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Picture taken 6/25/23
Logan's Roadhouse | 2170 W 4th St, Ontario, OH
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Logan Lerman is very cute! I can't wait to see the next movie... Will Percy Jackson beat Harry Potter?
Major General John A. Logan is a public artwork by American artist Franklin Simmons, located at Logan Circle in Washington, D.C. The monument is an equestrian statue dedicated to American soldier and political leader John A. Logan.
This statue shows Logan upon his horse. In his proper left hand he holds the reins and in his proper right hand he holds a sword which is pointed downwards. Logan, wearing a long belted frock coat, boots, gloves and a hat, is shown with long hair and a long mustache. The horse strides forward with its proper right front foot raised.
The sculpture sits upon a bronze base, which itself rests upon a low stone base. Each corner of the bronze base features an American Eagle as a symbol of patriotism. The front lower portion is adorned with palm leaves, which symbolize victory, and surround the inscribed word LOGAN (which appears on both east and west sides of the base).
The bronze base features reliefs depicting historical moments in Logan's life. The west side of the bronze features Logan, dressed in a military uniform, standing with fellow officers who are meeting to discuss the Civil War. To Logan's proper right is a table with an open map on it with three officers looking at it, with one pointing to the map. Logan stands with his proper left hand on the map, looking away, while the other officers look toward him. The east side of the bronze depicts Logan standing with Vice President Chester A. Arthur. The scene shows Arthur swearing in Logan as a senator in front of a group of other senators. Logan is shown raising his proper right arm while Arthur raises his left and holds a book. The other two sides of the bronze base feature two allegorical female figures. One represents Peace and holds a laurel wreath in her proper right hand and a fasces in her proper left. Peace wears long robes and a laurel wreath on her head. The other short side shows a female representing War, holding a shield in front of her, wearing a crown-shaped helmet and a dress with armor details. In her proper right hand she holds a sword.
The bronze base was installed on April 18, 1898, the sculpture was installed on Jan 23, 1901 and dedicated on April 9, 1901. It was paid for by the government and Society for the Army of the Tennessee and cost $65,000. It was estimated that the bronze base would take one year to cast, but sculptor Franklin Simmons paid extra to have the foundry work around the clock to have it made, which took only 31⁄2 months.
The bronze base, which features a depiction of Vice President Chester A. Arthur, is historically inaccurate. When Logan was senator, Arthur was not Vice President, however, Mrs. Logan wished to have contemporary famous men shown in the panels during Logan's death, hence the appearance of Arthur.
Cranford Paving Company provided the foundation construction and placed the granite for the base. Simmons was unhappy with the first base and requested a new base be replaced in September 1897. The sculpture arrived from Rome in December 1901 and was stored at the Brooklyn pier for a month. The bronze was too large to be transported by train to Washington. Eventually the piece was placed onto a two-masted schooner and arrived in Washington on January 16, 1902.
Each January, Logan Lake is home to the Western Cup of Pond Hockey. The "Cup" offers hundreds of hockey enthusiasts a rare chance to play their game outdoors! Dry snow and open spaces make for marvelous cross-country skiing. Logan Lake offers 36 kilometres of groomed ski trails, with two runs illuminated for night skiing.
Logan Lerman at the "Percy Jackson & The Olympians" World's First "Lightning Billboard" Sunset Strip unveiling on October 28, 2009 in West Hollywood, California.."Percy Jackson & The Olympians" Cast Electrifies Sunset Strip With World's First "Lightning Billboard".Sunset Strip.West Hollywood, CA United States.October 28, 2009.Photo by Eric Charbonneau/WireImage.com..To license this image (17016471), contact WireImage.com
Logan Circle has a great collection of restored Victorian rowhouses and may be the most attractive of DC's many circles.
nrhp # 85003319- The Logan Temple Barn was built in Logan, Utah in 1896-97 to house the animals belonging to Mormons working at or attending the nearby Logan Temple. It is unique as one of only two stone barns in the Cache Valley, where wood-frame barns prevailed. The temple barn fell into disuse after automobiles began to bring worshipers to the temple and was sold in 1919, becoming an automobile repair shop. The owner at this time was Dr. Thomas B. Budge, who owned the Utah-Idaho Hospital across the street, later the William Budge Memorial Hospital. During the 1980s a conversion to apartment use was proposed but not pursued.
