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Clearing a firebreak in Banyabba State Forest
Dated: No date
Digital ID: 12932_a012_a012X2441000148
Rights: www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/rights-and-permissions
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Fresno State football linebacker Tyler Mello, photo by Sam Marshall, vs. UNLV, Sept. 24, 2021, Courtesy of Fresno State Athletics, Copyright 2021.
State Buildings of Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania. Large photographic print from The White City (As It Was), photographs by William Henry Jackson. World's Columbian Exposition 1893.
Digitial Identifier: GN90799d_JWH_072w
June 15, 2021 - Geddes, NY - Fireworks are seen over the Exposition Center at the State Fairgrounds. Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced that landmarks across the state will be lit blue and gold on June 15 in celebration of reaching 70 percent of New York adults receiving their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. In addition to these lightings, firework displays will be held at ten sites across the state beginning at 9:15pm. (Mike Groll/Office of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo)
Notes: Photo by Thomas W. Benson
Preferred Citation: Thomas W. Benson Political Protest Collection, Historical Collections and Labor Archives, Eberly Family Special Collections Library, University Libraries, Pennsylvania State University.
Repository: Penn State Special Collections, University Park, PA, USA.
Empire State Building Photos & Video
photo by Scott Beale / Laughing Squid
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as "Scott Beale / Laughing Squid" and link the credit to laughingsquid.com.
The team hoists the championship trophy.
Photos taken for work of Hoover High School winning the state high school baseball championship, played in Fort Dodge, Iowa. The Hoover Huskies defeated the ADM Tigers 8-3 to win their first state championship since 1982. The Huskies defeated higher-ranked teams in all six of their postseason games.
We spent an afternoon with the grandkids on the beach near Ocean City State Park.
The Washington state beach is on the Pacific Ocean. For July, it was a pretty cool day (for a former Texan).
David found a small flounder.
Notes: Photo by Thomas W. Benson
Preferred Citation: Thomas W. Benson Political Protest Collection, Historical Collections and Labor Archives, Eberly Family Special Collections Library, University Libraries, Pennsylvania State University.
Repository: Penn State Special Collections, University Park, PA, USA.
Ecola State Park, located off Highway 101, north of Cannon Beach, offers some breathtaking views to be found on the Oregon Coast. One of Ecola State Park's first attractions was a beached whale. Hit 'L' to view large on black
Copyright © Kay Gaensler Photography - Creative Commons, please visit my Profile for detailed information.
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Photographed using the Fujifilm Hi-Speed 1600 disposable camera.
'
Taken in Ferntree Gully, Victoria, Australia.
Three of our CSU Rams were selected as finalists for the Truman Scholarship. They were selected because of their leadership, public service and academic achievement.
Petrus Spronk sculpture in front of the State Library of Victoria
My friend petrus has this gorgeous art work installed in swanston st outside the library. pity about the stupid sign they plonked beside it!!
Image Available for purchase from www.ballaratheritage.com.au
VHR Statement of Significance
What is significant?
The trustees for Melbourne's new public library were appointed in July 1853 and on 3 July the following year the foundation stone for the first section of building was laid. Opened in 1856, this building was the first of many constructed on the site to accommodate four institutions over a period of time. These included the Public Library, the National Gallery of Victoria, the Industrial and Technological Museum and the Natural History Museum.
The Chairman of Trustees, lawyer Redmond Barry, was the prime founder of the institution and the aspiration of the trustees was to create one great centre of learning. Initially a competition was held for the design of the library and this was won by Joseph Reed. The first building constructed comprised an entrance hall and upstairs reading room. By 1865 wings had been added to the north and south of the original building, extending the Queen's Hall reading room on the first floor, and in 1870 the portico was added to the front facade.
The National Gallery of Victoria began its association with the site in 1861 when a gallery was opened to display works of art in the south wing of the library. Various buildings and wings were added to display additional artworks in 1874 and again in 1887 and 1892. Despite the continual searching for another site, the National Gallery shared the library site until 1968 when it moved to the new gallery building in St Kilda Road.
The 1866-67 Intercolonial Exhibition, held at the library site led to the opening of the Industrial and Technological Museum on this site in 1870, with many of the exhibits forming the core of the collection. In 1899 the contents of the National Museum, formerly the Natural History Museum, were transferred from the University of Melbourne to the library site. The Museum of Victoria remained at the site until its relocation c2000. At this time the library became the sole occupant of the seven acre site.
