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Diamond Lil and friend Earleen. Drag in Savannah , Georgia . This is not my photography. It's from the personal collection of Atlanta legend Diamond Lil .

The track looms ahead of this motorcycle racer as he sets to stage his Suzuki drag bike for action.

Portrait of drag performer Fox E. Kim in Chicago. July 2015. By Flaming City Photography.

Found in old file from the 2011 Liverpool Pride event.

This singing Drag Queen was performing on the city's Erberle Street outdoor stage.

 

JacarandaFm RJ frank loses a bet and dresses as woman for a week

Going through old pictures from an air show at Andrews Air Force Base.

Easter Monday 1989 and Birmingham-Nuneaton Drags were provided for Bank Holiday entertainment. Recorded from Saltley Viaduct, InterCity 47527 had 86433 'Wulfruna' in tow with the 1A21 SX 09:18 Birmingham New Street to London Euston.

 

All images on this site are exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed written permission of the photographer. All rights reserved – Copyright Don Gatehouse

American Bald Eagle dragging its tail in the James River while snatching a tasty fish from the water.

Photograph from a 1968 edition of "Female Mimics" magazine. The caption accompanying this photo reads as follows:

 

"The talk ranges from giddy stories to serious appraisals of the various outfits and make up techniques used by the guests. Many a mimic comes away from the 'drag ball' with great new ideas."

2016 IRHA Nationals

Drag Race!.....

 

Having taken several other shots once the van had driven off, I subsequently decided that it’s actually what makes the photo here. At the very least it underlines the sheer size of a Class 66!...

 

On March 15, GBRf GB Railfreight Class 66/7, 66775 ‘HMS Argyll’ stands outside Hornsey EMU Depot, with Thameslink Class 700/0 Desiro City, 700058 in tow, having worked 6X71 0220 Dollands Moor to Hornsey EMU Depot.

"Creative drag queen witch," as she calls herself.

Photograph from a 1971 edition of "Drag" magazine...

Classic drag racing at Pendine Sands, West Wales.

Pendine sands famous for land speed records in the 1920's from Malcolm Campbell and R.G.Parry-Thomas in his car Babs which can be seen in he Museum of Speed in Pendine. copyright Garry Smith/Alfiepics

January 19, 2023: Queens Drag Story Hour protested by a few right wingers and defended by hundreds of community supporters.

Joseph Anton Dräger (1794-1833) - The Nativity

Class 57303 is seen dragging 379014 through New Southgate.

This was my first trip back to this location after a couple of years, and I was really pleased to see that the vegetation was clear enough for the shot to still be viable. Here ROG Class 37 drags GWR Class 387 EMU 387159 back to Reading depot from Ilford.

 

Locomotive: Rail Operations Group Class 37/7 37800 "Cassiopeia".

 

Location: Ruscombe Junction, near Twyford, Berkshire.

Stonewall Boston Dragtacular 2022

With only 5 well cars of international containers on the rear "intermodal train" 238 pulls to a stop in Flowery Branch on a gloomy early summer afternoon. The town of "Blossom Creek" does a nice job keeping its main drag in great shape.

I remember it like it was just a few months ago - I was already 3 years old and my Mom, a second generation Alaskan - Dee Lane, and my Dad, a third generation Alaskan - Chic Lane, took my sister Lisa and I over the few blocks from our house on the corner of 3rd avenue down to the Park Strip to watch the bonfire in celebration of hard won Alaskan statehood.

 

There was a great huge pile of wood, and the fire was well underway -- men would run up with all kinds of wood, spare or not, and throw it on the fire. And a whole tree was thrown in too! The tree being dry burned really fast with a great sputtering noise mixed with the festive scent of painted wood all together. As I understand now, there were fireworks hidden in the wood pile that went off from time to time. The United States Senate had voted to make Alaska the 49th state on June 30, 1958.

 

Just as we arrived from the north side a couple of men were dragging a large wooden box, the size of an outhouse or larger and throwing it on the fire, which was growing quite large. People stood around the fire in a huge circle and it was obvious there had been a bit of drinking going on. Part of a fence was thrown in, sometimes a couple of two-by-fours, or a 8 by 10 sheet of plywood, but mostly old sections of some built things.

 

My father ran up with his camera just as my Mom was buttoning up my sister's jacket, I think he had parked the car, having just gotten off of work as an architect. She wanted to know what had taken so long. She was pregnant with my brother Ward, born in July of 1958, we girls were born only 11 months apart.

 

The crowd was growing as the evening was coming in, and singing and hollering and whooping and dancing jigs, in groups of people cheering whenever a new item was thrown on the fire. It was pretty wild and I didn't see many children on the park strip.

 

Notably the people greeted each other by name since they knew one another! There were a lot of people there.

 

Later I was taught the "Alaska Flag" song in school. The flag was said to have been designed by Bennie Benson, but the truth was his school teacher designed it to help him submit something, and I think she was happy he unexpectedly won the award with her simple design; she didn't complain when her student got credit for her design.

 

My mom showed me the Anchorage Times newspaper which read "WE'RE IN!" we kept a copy of that paper for more than 20 years. The heat from the bonfire was so hot it burned our faces and kept us warm - finally my sister Lisa began to get too cold so our folks bundled us off to the house our grandparents built on the very corner of downtown Anchorage where the legal buildings are now, near the statue of Captain Cook.

 

"8 Stars of Gold on a field of Blue..." I had wonderful teachers. I stayed true.

