View allAll Photos Tagged c1919
Ketchikan's Most Famous Brothel - Dolly's House Museum
ALASKA, USA
SIGHN READS:
DOLLY'S HOUSE
HISTORIC RED LIGHT TOUR
WHERE BOTH MEN & SALMON
CAME UPSTREAM TO SPAWN
24 CREEK STREET EST. 1919
Dolly Arthur bought this house for $800 and worked as a madam here until she was 72. Prostitution was illegal on land so they built Creek Street on stilts. It is $10 per person to tour this house. They have plaques and TVs in every room telling her story instead of a guided tour. The house itself is nothing extraordinary (except maybe for the shower curtain - condoms were embroidered into flowers), but it is still an interesting part of Ketchikan's history.
Single young men in Alaska had a different idea of after-work entertainment - hard liquor and a certain type of female companionship. These loggers, miners and fishermen worked hard in the woods, the gold camps or at sea. When they got back to town, Creek Street and its brothels were waiting.
As per online information.
Thank-you for all the overwhelming support and many friendships.
Happy Clicks
~Christie
*Best experienced in full screen
Pacific Central Station is a transportation hub for buses and rail.
Amtrak / Cascades
Brief History of Vancouver Pacific Train Station
With work completed in 1919, Vancouver station was designed in the grand Beaux-Arts style by architects Pratt & Ross. It is characterized by symmetry, monumentality and the use of classical features in design, massing and details.
Built from locally-sourced materials including: granite, brick and andesite, a volcanic stone from a quarry on Haddington Island off the northeast coast of Vancouver Island.
The signage on the building has evolved, and its first appearance (as “Canadian National”) in 1932 was one of the earliest examples of neon signage in Vancouver. This sign was replaced by the current “Pacific Central” in 1993, which reflects the change in use of the Station while reinforcing its historical associations.
Vancouver Station was designated a Heritage Railway Station by the Federal Government in 1991 under the Heritage Railways Stations Protection Act.
.The landmark was showing signs of water penetration and decay including mould and moss growing on the skin of the exterior, window damage, loss of mortar and shifting masonry.
The restoration of the Station included preserving, restoring and rehabilitating the station’s masonry and windows, extending the useful life of the building and preventing any interior damage.
All work had to respect and retain the defining heritage features of the building which meant a lot of careful planning and adjustments. No new holes could be drilled into the masonry, so the scaffolding had to be erecting using a system that did not rely on cables attached to the building. Instead the scaffolding used a pressure-system that “hugged” the building. It was both very safe and very effective, and eliminated the possibility of further damage to the landmark.
All information has been taken from online sources and not verified to be accurate.
Battey, C. M., 1873-1927,, photographer.
W.E.B. (William Edward Burghardt) Du Bois, 1868-1963
c1919 May 31.
1 photographic print.
Notes:
Photo shows W.E.B. Du Bois, head-and-shoulders portrait, facing slightly right.
Title from item.
Photo by Cornelius M. Battey, 1918.
No. 8.
No copyright renewal.
This record contains unverified, old data from caption card.
Forms part of: Biographical File filing series (Library of Congress).
Exhibited: "The Civil Rights Act of 1964 : A Long Struggle for Freedom" at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., March - January 2016.
Subjects:
Du Bois, W. E. B.--(William Edward Burghardt),--1868-1963.
Format: Portrait photographs--1910-1920.
Photographic prints--1910-1920.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Part Of: Biographical File filing series (Library of Congress) (DLC) 2001695651
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.38818
Call Number: BIOG FILE - Du Bois, W.E.B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963 [item]
Excerpt from heritagemississauga.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/Dixie-...:
3. Hickey-Carson House
775 Dundas Street East (Built c1919)
The building was originally built as a residence by James Crawford in 1919, after the lot had been severed from the larger Gummerson farm in 1918. Crawford sold the house to Rose Hickey in 1920. Rose later married Dominick Carsoni. Dominick, who was born in Italy, worked nearby at the Cooksville Brickyard. He later anglicized his name to Dominic Carson. The house remained in the Hickey-Carson family until 1985, at which time it was sold and converted for commercial usage. The building is a two storey red brick structure with a wraparound porch on the front and side facades supported by round wood columns and the original balustrade. The adjacent Cedar Creek Lane is a remnant farm lane from the Gummerson-Simpson farm.
War memorial window in the north aisle by Burlison & Grylls, c1919.
All Saints church in Kimcote sits in an elevated position by the roadside in the heart of the village. Most of the building is of 13th - 14th century date, the chancel being the earliest part with the nave, north aisle and sturdy west tower the result of slightly later modifications including the addition of the clerestorey (probably 15th century, contemporary with the nave roof within and perhaps the oddly recessed parapet of the tower, though this may also be the result of later rebuilding after the fall of its spire).
Within the church the hand of Victorian restorers is more evident, particularly in the furnishings and glass, though the medieval nave roof is handsome enough and the font is an intriguingly archaic piece of Gothic Survival dating from 1654. The most memorable features here are the windows, there are good windows by Kempe and Burlison & Grylls but best of all is the Arts & Crafts glass by Theodora Salusbury on the south side of the chancel.
