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Contributing Building - Seth Lore and Irwinton Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #86001534

 

Built 1872

Style: Victorian

Contributing Building - Southeast Gainesville Residential District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #87002435

Contributing Building - Tockwotton Love Place Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #84001260

IMMIGRANTS CONTRIBUTE: AMERICA, WE SING BACK! community event at the All Souls Unitarian Church at 1500 Harvard Street, NW, Washington DC on Saturday afternoon, 28 September 2013 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

Performances

 

Quique Aviles (El Salvador)

www.facebook.com/quique.aviles

 

Follow DC Office of Human Rights / IMMIGRANTS CONTRIBUTE: AMERICA, WE SING BACK! facebook event page at www.facebook.com/events/530488973690958/

Contributing Building - Fort Myers Downtown Commercial District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #89002325

 

Built 1911

Contributing Building - Titusville Commercial District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #89002164

Contributing Building - Hahira Commercial Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #RS100006746

Contributing Building - Railroad Avenue Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #84000640

Contributing Building - Downtown Douglas Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #93000941

Contributing Building - Colquitt Town Square Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #83000237

Infestations on the bark contribute to an overall decline in tree vigor, growth, and productivity. Check out the NYS IPM fact sheet San Jose Scale (Quadraspidiotus perniciosus (Comstock)), in eCommons, Cornell University at ecommons.cornell.edu/handle/1813/43128. Photo by NYSAES, Cornell University. More information is on nysipm.cornell.edu/agriculture/fruits and Cornell Fruit Resources fruit.cornell.edu.

Atty. Sonia Burgos Crannage of Sichol & Hicks, P.C. and an RCC Foundation Board member whose specialty is ElderCare Law contributed to the Estate Planning and Financial Abuse Workshop. #RocklandCommunityCollege

Contributing Site - Washington Oaks HD - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #09000400

 

Contributing Building - Shingler Heights Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #92001571

 

Style: Colonial Revival

Architect: Peter E Dennis

Contributing Building - Madison Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #74000696 and #89002159

 

Contributing Buildings - Donalsonville Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #02000190

Contributed to their crowdfunding appeal. Fortunately they seem to be doing OK now. Amazing place

Contributing Building - Barnesville Commercial Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #95000733

 

Built 1884

Contributing Building - River Road Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #98000861

Contributed by Historian, Darin Kuna

Contributed by:

Linda Pickrill

Nurse

St. George's Hospital

The Catalyst Open Source Academy 2018 took place at Catalyst IT in Wellington, New Zealand, from 8 to 19 January 2018.

 

catalyst.net.nz/open-source-academy

 

Day 7 to 10 are dedicated to the open source projects to which the students contribute. Mentors support them throughout.

Built in 1923-1925, this Gothic Revival-style skyscraper was designed by John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood for the Chicago Tribune, with this being the winning design of a competition held in 1922, which included submissions from multiple notable architects and a variety of architectural design philosophies. The building’s top portion was inspired by the Tour de beurre, or Butter Tower, at the Rouen Cathedral in France, with the rest of the building being an example of Gothic Revival motifs and trim work, along with an overall American Perpendicular Style arrangement and character of elements on the facade. The building stands 496 feet (151 meters) tall and has 36 floors, and originally housed the offices of the Chicago Tribune, with a rear annex building standing six stories tall, and featuring a more streamlined exterior appearance. The building features stones from various historical sites from around the planet at the base, many of which are labeled, which were provided by Chicago Tribune correspondents at the request of Robert R. McCormick. The building is clad in Indiana limestone with strong vertical emphasis on the exterior made up of multiple pilasters, with the larger pilasters continuing beyond the roofline of the main portion of the building to form buttresses at the corner of the octagonal tower atop the roof. The base is relatively unadorned, with a recessed arched doorway along Michigan Avenue featuring carved reliefs above the doors, decorative tracery, railings, and carved spandrel reliefs above and below the fourth floor windows, with the facade between the fifth floor and the twenty-fifth floor being relatively unadorned with contrasting spandrel panels between the windows on each floor. The building also features a twenty-story rear wing with similar detailing, which features multiple pinnacles, decorative tracery, and a parapet with decorative trim. The twenty-fifth floor features a wrap-around promenade around the upper portion of the tower, with eight flying buttresses at the corners of the octagonal upper tower soaring above, a parapet with tracery, pinnacles, and decorative trim, and tracery on the buttresses. The upper portion of the building above the thirtieth floor is set back further, with another set of pinnacles, tracery, and decorative trim crowing the top. In 1935, an Art Deco-style eight-story addition with Gothic Revival trim was added to the north side of the tower to house the WGN Studios. The building is a contributing structure in the Michigan–Wacker Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. The building was designated as a Chicago Landmark in 1989, and was renovated between 2018 and 2023, adaptively reusing the historic office tower as a residential condominium. Today, the building houses 162 residential units, and has had its historic common areas restored, with the rest of the building renovated in a way that is sensitive to the historic character of the building and recognizes its significance.