Construction of buildings on the library site was almost continuous from 1854 until the construction of the La Trobe Library in the 1960s. Joseph Reed, or his subsequent firms and their descendents, was responsible for the design of a number of building phases, including the initial building, the international exhibition spaces in 1866, the portico in 1870, the various halls constructed for the museum and gallery from 1874 to 1906 and the domed reading room in 1913. Work undertaken in the 1920s-40s was undertaken by Irwin and Stevenson and later work by the Public Works Department.
The main Swanston Street facade of the library is built of sandstone in an English Palladian manner, with central Corinthian portico and flanking wings which terminate in projecting pavilions. A giant order, supporting an entablature and balustrading, runs across the undulating, two storey facade. The classical character continues in the interior of the Queen's Hall reading room, which was designed with a central space encircled by galleried aisles, delineated by a giant Ionic order colonnade.
The need for additional library space led to the construction of a large domed reading room, completedin 1913, to designs by Bates, Smart and Peebles, descendents of Joseph Reed's architectural firm. This octagonal building was built by J. W. and D. A. Swanson, using the English Truscon company for their structural detail. This included the first major local use of the Kahn Bar system of reinforcing. It resulted in the construction of the largest reinforced concrete dome in the world at the time, spanning 35.5 metres.
Other significant additions on the site include the Baldwin Spencer Hall, Russell Street in 1906 to create additional museum space and designed by Reed, Smart and Tappin in a flat stripped classical style; Bindon Hall, Little Lonsdale Street, designed by Irwin and Stevenson in 1927, and the La Trobe Library designed by the Public Works Department in 1961 and completed in 1965, in a minimalist manner with direct reference to the original Swanston Street facade in its represented trabeated system.
The first section of the library to be built was set well back from Swanston Street, forming a forecourt at the front of the building. Despite many alterations since the 1850s, particularly in 1939 when the diagonal entrances were added to the central stairs, the formality of the forecourt has been retained. Integral to the design of the forecourt are statues which have been added over time, including Sir Redmond Barry by 1887 (with gasoliers placed either side in 1891), St George and the Dragon, Joan of Arc and Driver and Wipers, which was relocated to the Shrine of Remembrance in 1998.
Two murals by significant Australian artists were acquired by the library in the 1920s. War, by H. Septimus Power, was installed over the entrance to Queen's Hall in 1924 and Peace after Victory, by renowned artist Napier Waller, was installed over the old entrance to the domed reading room in 1929.
Redevelopment of the State Library began in 1990 with the entire site being refurbished for library use.
How is it significant?
The State Library of Victoria buildings are of historical, architectural, scientific (technical) and aesthetic importance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The State Library of Victoria is of historical significance as the principal educational and cultural centre for the people of Victoria for more than 150 years. The early buildings are of significance as the first purpose built, free public library in Australia and one of the first in the world. Successive buildings are of importance as the first homes of the National Gallery of Victoria and the Museum of Victoria.
The State Library of Victoria is of historical significance for its associations with its visionary founder, Sir Redmond Barry, who established one of the great library collections of the world before his death in 1880, and its associations with Bernard Hall, the influential Director of the National Gallery of Victoria from 1891-1934, and Sir Baldwin Spencer, the first Director of the Museum of Victoria.
The State Library of Victoria is of architectural significance as the first major building by prolific Melbourne architect Joseph Reed, and as an early example of public architecture in Victoria. Queen's Hall is of particular note for its elaborate interior and as an early example in library design.
The State Library of Victoria is of scientific (technical) significance for the early and innovative use of reinforced concrete construction used in the domed building to create the largest dome in the world at the time of construction.
The State Library of Victoria is of aesthetic significance for its forecourt which provided the public setting to Melbourne's first cultural institution. Despite many alterations since its inception, it retains its formal approach to the building. The array of sculptures and plantings add to the aesthetic landscape.
The State Library of Victoria is of aesthetic significance for its murals by H. Septimus Power, official war artist with the Australian Imperial Force from 1917, and Napier Waller, a leading neo-classical mural painter of the Inter-War period. The works are two of Melbourne's major murals and key works of Australian art of the 1920s.
[Online Data Upgrade Project 2008]
Year Construction Started 1854
Architect / Designer Bates Peebles & Smart; Reed, Joseph
Architectural Style Victorian Period (1851-1901) Academic Classical
Delaware State Police
Two Ford Crown Victoria's
Picture Date: 03/10/2010
Two Delaware State Troopers have cars stopped during some speed enforcement on I-95.
This is a good picture that displays DSP's old and new lightbars, with the older being on the left.
Delaware State Police
Dodge Charger
Picture Date: 06/21/2009
A Delaware State Trooper sits parked along I-95. Sorry this picture is a bit blurry.