The Logan Temple Barn is a 36-foot (11 m) by 36-foot (11 m) square two-story stone structure with a pyramidal wood single roof. A pigeon-house cupola was added to the top by its first private owner. The front and rear elevations have double doors to the ground floor, and there is an original doorway on the east side. Two more openings on the east and west sides were added in 1919 using concrete lintels in lieu of the original openings' stone arches and lintels. There is a hayloft door on the eastern side and several old and new window openings on all sides. The interior is dominated by a central bearing wall supporting the wood framed floor and roof.[2]
The Logan Temple Barn was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on December 19, 1985.
from Wikipedia
Logan Browning speaking at the 2015 Wondercon, for "Powers", at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California.
Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.
Meadow Creek Golf Club is located on gently rolling hills in a beautiful, lush pine and aspen forest by the eastern shore of Logan Lake. The challenging nine-hole course (3,124 yards, par 36) is situated in a picturesque, natural setting within walking distance of downtown Logan Lake.
Logan Circle, bisecting the Benjamin Franklin Parkway between City Hall and the Art Museum, Center City Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Logan, West Virginia:
The Logan Theatre History
The Logan Theatre opened its doors on October 16, 1938 to a packed house. When built, the Logan Theatre was West Virginia’s finest theater.
The seating capacity of this house is thirteen hundred, seating arrangements were laid out by the American Seating Company, bearing in mind that perfect comfort was the goal for each and every person.
The theatre had installed Acousticon hard-of-hearing aids of both the bone conductor and earphone styles and were available from the ticket boy. Of course, this was another advancement in motion picture comfort.
The stage was fully equipped to handle any show that might be secured for patrons entertainment, being it was supplied with the latest public address system and all known safety devices for stage hanging.
The lighting equipment throughout the building was designed to give the best possible light and eliminate all glare, making it further possible to relax and enjoy the attractions.
The projection booth was equipped with the latest Simplex Mechanism and was the most perfectly constructed booth in the state of West Virginia, being completely fireproof.
The entire building was constructed for sound superiority under the supervision of Western Electric and National Theatre sound engineers.
The construction of the complete building is fireproof and, in addition, there was the latest in modern sprinkler protection.
The unusual lighting effects constructed in the entrance lobbies is of the new vapor tube light, which was just put on the market and the first installation of its kind.
On the mezzanine floor were lounge rooms where smoking could be enjoyed by all, also all conveniences for ladies and gentlemen.
The Logan Theatre was one of the first in West Virginia with air conditioning which gave the patrons refreshing air during the hot summer months, but also throughout the entire year, a new feature which was found in very few buildings at that time.
In the main lobby was further evidence of all the conveniences, as the owner had located a public telephone and check room.
A special balcony was reserved in the new theatre for the accommodation of colored patrons. Seats were located on each side of the projection booth. Rest rooms for both colored men and women were built into the balcony of the grand theatre.
The owner, F. Midelburg, had the Logan Theatre constructed at a cost of $150,000.
So it was, that on opening day of October 16, 1938 at 11:00 a.m., that Logan’s most modern entertainment center opened to a packed house with “Sing You Sinners” with Bing Crosby and Fred MacMurray.
Logan Hindi Dubbed Torrent Movie Download 2017 Hollywood Full Film
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The Logan Rock is found on the outcrop of rocks in the middle distance. In the far distance is Lizard point.
The Logan Rock is an example of a logan or rocking stone and is situated on this outcrop of rocks.
Logan Rock is remembered because it was at the center of a famous drama. In April 1824, Lieutenant Hugh Goldsmith, R.N. (nephew of the famous poet Oliver Goldsmith), and ten or twelve of his crew of the cutter HMS Nimble, armed with bars and levers rocked the huge granite boulder until it fell from its cliff-top perch. Goldsmith was apparently motivated to disprove the claim of Dr Borlase, who wrote in Antiquities of Cornwall in 1754 that:
In the parish of S. Levan, there is a promontory called Castle Treryn. This cape consists of three distinct groups of rocks. On the western side of the middle group near the top, lies a very large stone, so evenly, poised that any hand may move it to and fro; but the extremities of its base are at such a distance from each other, and so well secured by their nearness to the stone which it stretches itself upon, that it is morally impossible that any lever, or indeed force, however applied in a mechanical way, can remove it from its present situation.
Goldsmith was determined to demonstrate that nothing was impossible when the courage and skill of British seamen were engaged. The Logan Rock slid aside and was caught in a narrow crevice (it did not fall from the cliff as claimed by some).
