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Laid down in 1816 at Woolwich as a Southampton class frigate, she was launched as HMS Winchester with 52 guns in 1822. She was removed from her active service in 1861 and renamed as HMS Conway, a role she served until 1876.
In 1876 she became Mount Edgcumbe, an industrial training ship for homeless and destitute boys. She retained that role, anchored off Saltash, until 1921 when she was sold and broken up at Plymouth.
Mount Hope Cemetery is a historic cemetery in southern Boston, Massachusetts, between the neighborhoods of Roslindale and Mattapan. It was established in 1852 as a private cemetery, and was acquired by the city five years later. It is the city's first cemetery to be laid out in the rural cemetery style, with winding lanes. It was at first 85 acres (34 ha) in size; it was enlarged by the addition of 40 acres (16 ha) in 1929. Its main entrance is on Walk Hill Street, on the northern boundary.[2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 25, 2009.
Wikipedia
This wonderful house on the corner of West 121st Street and Mount Morris Park West in Harlem and is a fine example of the archtiecture of the late nineteenth century. Redevlopment in other Manhattan neighborhoods during the age of "urban renewal" did away with such architecture on a big scale, but, ironically, such plans largely neglected Harlem - gee, I wonder why? - and left architectural gems like this one to be (re)discovered by future generations who were more interested in preservation.
This block anchors the Mount Morris Park Historic District ,whose boundaries are North from West 118th to West 124th Streets and West from Fifth Avenue to Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard . There is also "Doctor's Row", which is West 122nd Street, Mount Morris Park West and Lenox Avenue/Malcolm X Boulevard.
Here is my warped version of being some kind of artist in this world. I use beetles to create European mounts.
Since the sun was out, we pretty much gave up on trying to get any pictures of waterfalls. So we drove around and explored some other places nearby. We drove up to the top of the mountain, which provided this overlook of Mount Magazine.
Reaching 2,753 feet, Mount Magazine is the tallest spot in Arkansas. Mt. Magazine got it's name thanks to some French explorers, who apparently " were travelling through the area and a landslide occurred on the mountain. The noise from the landslide was so great that one explorer described it as the sound of an ammunition magazine exploding. The explorers then named the mountain 'Magazine'."
Mount Vesuvius is a stratovolcano in the Gulf of Naples, Italy, about 9 km (5.6 mi) east of Naples and a short distance from the shore. It is one of several volcanoes which form the Campanian volcanic arc. Vesuvius consists of a large cone partially encircled by the steep rim of a summit caldera caused by the collapse of an earlier and originally much higher structure.
Mount Erciyes
The main volcano and "the father of the Cappadocian landscape" is the 3916 m high Erciyes Dag. Its name in antiquity (Hittite Harga, Greek Argaios, Latin mons Argaeus) means "white", and this has been retained in its present Turkish name. The Ancients held the mountain with its mostly snow-clad peak to be an abode of the gods and regarded it as one of the emblems of Kayseri. Up into the 19th century it was regarded as insurmountable.
Mount St Joseph, Wheeling, WV - W W Holloway Mansion, now a Retreat Center. Former mansion library now a chapel for the Sisters.
FORT CARSON, Colo. – Specialist Kenneth Hayes, motor transport operator, Company A, 64th Brigade Support Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, prepares to mount the rock wall during the Iron Horse Week wall climb competition at the Iron Horse Sports and Fitness Center, June 7, 2012. During Iron Horse Week, Soldiers and their Families took the time to relax, engage in friendly competition and celebrate the 4th Inf. Div.’s legacy of outstanding achievement.
(U.S. Army photo by Cpl. Anthony Kozleuchar, 4th Inf. Div PAO.)
Mount St Joseph, Wheeling, WV - W W Holloway Mansion, now a Retreat Center. Design on floor of bathhouse.
This is a view of Mount Si from Little Si, a much easier hike nearby. This is less than an hour from Seattle.
Mount Becher seen from the slopes of Mount Drabble.
Taken on a trip to Mount Becher and Mount Drabble.