it. There was no evidence of growth when I was there in mid-June when this picture was taken, but I am not sure when they might have reseeded it, and the bigger problem in terms of getting something new established here is that we have been in quite an unusual dry period for a couple of months now. There has been very little rain, and now we are into July which is always one of the driest months here. I should take a walk back up there, and see how things are coming along, if at all.

 

This was a really sad thing to see, and quite disturbing to read about. Here is the link to the full article in the Vineyard Gazette of May 16, 2008 for anyone who might have interest in reading about this in more detail:

 

www.mvgazette.com/article.php?16416

  

Note: Part of a series I will be putting up in a set of pictures taken over the month of June, 2008 on the island of Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts.

Student speaker Jason Tannahill, inspires fellow grads. (photos by Cameron Rivera)

 

Leeward Community College celebrated spring 2017 commencement on Friday, May 12, 2017 at Tuthill Courtyard.

 

For more photos from Leeward Community College’s spring 2017 commencement go to:

www.flickr.com/photos/leewardcc/sets/72157683964234296

1LT Daniel Tuthill, intelligence officer, listens to a fellow participant discuss the technological capabilities being demonstrated during Enterprise Challenge 13, in which Fort Huachuca highlights the synergy between the U.S. Army Intelligence Center of Excellence, Network Enterprise Technology Command, the Army Electronic Proving Ground, and the Joint Interoperability Test Center, Fort Huachuca, AZ, July 24, 2013.. (U.S. Army photo by Sergeant First Class Kristine Smedley/Released)

Leeward CC management program graduates. (photos by Cameron Rivera)

 

Leeward Community College celebrated spring 2017 commencement on Friday, May 12, 2017 at Tuthill Courtyard.

 

For more photos from Leeward Community College’s spring 2017 commencement go to:

www.flickr.com/photos/leewardcc/sets/72157683964234296

 

Leeward Community College celebrated spring 2018 commencement on Friday, May 11, 2018 at Tuthill Courtyard.

 

For more photos from Leeward Community College’s spring 2017 commencement go to: www.flickr.com/photos/leewardcc/albums/72157696110155634

Rob Font (right) defeats Matt Tuthill via Rear Naked Choke, Round 1

Coconino County Fair

 

Fort Tuthill County Park

2446 Fort Tuthill Loop

Flagstaff, AZ 86001

 

02 Sept 12

Tuthill Blowers offers a wide range of blower packages, Positive Displacement Blowers and custom-designed solutions to suit the unique design requirements.

  

A positive displacement blower, also known as a PD blower or rotary air blower, is a machine used to transport gas or air for various purposes. Positive displacement technology is used in these systems, which capture a certain amount of air before discharging or pushing it out against the system pressure. This air usually gets pushed into a pipe or hose to transport goods or gas to a specific location.

  

Let's have a look at how they are helpful for different industrial purposes.

  

HANDLING AND PACKAGING: Blowers can be used as an alternative to vacuum pumps in low-vacuum packing and handling uses.

  

VACUUM PACKAGING: To prolong the shelf life of food items, vacuum pumps must be used in the packing process. Vacuum pumps are commonly used to collect air and remove water vapor, fat, and granular materials such as seasonings. In the chamber manufacturing stage, food is placed inside a vacuum bag and packed into a packaging compartment. The bag is heat-sealed after the air evacuates.

  

THERMOFORMING: The thermoforming process is used to wrap various materials in plastic films or preformed trays. For making a container, heated plastic sheets are put over a shaping die. If the substance has cooled, it is inserted into these containers, and the upper film is heated and secured to the bottle. Thermoforming speeds up packaging efficiency significantly.

  

BOTTLING: Vacuum is used to equalize friction and fluid flow throughout the bottling process. Contaminants would also need to be collected using vacuum pumps when bottling consumable drinks. Carbon dioxide is pumped into beer bottles during the bottling process to minimize the volume of oxygen within the bottle. When the bottle is filled with alcohol, the filler can also inject a tiny portion of inert gas on top of the beer, expelling the oxygen.

  

PNEUMATIC TRANSPORTATION: Positive displacement blowers use in pneumatic conveying is to efficiently move dry bulk material from one location to another at different pressures and vacuum conditions. Dry bulk content is transported into a sealed pipeline containing rice, cornmeal, ingredients, whole grains, soy meal, or meat by-products within the food industry. A variety of blower models with tri-lobe rotors and specially-tuned housings are available to minimize blower noise.