Kimcote church is likely to be found locked outside of services but is worth getting inside if possible, especially if like me you admire good glass. Our visit was naturally on a Ride & Stride day / Heritage weekend in September (best day to explore this diocese's churches) though this also coincided with a prayer group meeting in the chancel which placed some limits on photography, but we were grateful to the people involved who were very accommodating in letting us explore and view the glass there.
For more detail on the church see the Leicestershire Churches site below:-
Looking west down the nave begun in 12c to the late 15c west tower . The art nouveau ironwork screen across the tower entrance was placed c1919 in memory of the men who died in the First World War. flic.kr/p/6JHZ2Y
Church of St Andrew, Cubley Derbyshire
Picture with thanks - copyright Tony Grist CCL en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Andrew%27s_Church,_Cubley#/media...
Taken from a print in my collection.
GSWR class 100, entered service numbered 126 December 1882. Duplicated as 126A January 1911, later rebuilt. Became 704 as part on the June 1923 renumbering scheme. Became LMS 14120 after the 1923 amalgamation, withdrawn June 1934.
Entitled: Natives At Breakfast, Movable Chow Shop, Canton, China [c1919] Keystone View Co. [RESTORED] I did the usual spotting, contrast, tonal corrections and added a sepia. However there are really serious limits that one can do when the original shot was set up with a single light source and no apparent or proper fill. The shadows in this case, seem to be deeper than the US national debt.
I just love these funny propped shots that purport to show the "real" Chinese slice of life. The funniest part is that there were probably some who believed these pictures wholeheartedly. A mixture of truth, probabilities, outright falsehoods, and a often a lot of the photographers' wild imagination, they're not only of historical significance, but begin to take on artistic value purely because of their sheer Kitsch.
That said, historically, street vendors did in fact sell hot food from either portable or rolling kitchens like this in the larger Chinese cities of the 1900's, so the image probably leans more to the truthful side than not. However I do question the dating of this image, which seems to be thematically similar to many that were produced by the BW Kilburn Co in 1901 (Kilburn unfortunately never issued sets of images). As Kilburn eventually closed its doors in 1909, its vast collection of 17,000 views and over 100,000 plate glass negatives was sold to Keystone View.
Source: www.yellowstonestereoviews.com/publishers/kilburn.html
My own speculation is that Keystone then picked the best of each collection that they acquired and reissued them with new titles and dates; hence the production date of this image was relabeled as 1919.
The book of dogs
Washington, D. C.,The National geographic society[c1919]
biodiversitylibrary.org/page/14994712
The tallest dog breed? The Irish Wolfhound. It came 2 Ireland as early as 7000BC. C our #SpeciesOfTheDay in #bhlib biodiversitylibrary.org/page/14994712
Painting of The Bowl of Milk by Pierre Bonnard at the Tate Liverpool
Waukesha four-cylinder long-stroke high-torque internal-combustion gasoline engine, 24-hp
----
'Steam-Era 2017' - Ontario Steam & Antique Preservers Association (OSAPA)
----
SLR Magic 8mm 1:4 rectilinear ultra-wide-angle manual-focus lens
P9021816 Anx2 1400h Q90 0.5k-2k
Taken from a copy of a print in my collection, no further details known.
GSWR class 8, entered service numbered 85 June 1892. Rebuilt as a class 18 February 1912, became GSWR 376 under the June 1919 renumbering scheme. Became LMS 14269 after the 1923 grouping and withdrawn during 1930.
Entitled: A Chinese Professor, China [c1919] Keystone View Co. [RESTORED] I took out the obvious spots, adjusted tone and contrast, then created some faux shadow detail under the "professor's" shoulder and left arm, as well as broadening the shoulder. Otherwise the huge black hole of a shadow in the middle of the print was such a visual bottomless pit that leaving it as is would have been a distraction that ruined the entire shot. The original too, found in the US Library of Congress under Reproduction Number LC-USZ62-54309, was actually a low resolution image of marginal quality. The shadows held little (if any) detail and were full of scan line artifacts (I left some in the upper right hand corner).
Again, I suspect that the original was taken earlier (likely by a work for hire for BW Kilburn c1901) but was reprinted with new labels by Keystone in 1919.
The costumes in this one are great. They're right out of Chinese stage opera and I suspect that the "mother" figure to the far left is really posed by a man.
www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2006681031/
Natives of Bethlehem on their way to Jerusalem
•Title: Natives of Bethlehem on their way to Jerusalem
•Creator(s): Keystone View Company.,
•Date Created/Published: Meadville, Pa. : Keystone View Company, c1919 December 19.
•Summary: Group of men, women & children, some riding on a camel.
•Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-ppmsca-10731 (digital file from original stereograph)
•Call Number: LOT 13744-3, no. 4 [item] [P&P]
•Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
•Notes:
oJ238591 U.S. Copyright Office.
oTitle on recto of item.
oCopyright by B.L. Singley.
oNo. 7328.
•Subjects:
oCamels--West Bank--1910-1920.
oTravel--West Bank--1910-1920.
•Collections:
oStereograph Cards