Women surf life savers at a carnival 23 Jan,
Published/Produced: 1938
Find this image in the State Library of Western Australia Pictorial Collectio, 006550D, State Library of Western Australia
catalogue.slwa.wa.gov.au/record=b2003090~S6
Search for more images in the State Library's collection: catalogue.slwa.wa.gov.au/search~S2
Thanks to all of you who have been visiting my Flickr site.
Today this site passed one million views.
I am not sure what my first Flickr photo was but this is from September 2007 and is one of the first in my photo stream. This is a collage of a few of the many food stands at the Minnesota State Fair-my home state.
At the bottom is a photo of my brother, my cousin who worked in the malt stand, and I am on the right.
By afternoon the rain had subsided and the mockingbird was on the rocks! Here he takes a step into mid-air!!!
Mockingbird is the state bird of Tennessee!
Mockingbirds are a group of New World passerine birds from the Mimidae family. They are best known for the habit of some species mimicking the songs of other birds and the sounds of insects and amphibians, often loudly and in rapid succession.
Some types of mockingbirds are known to lay "alien eggs", or eggs that are laid in another bird's nest. Similar to the cowbird, the mockingbirds' offspring will force the other nest inhabitants from the nest, taking all the food from the parents and forcing the foster-parents to rear and fledge them.
The only mockingbird commonly found in North America is the northern mockingbird (Mimus polyglottos). The Greek word polyglottos means multiple languages.
Excerpt from the Fifth State of the Nation Address of President Elpidio Quirino delivered on January 26, 1953:
"Our essential public services have been progressively improved and expanded, spreading throughout the country the benefits of health, education, and social welfare for our people to enjoy. Our death rate has been reduced; our birth rate, increased. The hardy perennial problems of inadequate school space and inadequate rice supply have become things of the past. And what is more, prices have gone down, living standards have been raised, and the lot of the common man, especially the laborer, has been greatly improved.
Our foreign relations have grown and so developed that one of the sources of our strength is in the sympathy and high regard of our friends across the seas.
All these have placed us in a firmer and sounder position, increased our international credit, and enhanced our name and prestige abroad."
(Photo from the National Library of the Philippines.)
A group of MAC football team members. On the back: "'95 Class Team."
1893
Subjects
Michigan State University --Athletics
Michigan State University -- Football
Repository:Michigan State University Archives & Historical Collections, 101 Conrad Hall, East Lansing, MI 48824, http://archives.msu.edu
Resource Identifier: A001618
The abandoned Pilgrim State Psychiatric Center on Long Island, NY (Brentwood). From the time I was in High School, I always wanted to go to Pilgrim State to explore and photograph it. Since then, much more of the facility has been closed, and the landmark smoke-stacks from the power station have been torn down.
Pilgrim State Hospital opened on October 1, 1931 as a close-knit community with its own police and fire department, courts, post office, a LIRR station, power plant, potter's field, swine farm, church, cemetery and water tower, as well as houses for staff and administrators. A series of underground tunnels were used for transporting food from the kitchens to the buildings, as well as housing steam pipes. Each set of buildings were known as quads, a pattern of four buildings situated around a center building, where the kitchen was located. After World War II, Pilgrim State Hospital experienced an increase in patient population that made it the world's largest hospital, with 13,875 patients and over 4,000 employees. In fact, at one time it was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest mental hospital in the world. In the 1950's more aggressive treatments, such as lobotomy and electro-convulsive therapy (ECT) were implemented. The best known controversy about this surrounded the case of Beulah Jones, a patient there between 1952-1972 who received both such treatments and was left seriously impaired.
For a brief period in the 80's some of the buildings were used as a correctional facility (prison), but this was short lived due to outcry from the community.
It was mostly closed by the mid-80's (slowly starting in 1974), but some buildings are still in use today.
In 1985 the movie "Murder: By Reason of Insanity", starring Candice Bergen, was filmed on the grounds of Pilgrim State Hospital, in Building 14.
Ghosts are rummored to haunt Pilgrim State Psychiatric Center.
Empire State Building, seen from outside at ground level
PERMISSION TO USE: Please check the licence for this photo on Flickr. If the photo is marked with the Creative Commons licence, you are welcome to use this photo free of charge for any purpose including commercial. I am not concerned with how attribution is provided - a link to my flickr page or my name is fine. If used in a context where attribution is impractical, that's fine too. I enjoy seeing where my photos have been used so please send me links, screenshots or photos where possible. If the photo is not marked with the Creative Commons licence, only my friends and family are permitted to use it.