Tuthill Park in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Our 2 year old daughter Helen is enjoying the beautiful spring day!

Karissa Meyer

Sioux Falls, SD

2 unfinished pages from an earlier version of the story that would eventually evolve into the Age of Heroes #1. Someday I may re-draw parts of them to make them more consistent with the current look of the characters and color them. Chronologically, the events of these two pages take place between page 1 and 2 of the Age of Heroes Issue #1.

 

As you can see, the look of Midge and Jazz has changed a bit since this was drawn, as has the design of Midge's scooter ( the current version is based more on a real design). He also apparently didn't observe laws about helmets!

 

This page is an early introduction to some of Midge and Jazz's friends: Wurmy (the name is inspired by Luke Skywalker's nickname back on Tattooine, and his look is based on my friend Ben Tuthill) and "Large" Alice. It also establishes Midge and Jazz's social status early on.

  

Gail Fine, executive director at the Ellie Fund, and Kelley Tuthill, event founder and vice president of public relations and communications at Regis College, at the Ellie Fund's 10th annual Kelley for Ellie gala. Photo by Dana Bisbee.

Ticket booths at the Coconino County Fair

"This monument is erected to the memorye of Grace wife of William Tothill of the Middle Temple esq who havinge issue Henry died the 24 day of Februarye 1623 in the 18th yere of her age and lieth buried in this ile she being the daughter of Henry Tothill of Peamount then sherife of Devon and Mary his wife"

"If Grace coulde length of dayes thee give,

Or Vertue coulde have made thee live,

If Goodnesse coulde thee heere have kept,

Or tears of friendes which for thee wept,

Then had'st thou lived amongst us heere,

To whom thy vertues made thee deere.

But thou a Sainte did'st Heaven aspire,

Whilst heere on earthe wee thee admire.

Then rest deere Corps in Mantle Clay,

Till Christ thee raise the latter day.

Thy years were fewe - thy glasse being runn,

When death did ende - thy lyfe begunn."

 

Grace lies in alabaster, her elbow resting on a pillow, her hand supporting her head. She wears a ruff, mantle open at the front showing the tight-fitting bodice, and long full skirt. Beneath her figure are the lines:—

"Speake statue tell her story, Its Grace inherits Glory."

 

Grace Tothill (1605-1623), was the youngest of the co-heiress two daughters of Henry Tothill (1640) of Peamore, Exminster, Sheriff of Devon in 1623 & Mary 1646 sole heiress of Nicholas Sparke of Sowton, co. Devon. (Henry Tothill 1561 - 1640 her father was High Sheriff of county Devon in 1623 and 1624. and was the, eldest son and heir of Geoffry Tothill of Peamore He was buried here 22 December 1640. " Here lyeth the bodye of Henry Tothill of Peamore, Esquire, who died the 9th day of Dec. 1640 Anno aged 78. Mary the only wife of the aforesaid Henry, Sole daughter and heire of Nicholas Sparke, Gent., lyeth also here.".

She was the grand daughter of Geoffry Tothill, recorder of

Exeter, & Joane daughter of Robert Dillon of Chymwell

Devon, by Isabell daughter of William Fortescue of Prudestone,

Her co-heiress sister was Joan Northleigh whose son eventually Henry inherited +++

 

She m (her cousin) William 1645 son of John Tothill

He was admitted to the Middle Temple on 4 March 1612 ;

He inherited Peamore from his father-in-law Henry Tothill, who also appointed him executor of his will.

Child - Grace dying soon after his birth

1. Henry Tothill, eldest son and heir, baptized 15 April 1623 at Exminster. matriculated 4 June 1641, Exeter College, Oxford, aged 18 years ; buried 29 October 1642 at Exminster ;

unmarried.

 

Husband William m2 on 19 December 1626 at Exeter, Elizabeth 1647, daughter of Sir George Southcote of Dartmouth Castle & Shilliugford, Devon, 4th son of Thomas Southcote of Shillingford.

