View allAll Photos Tagged professionls
...or trying to shoot Avenida Figueroa Alcorta, in Buenos Aires! The safety net looks like I'm in jail... (I was aiming to shoot outside, with the window closed)
For those who keep wondering why so many photos of my kitchen...I am a Professional Chef...among other things.
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Reflejos culinarios de una fotografa tratando de tomar una foto de la Avenida Figueroa Alcorta, en Buenos Aires! La ned de seguridad me hace ver como si estuviese en la carcel.. (trataba de tomar una foto de fuera con la ventana cerrada)
Para aquellos que se preguntan por que tantas fotos de mi cocina...soy una Chef Profesional...entre otras.
In the mid-1980s Tamron launched a series of professionl grade lenses featuring low dispersion glass - signalled here by the light green stripe around the front ring of the lens.
Each lens performed extremely well, and still perform extremely well mated to a Sony A6000 via an adaptor.
From left to right:
- Tamron SP 180mm f2.5 LD IF (63B)
- Tamron SP 80-200mm f2.8 LD (30A)
- Tamron SP 300mm f2.8 LD IF (60b)
- Tamron SP 400mm f4 LD IF (65B)
left hand picture post produced for Bw in Lightroom, then right hand picture put into Portrait Professionl for complete re-touch
World's largest clam dredge. 30 Foot "A" frame. Bulk "mud tanks" essential for offshore supply vessels removed leaving a room 48 feet by 30 feet by 10 feet and sea chests were installed. Two Caterpillar 3408TI engines were installed to drive 10 inch Fairbanks Morse clam pumps. Two Gremantic Model 44 winches. Two Detroit Diesel 16V-71 main engines delivering 926 hp. Auxiliary power provided by two Detroit Diesel 4-71s each driving 50kw 110/240 three phase generators and two Detroit Diesel 6-71s, each driving 100kw generators. Gross weight 196 tons. Overall length, 133 feet. Width 32 feet. Approved for 240 tons of deck cargo. The vessel will pull two steel dredges weighing 12,000 pounds empty. It is expected that the ship will hold 384,000 pounds of clams, or 384,000 bushels. About 550 bushels an hour. Pictures and article sold to "Fish Boat " magazine in June, 1984. Picture taken with a Canon AE1 camera with a Vivitar 70-210 zoom lens using Kodak slide film. It was professionlly digitized for posting on Flickr.
Baroid Bullet : OSV : 124: 194: 1966: Later fishing vessel Jessica-Lori, now Christ-Caroline: 960: DEL-11: Del-Ile Barge inc: Cargo barge : 120: 209: 1966: Active: 963: Stout Tide:
Right here is my easy information to Scanning and Restoring Photos at Dwelling” including some nice simple ways to attain prompt photograph enhancement. When you've got used a special form of water repellent previously in your chimney, we recommend utilizing the Solvent-Base water repellent, with mineral spirits. First the depth of the water is forbidding next the deep oil and fuel find has excessive pressures, then the current day blow out preventers being used by all usually are not pressure rated precisely. So as to get rid from water injury, residence restoration water injury professionl utilizing makes an attempt with important tool for restoration.
Contact Us:
Chatsworth Water Damage Restoration
Chatsworth
CA 91311
(818) 722-1352
I ran into an in progress fashion shoot for the new line of Uggs shoes that are about to be released.
The female model was Elsa Sylvan I believe and the male model's first name was Ryan. Not sure of his last name but he told me he has done a bunch of work.
I snagged some shots of the shoot and very much enjoyed watching the professionals make it happen.
Awesome experience to say the least.
History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a surburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
U.S. Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Mark A. Milley, gives opening remarks at the Army Professionl Forum, Sexual Harassment / Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) conference,Tysons Corner, Va., December 8, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Burden)
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
HO Scale 1:87 custom painted and Detailed
"Herman Ferrer CEO and founder of Ferrer Big Six unvails Cash Green the new company color scheme at the annual share holders meeting."
History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a surburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
Fujifilm TX-1 + Fujifilm Fujinon Super EBC 45/4 + Svema FN64 Iso:64 Black&White Film / Developed By Me / Scanned By Noritsu HS-1800 @ Fengyue (High Quality Scan)
Developer: Kodak Professionl Polymax T (1:9) 12 Min @ 24 Degree
Stopper: Rollei Acetic Acid 60%
Fixer: Kodak Professional Kodafix
Wash Aid: Kodak Professional Hypo-Clearing
Wetting Agent: Kodak Professional Photo-Flo
Fifth location in Danvers. The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
Fujifilm TX-1 + Fujifilm Fujinon Super EBC 45/4 + Svema FN64 Iso:64 Black&White Film / Developed By Me / Scanned By Noritsu HS-1800 @ Fengyue (High Quality Scan)
Developer: Kodak Professionl Polymax T (1:9) 12 Min @ 24 Degree
Stopper: Rollei Acetic Acid 60%
Fixer: Kodak Professional Kodafix
Wash Aid: Kodak Professional Hypo-Clearing
Wetting Agent: Kodak Professional Photo-Flo
Fujifilm TX-1 + Fujifilm Fujinon Super EBC 45/4 + Svema FN64 Iso:64 Black&White Film / Developed By Me / Scanned By Noritsu HS-1800 @ Fengyue (High Quality Scan)
Developer: Kodak Professionl Polymax T (1:9) 12 Min @ 24 Degree
Stopper: Rollei Acetic Acid 60%
Fixer: Kodak Professional Kodafix
Wash Aid: Kodak Professional Hypo-Clearing
Wetting Agent: Kodak Professional Photo-Flo
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
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The Salem Village Parsonage, where the Salem Witch Hysteria began. Present day Danvers, Massachusetts. History alert! If you do not do research you will not know that this excavation site is here...and it's an important one! It is in a suburban neighborhood with Romney and Obama yard signs. This is when research comes in handy.