 

From the time I was a babe in arms we had a visitor by the name of Yule Kilcher. He was a state senator and one of the most fascinating people I have ever known. I asked him once how many languages he spoke and he took a minute to count them all up and said - "if you include the dialects - it's 47." 47!!! Yule helped to write the Alaska State Constitution, and he stood for liberal causes in a conservative way. People now have forgotten that Alaska was once a liberal state, and it was the conservatives who opposed statehood.

 

The summer I turned 13 years old Yule took me to visit his farm down in Homer, driving like a mad man around each curve of the road which he knew every bit of from memory. Every where we stopped Yule spoke to the people in their native languages - and what a diverse set of people he knew - it was just everyone - speaking in Norwegian, Lap, Danish, Finnish, German, Russian, and French, and everyone was so happy to see him and asked us to stay if only for a bite, or tea, or sometimes a sauna! It was one of my most memorable life experiences as I met people from all over the world visiting Yule at his ranch, and his children and other family members and neighbors. I credit Yule with changing my world view completely.

  

So this photo was taken of the US Flag and Alaska State flag in front of the top floor fireplace in the Anchorage Pioneer's Home with the Christmas tree, when I was just visiting my mom for Christmas (thank you to the excellent staff there).

 

Myself if I were to die today I could honestly say that I have lived a completely unique and unusual life due to being raised in Alaska, and knowing the people I have been fortunate to meet like Senator Bob Bartlett, who was greatly responsible for Alaska becoming a state of the United States of America, Karin and Honorable James Fitzgerald (U.S. Senior Judge) and family - Dennis, Denise, Debra, and Kevin, Glo and Victor Fischer and family - Yonnie, the Listons - Bill and Helen, Mike, Mary, Lissa, Gene Guess and family, the O'Malley's, Ernest Gruening (Governor Alaska Territory), and Alaska State senator Yule Kilcher, his children, Wendell Kay - Eddy Kay, Nick Begich and his family, artist and teacher Alex Duff Combs and his family, the Selkreggs, Governor Bill Egan (who remembered everyone's names and family), Jill Smythe, the Arns family, the Rosenthals, the Jensen family, Kathy 'Willow' Graves, and later folks such as the Browns, Judge John and 'Mama' Kay Reese, Nancy Byrd, the Fairbanks crowd; the Drs. Forbes - John Forbes and Rob, Laura Forbes, the Deans - Doug Dean and Steve Dean, Nick Boseck and his family, the Hale family - Ed, Fred, and Billy, Jim Chase and family, Dennis Savage and his family, Dennis Hartley; the teachers at Orah Dee Clark and East High School, Anchorage Community College and UAA, and other notable people with enormous personalities and strong love for their fellow human beings. Really too many to write about here.

 

Having left Alaska to seek out world culture I became the student of Dagchen Sakya Rinpoche, a senior Tibetan Lama in Seattle, where my Alaskan childhood served me well - as I traveled Thailand, India, Nepal, to study and observe what I believe is the real final frontier, not Alaska as the saying goes, but the innate nature of our own minds.

 

On January 3, 2009, Alaska will celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Alaskan Statehood, and I will be there in spirit remembering a fairly warm day of June 30, 1958 when my mom buttoned me up and said "Look at the bonfire Linda, remember it, because some day when you are much older, you will be able to say, 'I was there for the first bonfire, when Alaska became part of the United States of America.'" I remember her black cat-eye framed eye glasses, and the look of joy, pride, and concern on her face as she told me this with her dark brown hair pulled back under a kerchief, she looked into my eyes so closely. And I remember the bonfire.

 

Someone told me recently that my life stories are like the movie Zoolander except real, so what's not to enjoy?

 

What I did not understand at the time was how rare my experience is, and how few people would be alive 50 years later who shared that experience. But I can honestly say, 50 years later, that I have lived fully because of Alaska, and because of the Alaskan community who raised me and infused my life with personality and love.

 

Happy 50 Years to Alaska, to Alaskans every where, to Americans, and to the World in which we live together - congratulations! To my relatives who are now raising the 6th generation of our family in Alaska - congratulations on the twins!

 

Respect goes out to my elders - my great-grandfather who resurveyed the Alaska-Canadian Border based out of Eagle in 1896, my great-grandfather Isaac Newton Lane - Cherokee from Mexico who was a Pony Express Rider and Alaskan, my grandmother raised in Ketchikan, my grandfather Billy Murry - a tailor, he owned the New Method Cleaners and the Murmac Bar in Anchorage, my grandmother Marion Murry - played organ during the silent movie era, to my parents Roland and Darlene (architect and planner), thank you to everyone who made Alaska more than just a beautiful place, but an amazing event.

 

Here's the lyrics to the Alaska State Flag Song:

 

Eight stars of gold on a field of blue,

Alaska's flag, may it mean to you,

The blue of the sea, the evening sky,

The mountain lakes and the flowers nearby,

The gold of the early sourdough's dreams,

The precious gold of the hills and streams,

The brilliant stars in the northern sky,

The "Bear," the "Dipper,"

and shining high,

The great North Star with its steady light,

O'er land and sea a beacon bright,

Alaska's flag to Alaskans dear,

The simple flag of a last frontier.

CHEERS TO YOU! GREAT LOVE -- GREAT PEACE! Do Seek The Treasure!!!

 

For a historical outline see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_Statehood_Act

Sunset - dragged shutter

ODC - Drag and drop

Whoops - I didn't notice at the time that poor Maud's boobs were caught up - but I guess that could happen if you were dragging a reluctant dog.

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