This upset the local residents considerably, since Logan Rock had been used to draw tourists to the area. Treen had become a lucrative tourist destination. Sir Richard R. Vyvyan was particularly unhappy. The local residents demanded that the British Admiralty strip Lieutenant Goldsmith of his Royal Navy commission unless he restored the boulder to its previous position at his own expense.
However, Davies Gilbert persuaded the Lords of the Admiralty to lend Lieutenant Goldsmith the required apparatus for replacing the Logan Rock. The Admiralty sent thirteen capstans with blocks and chains from the dock yard at Plymouth, and contributed £25 towards expenses. Gilbert also raised more funds
After months of effort, at 4.20pm on Tuesday, the 2nd of November, 1824, in front of thousands of spectators and with the help of more than sixty men and block and tackle, the Logan Rock was finally repositioned and returned to "rocking condition". Apparently the total final cost of this enterprise was £130 8s 6d. The original receipt for this expenditure can be found today in The Logan Rock public house in Treen. However, it is not clear how much of the remaining £105 Goldsmith had to make up out of his own pocket.
Volvo B12BLEA/Custom Coaches 116 in William St Brisbane working a route 555 service to Logan Hyperdome.
You can get the best at Logans
Advertisement, Border Morning Mail, 12 December 1920
S.M. Logan
1876–1948
Family man, architect, business leader, building contractor, undertaker, timber and joinery retailer, church-goer, brick maker, sportsman, alderman and mayor of Albury; Stuart McKenzie Logan (1876–1948) was a man of many parts. He was best known for his timber and joinery shop on the corners of Swift, Macauley and Spencer streets. His business, Logans, was a part of the Albury streetscape for 80 years.
Born in 1876 in England, the son of Duncan MacLaurin and Eliza Mary Logan, Stuart was four when he, his parents and four siblings embarked on the ship Hydaspes on 17 July 1880, bound for Melbourne. At age 13, he took a course in carpentry at a technical college. The family moved to Albury in around 1893–94 hoping for an improvement in the health of Stuart’s mother, who suffered from asthma.
In Albury, Logan was apprenticed to Smith & Bates timber merchants, Hume Street. On completing his carpentry and joinery indenture, he started doing odd jobbing work. In February 1898, Logan entered into a partnership with Alexander Charles Frew, the son of an Albury builder. After several months of small jobs the fledgling firm secured a government contract to build a fernery at the Albury Botanic Gardens. The firm began under a tree in Young Street and later expanded to premises on the corner of Wilson and Olive streets.
Frew and Logan built houses, churches and halls far and wide. They also ran an undertaking business. At that time, the undertaking business was carried out by joiners, carpenters or furniture suppliers. In 1906, owing to a shortage of bricks, Frew and Logan also set up a machine-made brick yard in Young Street. It has been estimated that, over the life of this yard, its average output was over a million bricks per annum of all descriptions. Frew and Logan had grown at an amazing rate, employing a total of 105 staff.
Logan married a neighbour, Kate William Davidson, on 24 September 1902. Stuart and Kate’s first child, Jessie May, arrived in 1903. They went on to have three more children; Jean, Don and Ken. Meanwhile, the business continued to thrive, with the Lockhart Court House, the Corowa Post Office and a parsonage under construction.
The Frew and Logan partnership was dissolved in 1918, after which Stuart Logan continued to expand with his own company, Logans. Logans’ building contracts extended throughout the district, as far as Corryong, at a time when transport was not as simple as a truck and paved roads. The business went on to concentrate on retailing timber, hardware and plumbing supplies. Logans Timber Yard prospered on the corner of Swift and Spencer streets, Albury.
In 1918, Logan built his family residence, ‘Rothesay’, in Sackville Street, named for the Scottish town where his parents had married. Logan’s four children joined the business after finishing school; Don becoming a joiner and Ken a plumber, while Jean and Jessie worked in the office. Don’s name would appear on many of the Logan plans as designer. They continued running the business for 30 years after Logan’s death in 1948. ‘Rothesay’ remained the family residence until Jean and Jessie died and Ken Logan took up residence in the Riverwood Retirement Village.
Stuart Logan was always vitally interested in the promotion of Albury. He served on many committees in the town, spoke out on many and varied issues, was an alderman for 36 years and served as mayor in 1915. He played sport well into his sixties and was a staunch member of St David’s Presbyterian Church.
Frew and Logan, and Logans, left their marks on the built landscape of Albury and surrounding districts.
Stuart M. Logan mayoral portrait
1915
Portrait of Stuart Logan made when he was mayor in 1915. This photograph is on display with all other mayoral portraits at the council chambers.
AlburyCity Collection