Contributing Building - Monument Square Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #84002512

 

Style: Romanesque Revival

Contributing Building - Alamo Plaza Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #77001425

 

Built 1904

 

Architect: Atlee Ayres

Contributed by Dr. Wegahta Tesfay, Ethiopia.

Contributing Building - Model Land Company Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #83001439

Contributing Building - Crescent City Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

Contributing Building - Toccoa Downtown Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #11000879

 

Formerly the US Post Office

Contributing Building - St Augustine Town Plan Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #70000847

Contributing Building - University of Florida Campus Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #89000322

 

Built 1953

Architect: William Augustus Edwards

-Contributed Photo by Jim Ross

Contributing Models of The Civilian Press Clothing Brand. Christine Barnum, Desiree Bolanos, Stephanie Ferrell, and more...

www.thecivilianpress.com/models-a/272.htm

Contributed by Linda Cole

Contributing Building - St Augustine Town Plan Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #70000847

Built in 1904, this Collegiate Gothic structure is a contributing property to the Chapel Hill Historic District.

 

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (popularly known as UNC, North Carolina, or simply Carolina) is a public research university in Orange County. The flagship of the University of North Carolina system, it is considered a Public Ivy, or a public institution which offers an academic experience similar to that of an Ivy League university. After being chartered in 1789, the university first began enrolling students in 1795, making it one of the oldest public universities in the United States. Among the claimants, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is the only one to have held classes and graduated students as a public university in the eighteenth century.

 

The first public institution of higher education in North Carolina, the school opened its doors to students on February 12, 1795. However, North Carolina became coeducational under the leadership of President Kemp Plummer Battle in 1877, and began the process of desegregation under Chancellor Robert Burton House when African-American graduate students were admitted in 1951, 156 years after the university opened its doors. In 1952, North Carolina opened its own hospital, UNC Health Care, for research and treatment.

 

Much of the oldest portion of campus contributes to the Chapel Hill Historic District, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971, and was expanded in 2015.

 

Information from: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_North_Carolina_at_Cha...

Contributing Building - South Main Street Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #94000375

 

Style: Classical Revival

Contributing Building - Wakulla Springs Archeological and Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #92001760

 

Built 1937

Style: Mediterranean Revival

Architects: Marsh and Saxelbye

Discover the mesmerizing realm of William Stone Images, your destination for Limited Edition Fine Art Prints. Journey into our collection of Fine Art Photography Prints & Luxury Wall Art at: www.wsimages.com/fineart/

 

Stand on the precipice of a transformative journey with WSImages. Seize this extraordinary opportunity to fuel empowerment and growth by contributing a donation towards our relentless support of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs).

 

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Also a small donation using this link will go a long way too - buy.stripe.com/28o8zHgmf0dO8dW5ko

 

Together, we hold the power to shape the world. Your donation is the spark that drives the engines of change, bringing entrepreneurial dreams to life. With your steadfast support, we can empower these enterprises, laying a solid foundation for sustainable growth, job creation, and economic prosperity.

 

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Visit our Flickr presence, showcasing our ever-evolving catalogue and our spirit of giving. Our gallery is expansive, but we’re always willing to grow further, driven by the desires of our esteemed clientele. Check our current selection at wsimages.com/

 

Our services extend to capture unforgettable moments through wedding photography and videography. Visit: randrphotographs.com/

 

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Although our Flickr images are lower quality to protect copyright, our full-size 4096x pixel photos can be ordered in museum-grade quality. Use the voucher WS-100 for a discount and reference the unique code at the bottom of the photo description when contacting us: www.wsimages.com/contact/

 

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At William Stone Images, three passions drive us: the pursuit of beauty, the quest for the perfect picture, and the thrill of new photographic styles and equipment.

  

WS-175-2989195-182014-5123929-2462023182919

Matt Weber, who contributes short segments to "This Is the Day", encourages viewers to donate to CatholicTV. See some of his videos here.

 

The CatholicTV network held its 19th annual fundraising telethon on October 1, the feast of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, the network's patron saint. These photos capture the behind-the-scenes work of many employees and volunteers to support the work of network through the generosity of many donors. CatholicTV is part of the Catholic Media Secretariat of the Archdiocese of Boston.

 

(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) May not be reproduced without permission. All rights reserved.

Contributing Building - DeFuniak Springs Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #92001048

Contributing Building - Thomasville Commercial Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #84001258

Contributing Building - City of Alachua Downtown Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

Contributing Building - Wesleyan College Historic District - National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #04000242

 

Built 1928

Style: Georgian Revival

Architects: Walker & Weeks

 

See hcap.artstor.org/cgi-bin/library?a=d&d=p1938

Contributing Building – Macon Historic District – National Register of Historic Places

NRIS #74000658 and #95000233

 

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