View allAll Photos Tagged breakers
Jagged rocks at the eastern end of Breaker Bay on a winter morning. Definitely enough to break any ship that strayed onto them.
2015 BAY TO BREAKERS RACE !
ADDA DADA's VIEW COUNT is EIGHTY MILLION (80,000,000+ ) and with over 5,700 FOLLOWERS !
THANK YOU for visiting this virtual gallery! Enjoy my social documentary photos of the various events in San Francisco! !
NOTE: The BAY TO BREAKERS RACE is a fun World-Wide event held in San Francisco with many different people from around the world attending. These photos do NOT imply the person's sexuality in any way.
Photos are properly marked SAFE or RESTRICTED which is for 18+ only nudity. There is NO porn on my site!.
NOTE: MY photos are NOT to be reproduced, COPIED, BLOGGED, USED in any way shape or form. Use of them by anyone is an infringement of copyright ! © All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
Do NOT post them elsewhere!
NOTE: Viewers should be aware that these photos are viewed by a wide variety of folks and inappropriate RUDE, 'X' or 'R' rated comments shall be removed forthwith.
Check out ADDA DADA's other photo albums.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The Breakers is a Vanderbilt mansion located on Ochre Point Avenue, Newport, Rhode Island, United States on the Atlantic Ocean. It is a National Historic Landmark, a contributing property to the Bellevue Avenue Historic District, and is owned and operated by the Preservation Society of Newport County.
The Breakers was built as the Newport summer home of Cornelius Vanderbilt II, a member of the wealthy United States Vanderbilt family. Designed by renowned architect Richard Morris Hunt and with interior decoration by Jules Allard and Sons and Ogden Codman, Jr., the 70-room mansion boasts approximately 65,000 sq ft (6,000 m2). of living space. The home was constructed between 1893 and 1895 at a cost of more than $7 million (approximately $150 million in today's dollars adjusted for inflation). The Ochre Point Avenue entrance is marked by sculpted iron gates and 30-foot (9.1 m) high walkway gates are part of a 12-foot-high limestone and iron fence that borders the property on all but the ocean side. The 250' x 120' dimensions of the five-story mansion are aligned symmetrically around a central Great Hall.
Part of a 13-acre (53,000 m²) estate on the seagirt cliffs of Newport, it sits in a commanding position that faces east overlooking the Atlantic Ocean.
The Breakers Hotel is a historic hotel in Palm Beach, Florida, United States. First known as The Palm Beach Inn, it was opened on January 16, 1896 by oil, real estate, and railroad tycoon, Henry Flagler, to accommodate travelers on his Florida East Coast Railway. It occupied the beachfront portion of the grounds of the Royal Poinciana Hotel, which Flagler had opened beside Lake Worth Lagoon facing the inland waterway in 1894. Guests began requesting rooms "over by the breakers," so Flagler renamed it The Breakers Hotel in 1901. The wooden hotel burned on June 9, 1903 and was rebuilt, opening on February 1, 1904. Rooms started at $4.00 a night, including three meals a day. Because Flagler forbade motorized vehicles on the property, patrons were delivered between the two hotels in wheeled chairs powered by employees. The grounds featured a nine-hole golf course.
Today, the hotel and grounds occupy 140 acres (57 hectares) beside the Atlantic Ocean.
The Breakers Hotel Complex was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. In 1973, the 105-acre listed area included 15 contributing buildings and one other contributing object