Children

2 George, baptized 2 December 1627 at Exminster ; died

30 May 1629 ; buried* at Exminster.

3 John, mentioned in his father's will of 27 June 1643 ;

dsp 1647 so the property went to the Northleighs. +++

4 Elizabeth m 22 July 1658 at Yarnscomb, Christopher Wood of North Devon.

5 Anne m 14 July 1663 at Yarnscomb, John son of John Hale of Borings-Leigh in the parish of West Alvington.

 

Husband William died 26 April 1645, and was buried at Exminster. Will dated 27 April 1643; proved 16 May 1645 at Exeter by his widow Elizabeth. executrix of her husband's will and guardian of his children. His widow Elizabeth died 12th December 1647 & is buried here

 

Above is a lozenge with the arms of Tothill, and below this

lozenge is the Tothill coat differenced witli a label below a crescent (denoting the eldest son of a second son), impaling Tothill.

 

In Devonshire the Tuthills possessed considerable landed property at Peamore, Exeter, Bagtor, Sowton otherwise Little Durnsford, Plymouth, etc. The estate of Peamore or Peimount, which William le Speke possessed under Edward 11., in the

minority of Thomas FitzRalph, afterwards in the possession of the Cobham family, but on the attainder of the Duke of Suffolk it fell to the Crown and was purchased by Jeffrey Tothill. It was held by him and his descendants until Henry Northleigh +++ inherited it through his mother Joan Tothill, daughter and coheir of Henry, son of Jeffrey Tothill.

.

The Tothills filled various stations of honour and trust, the records shewing that William Tothill was Bailiff of Exeter in 1528, again in 1548, High Sheriff of Exeter in 1549, and Mayor in 1552. Jeffrey Tothill was Recorder of Exeter in 1563, which he held to the date of his death ; also during this time he represented the City of Exeter in Parliament.

Richard Tothill, in the reign of Elizabeth, attained considerable eminence as a Printer and Stationer in London, where he resided at the "Hand and Star" in Fleet Street.

  

- Exminster church Devon

 

www.bowlesfamilyhistory.ca/images/MiscellaneaVol3-BusliOr...

A cowboy passes by the beer tent at the Coconino County Fair.

Assistant Professor Ickes congratulates the grads. (photos by Cameron Rivera)

 

Leeward Community College celebrated spring 2017 commencement on Friday, May 12, 2017 at Tuthill Courtyard.

 

For more photos from Leeward Community College’s spring 2017 commencement go to:

www.flickr.com/photos/leewardcc/sets/72157683964234296

Photos from the WTO Public Forum 2019 photo gallery may be reproduced provided attribution is given to the WTO and the WTO is informed. Photos: © WTO/Jay Louvion

This early 911 was recently built as a fully competitive racing car for the 2 Litre Cup by Sports Purpose’s James Turner, in collaboration with Paul Smith. The Paul Smith ‘Artist Stripe’ is unmistakable, continuous through the cabin and underside of the car, built beautifully by Tuthill Porsche. It has attracted widespread praise since its launch at Paul Smith’s Paris headquarters and debut on track at Le Mans Classic, and was a highly visible part of the Porsche 70th anniversary celebrations at the Goodwood Festival of Speed this summer.

 

sports-purpose.com/

Tuthill Porsche 911

Glenn Janssens

At Saeed & Kristy's house in Denver, December 13, 2014.

Title: Carnegie Hall

Other title: Carnegie Hall (New York, N.Y.); Music Hall

Creator: Tuthill, William Burnet, 1855-1929

Creator role: Architect

Date: 1889-1891

Current location: New York City, New York, United States

Description of work: Located in the Borough of Manhattan. Built by Andrew Carnegie. Originally had a Mansard roof that was replaced by another floor in the 1890s. There have been two major additions to the Hall.

Description of view: The exterior of the Hall seen diagonally from across the street.

Work type: Architecture and Landscape

Style of work: Modern: Vernacular Architecture: Eclecticism: Italianate

Culture: American

Materials/Techniques: Brick

Source: Catchen, Gary (copyright Gary Catchen)

Resource type: Image

File format: JPEG

Image size: 1512H X 1800W pixels

Permitted uses: This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. For additional details see: alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightsarch.htm

Collection: Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures

Filename: WB2007-0472 carnegie hall.jpg

Record ID: WB2007-0472

Sub collection: theaters and performing arts buildings

Copyight holder: Copyright Gary Catchen

 

The grave of Alexander Forrest (22 September 1849 – 20 June 1901) in Karrakatta Cemetery, Western Australia.

