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Taken on the railroad tracks running next to East Metro Park in Dayton. September 2006.

Use our site map to learn more about our Dayton South Hotel located near Dayton International Airport, featuring spacious suites with all the comforts of home.

Notes about these pictures: Most of my Chemtrail pictures were taken in Dayton, Ohio--home of The Wright-Patterson Air Force Base -- final resting place of the Roswell aliens <:-0 -- and apparently from my photo and video documentation, Chemtrail Central. This area has been getting Chemtrailed on a massive, daily basis and I have 1000's of pictures and videos since I began documenting Chemtrails regularly, in late 2014. The level of Chemtrail activity here is astonishing, and is being conducted, as they say, in plain sight. Looking back through my film archive of slides & negatives, I have convincing evidence of Chemtrailing activity back to the early 1990’s, and chemtraily-looking skies back to the early 1980’s.

 

I am designating all my Chemtrail pictures and videos uploaded to Flickr as CC0 (Creative Commons Zero), which removes my copyright and releases them into the Public Domain. My goal is to make them available in the highest resolution possible, and without any image processing. They are archived on Flickr under "Chem Trailchaser".

 

I hope by making these images widely available, it will accelerate interest, research, study and more documentation from all over the world. Please, download, copy, backup, mirror, share and use & improve as many of these photos as you can! Thanks for looking - Chem

 

Built in 1931, this Art Deco-style skyscraper was designed by Schenck and Williams for the Mutual Home and Savings Association Bank, and later was home to Liberty National Bank, being renamed the Liberty Tower at that time. The building features a limestone and buff brick exterior with metal-frame windows, aluminum spandrels, decorative carved reliefs, a massing that tapers towards the top of the building with multiple setbacks, piers flanking the window bays, a three-story podium at the base of the building with a black stone base and arched windows on the second story, aluminum doors at the entrances, aluminum sconce-style fixtures flanking the central bays of the building, and aluminum flagpoles at the face of the parapet of the podium. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, and is a contributing structure in the Downtown Dayton Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2019.

Dayton Superior & Cochez, Pedregal, August 9th, 2013

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

4th Annual Dayton Zombie Walk 2012

 

Oregon District/Club Aquarius

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

Built in 1902-1904, this Flemish Revival and Renaissance Revival-style structure was designed by Frank Mills Andrews for Eugene J. Barney to serve as an enclosed shopping arcade in the middle of Downtown Dayton, Ohio. The building features multiple facades, with a Flemish Revival-style facade on 3rd Street with a red flemish bond brick facade with limestone trim, a central arched bay on the first floor, a stone base, decorative fluted columns, flemish gable parapets, a side-gable and hipped roof, turrets, cartouches, and casement windows with transoms. The 4th Street and Ludlow Street facades feature red brick exteriors with rusticated terra cotta, decorative trim, ionic pilasters, arched windows on the fourth floor, one-over-one double-hung windows, cornices with brackets and dentils, a rooftop balustrade, arched doorways and large storefront windows on the first floor, and doric pilasters on the first floor. The Main Street facade, known as the McCrory Building, features a white terra cotta facade with fluted corinthian pilasters, blind balustrades, decorative relief panels, one-over-one double-hung windows, a cornice with dentils, and a first floor storefront with a stone panel surround. Inside, the building features a long corridor to the north with a skylight and a central rotunda with a domed skylight, arched openings, multiple floors of balconies, and decorative pillars. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, and is a contributing structure in the Downtown Dayton Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2019. The building was rehabilitated between 2018 and 2021, and today, houses apartments and offices on the upper floors and retail space at ground level.

Dayton WA, town entrance sign with deer crossing highway in background. Image captured at dusk 10/4/2024.

Photo by Molly Zimmerman.

Taken at the 2009 US Air and Trade Show, a.k.a. Dayton Airshow.

Built in 1929, this Classical Revival-style building features a red flemish bond brick exterior, a stone base, stone trim, steel-frame pivot windows, arched bays on the ground floor and top floor, corner cartouches, balconies at the outer bays of the top floor, and a cornice with modillions. The building is a contributing structure in the Downtown Dayton Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2019, and today, houses various commercial office tenants.

Oregon District. Dayton, Ohio.

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

Wright 1909 Military Flyer at the National Museum of the United States Air Force, Dayton, Ohio, on Jun 10, '11.

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

Photo taken at the Dayton Hamvention 2022 in Dayton, Ohio.

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