My fifth stop on my Salem Village history tour was the Salem Village Parsonage 1681. Rear 67 Centre Street. Accessible by a cart path, or by foot (cough cough) this archaeological site is the famous parsonage of Salem Village, the focal point of the witchcraft delusion of 1692. Here lived the Rev. Samuel Parris family. The Parris slave Tituba was one of the first accused of witchcraft and her confession helped lead to the accusation of dozens of others. Also living here at an earlier time was Rev. George Burroughs, hanged as a witch during 1692. The house was torn down in 1784 and excavated beginning in 1970. Today, the orginal foundation walls and interpretive signs are the only things here.
From the book I had with me..."Hunting for Witches by Frances Hill:
January-February 1692
The hysteria is born.
Two little girls were telling their fortunes by the fire on a winter’s night in the Salem Village parsonage. They know they were doing something forbidden. If they were caught, they would incur the Rev. Samuel Parris’s (booo) terrifying disapproval and wrath. Betty, the pastor’s daughter, was nine. Abigail, his neice, who lived with the family, was just two years older. They broke an egg white into a water-filled glass and waited for it to settle into a shape. According to old English folklore, this would indicate the professionl of the future husband of one of them. The strands of egg white might float to the form of an anchor or a hoe or a Bible. But this time they settled into the shape of a coffin. The girls’ guilt and terror were so overwhelming that they went into hysterical fits in which they were “taken dumb, their mouths stopped, their throats choked, their limbs wracked and tormented.”
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Sgt. Maj. Daniel A. Dailey, Sergeant Major of the Army, gives opening remarks at the Army Professionl Forum, Sexual Harassment / Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) conference,Tysons Corner, Va., December 8, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Burden)
Eric K. Fanning, Secretary of the Army, gives opening remarks at the Army Professionl Forum, Sexual Harassment / Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) conference,Tysons Corner, Va., December 8, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Burden)
THIS IS A TAKEDOWN OF THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART IN NEW YORK. MY HUSBAN'S BROTHER IS BEING SHOT AND HELD IN THE MIDDLE. HE IS A SECRET SERVICE AGENT FOR THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. THE PEOPLE WHO ARE DOING THE KILLING ARE AS FOLLOWS: LAUREN DONNELLY WHO IS LANCE ARMSTRONG IN BODY PROTECTIVE GEAR WITH THAT GUN HELD OUT. RANDY THIBAUT IN THE MIDDLE WHO HEADS THE COMMUNIST PARTY. THEN WE HAVE OWL AND JESUS RODRIGUEZ. THIS IS A REAL MURDER WHERE 8 PEOPLE WERE KILLED IN COLD BLOOD. THIS IS REAL PEOPLE. THOSE INVOLVED HAVE BEEN MURDERED FOR TAKING DOWN MY HUSBAND'S BORTHER. THIS IS ALL ABOUT SEX, GAMBLING, DRUGS AND ROCK N' ROLL. THINK HARD BEFORE YOU JOIN A GANG PEOPLE AND REMEMBER THE COMMUNIST PARTY CULT ISN'T "PROFESSIONL BRAINS" IT IS A GROUP OF TOTAL IDIOTS!!!
Sgt. Maj. Daniel A. Dailey, Sergeant Major of the Army, gives opening remarks at the Army Professionl Forum, Sexual Harassment / Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) conference,Tysons Corner, Va., December 8, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Burden)
Eric K. Fanning, Secretary of the Army, gives opening remarks at the Army Professionl Forum, Sexual Harassment / Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) conference,Tysons Corner, Va., December 8, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Burden)
U.S. Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Mark A. Milley, gives opening remarks at the Army Professionl Forum, Sexual Harassment / Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) conference,Tysons Corner, Va., December 8, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Burden)
U.S. Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Mark A. Milley, gives opening remarks at the Army Professionl Forum, Sexual Harassment / Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) conference,Tysons Corner, Va., December 8, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Burden)
Eric K. Fanning, Secretary of the Army, gives opening remarks at the Army Professionl Forum, Sexual Harassment / Assault Response and Prevention (SHARP) conference,Tysons Corner, Va., December 8, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Burden)