Also, on this memorial are his daughter Sylvia (Pettie) Ada Eliza Lennard Woods nee Forrest (6 March 1881 - 18 December 1968) and her husband Dr Charles William Tuthill Woods (7 June 1876 - 30 November 1940). They married in St Martin in the Fields, London on 19 April 1909.

One the sons of Alexander Forrest is commemorated on this memorial. He was John Forrest (27 January 1887 - 24 December 1960) together with his wife Elsie Maud Forrest nee Warmington (23 July 1887 – 32 August 1966). One of John and Jean’s daughters was Jean Amy Forrest (13 October 1918 – 11 October 1997) and another was Mary Isobel Hampshire nee Forrest (13 June 1913 - 22 April 1979). Mary’s husband was Noel MacQuarie Hampshire (6 December 1912 – 23 May 1967).

Howden Minster (St Peter), South aisle west window by J B Capronnier, 1888.

 

Jesus inviting Zacchaeus down from the tree.

  

Minster Church of St Peter & St Paul, Howden, East Yorkshire.

 

Memorial Window to George Tuthill (1817-1887)

 

By Jean-Baptiste Capronnier (1814-1891), 1888.

 

Jean-Baptiste Capronnier was born in Brussels in 1814. He took over his father's glass design and manufacturing business around 1840 and acquired an international reputation. He used intense acid colours and a highly pictorial style, using large pieces of glass with most detail added in enamel. He carried out windows for various churches in Brussels, Bruges, Amsterdam and elsewhere, and his work was commissioned also for France and Italy. His reputation in England was highest in the 1860s and 1870s. At the Paris Exhibition of 1855 he won the only medal given for glass painting. He died in Brussels in 1891.

5th May 2016

 

Silja Baller, WEF, Lee Tuthill, WTO

 

How the Internet Enables Sustainable Development: Incorporating Data-Driven Policies to Measure Impact

 

©ITU/I.Wood

The rain set in as we approached the end of our Sunday afternoon hike.through the watershed of Tuthills Creek, along the border between Town of Islip and Town of Brookhaven on Long Island, New York. Our leader, Ed Silsbe, has helped bring together a group of community members called the Tuthills Creek Alliance, who would like to see established a muti-use recreational trail spanning the island, from the Great South Bay through Sans Souci County Park (a portion of which runs through Meadow Croft, the former estate of John E. Roosevelt), along the border between the Town of Island and the Town of Brookhaven and up the LIPA corridor that runs N-S across the width of the island. Hypothetically, the Greenleaf Trail could continue to the Setauket Woods to connect with the Setauket to Port Jefferson Station Greenway.

View looking toward Great Patchogue Lake (left distance) and Patchogue River (right distance) from the East Northeast, separated by a dammed isthmus, powering several mills and factories. The white, colonaded, rectangular, flat roofed building in the right foreground may be the John S. Havens or John J. Craven House (later home to the Canfield-Tuthill house, later the WW II USO and a home of the Patchogue Elks, prior its demolition. East Main St. is on the left. Medford Avenue (sometimes known as the the Coram road), bordered by wooden fences, runs North (right). Note the telephone polls scattered around the the roads, with lines, connecting to houses, which suggests telephones, not just telegraph polls.

Title: Carnegie Hall

Other title: Carnegie Hall (New York, N.Y.); Music Hall

Creator: Tuthill, William Burnet, 1855-1930

Creator role: Architect

Date: 1889-1892

Current location: New York City, New York, United States

Description of work: Located in the Borough of Manhattan. Built by Andrew Carnegie. Originally had a Mansard roof that was replaced by another floor in the 1890s. There have been two major additions to the Hall.

Description of view: The exterior of the Hall from diagonally across the street. Showing more of the front facade.

Work type: Architecture and Landscape

Style of work: Modern: Vernacular Architecture: Eclecticism: Italianate

Culture: American

Materials/Techniques: Brick

Source: Catchen, Gary (copyright Gary Catchen)

Resource type: Image

File format: JPEG

Image size: 1800H X 1283W pixels

Permitted uses: This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. Other uses are not permitted. For additional details see: alias.libraries.psu.edu/vius/copyright/publicrightsarch.htm

Collection: Worldwide Building and Landscape Pictures

Filename: WB2007-0473 carnegie hall.jpg

Record ID: WB2007-0473

Sub collection: theaters and performing arts buildings

Copyight holder: Copyright Gary Catchen

 

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