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Oh I drool over these cruisers. I want two! Both with pit maneuver bumpers! I got the right light tonight. They catch a break at the Starbucks near the hospital to get ready for a long night.
Disclaimer. . . my son's radio station's on location vehicle that I stylized a bit in post processing with a more grunge cracked finish look
United States training ship Empire State passing Dumbarton Rock on her way down the river Clyde after her visit to Glasgow. She was launched in 1961 and is still powered by steam turbines.
Wayne State police officers Eleshia Kelly and Shannon Thomas made history June 9 after becoming the first members of the WSU Police Department’s first-ever motorcycle division. Dozens of Detroit Police motorcycle officers were on hand to congratulate the two.
Marching band playing at a University of Wisconsin vs. M.A.C. football game
Marching band playing at a University of Wisconsin vs. M.A.C. football game. On the front: "Band on "Camp Randle","U of W 7 - M.A.C. 12. S&H.""
1910-1919
Repository Information:
Michigan State University Archives & Historical Collections, 101 Conrad Hall, East Lansing, MI 48824, archives.msu.edu
Subjects:
Michigan State University -- Athletics -- Football-- 1910-1919 -- Action shots
Resource Identifier: A000798.jpg
Title: State penitentiary
Creator: Adolph B. Rice Studio
Date: January 24, 1954
Identifier: Rice Collection 257B
Format: 1 negative, safety film, 4 x 5 in.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Virginia, Visual Studies, 800 E. Broad St., Richmond, VA, 23219, USA, digitool1.lva.lib.va.us:8881/R
The Colorado State Capitol Building, located at 200 East Colfax Avenue in Denver, Colorado, is the home of the Colorado General Assembly and the offices of the Governor of Colorado and Lieutenant Governor of Colorado. The building is intentionally reminiscent of the United States Capitol. Designed by Elijah E. Myers, it was constructed in the 1890s from Colorado white granite, and opened for use in November 1894. The distinctive gold dome consists of real gold plate, first added in 1908, commemorating the Colorado Gold Rush. The building is part of Denver's Civic Center area.
Built in 1932 under the agenda of Gov Huey Long, the Louisiana State Capitol is at 137m and 34 stories tall the tallest capitol in the United States. Symbolizing the end of "political domination of Louisiana's traditional social and economic elite" by Long, the building cost $5 million in the midst of the Great Depression. Only three years after its completion, Long was assassinated in the building over a judicial gerrymandering dispute. The Art Deco piece depicts various aspects of Louisiana state history. The 49 steps of the staircase leading to the front door contains the names of all 50 states in order of admittance. Alaska and Hawaii, admitted after the construction of the building, were added to the top step with "E pluribus unum". Historical Louisiana "Pioneers and Patriots" flank the staircase. At the 21st floor the building shifts from a square to an octagon, topped by the "Temple".
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
After almost 17 years, I met up with a childhood friend from Highschool in New York City today. We walked along the city and caught up with so many memories, and shared new experiences. It felt 17 years had never passed.
Thanks Buddy. This one is for you.
Photograph © Kausthub Desikachar.
Photographed with Panasonic Lumix GF1, with Panasonic Lumix G 20mm F1.7 Pancake lens. Handheld with available light.
Please do not reproduce in any form without prior written consent from the copyright holder. Please contact the photographer through Flickrmail, to inquire about licensing arrangements.
A state forest partnership between ODF and the Boy Scouts of America provides a three-acre parcel of state forestland for adventure and education for Coos County youth. As part of the partnership, the Boy Scouts will serve as tenants and stewards of the ODF property.
Idaho makes no sense. I speak from experience, having lived in the state for 20 years. Because it was cobbled together from leftovers, Idaho’s regions have nothing in common—they go together about as well as peanut butter and jellyfish.
This problem was understood as far back as 1886, when a bill was passed by Congress that would have eliminated Idaho altogether—giving the south to Nevada and the north to Washington. Alas, President Grover Cleveland vetoed the measure.
In 1907, the best plan of all was proposed, creating the state of Lincoln from northern Idaho and eastern Washington. This brilliant plan not only solved the Idaho problem, but it also made more sense of Washington and Oregon—because both of those states are profoundly divided by the Cascade mountains.
From loststates.com
Picture Of Empire State Building Lit In Celebration of Christmas (Red/Green/Red-And-White Candy Stripe) On December 24, 2015 Thru December 30, 2015 And January 1, 2016 Thru January 6, 2016. Photo Taken On Saturday December 26, 2015.
DSC1895
Cascadia State Park is a state park in the U.S. state of Oregon near Sweet Home along the South Santiam River at Cascadia. The park includes a day use area, campsites, hiking trails and 150 foot Lower Soda Creek Falls. In 1896, George Geisendorfer opened a resort to capitalize on what he called the "curative powers" of Soda Creek's mineral spring water. The resort included a hotel, tennis courts, croquet course, garden and bowling alley. The hotel later burned and the property was acquired by the state of Oregon in 1940. (oregonstateparks.org/index.cfm?do=parkPage.dsp_parkPage&a...)
Leard State Forest is approximately 8000 hectares of bushland located between Narrabri and Boggabri in north west NSW. The nearest township is the farming community of Maules Creek, which sits at the foothills of the Nandewar Range.
Leard State Forest includes the most extensive and intact stands of the nationally-listed and critically endangered Box-Gum Woodland remaining on the Australian continent. The forest is home to 396 species of plants and animals and includes habitat for 34 threatened species and several endangered ecological communities.
Open-cut coal mining threatens to destroy more than half of the Leard State Forest.
Learn more: leardstateforest.tumblr.com/about-leard-forest
File name: 06_11_000136
Title: State House
Alternative title: June 17th, 1875
Creator/Contributor: Lewis, Thomas, d. 1901 (photographer)
Created/Published: Cambridgeport, Mass. : Photographed and published by T. Lewis
Date issued:
Date created: 1875-06-17
Physical description: 1 photographic print on stereo card : stereograph
Genre: Stereographs; Photographic prints
Subjects: Massachusetts State House (Boston, Mass.); Capitols; Centennial celebrations; Beacon Hill (Boston, Mass.)
Notes: Part of series: Centennial views. Battle of Bunker Hill.; No. 10.; Title and date from printed caption on verso.
Series: Centennial views. Battle of Bunker Hill
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions
This shot is from my visit to Eastern State Penitentiary in April of 2009. I really enjoyed visiting this historic building. There is something for everyone. The photography subjects require several visits. You could walk down one corridor at different times of the day and see it in an entirely different light. Certain features pop out at you immediately, while others are subtle. This is a great preservation project and I hope that we will develop more sites like this in the future.
This was one of my favorite images captured from that visit. Until now I didn't want to touch it because I wanted to hone my editing skills a little more so that I could do this just the image it deserved. I hope to post a few more from this series of photos. I am also looking forward to visiting again in the near future.
Let me know what you think of this image. I had a great deal of fun editing this image.
If you like my flickr stream, you should follow me on instagram as well. web.stagram.com/n/artondra/
Todd, Stella, and I went to the Ohio State Fair.
I got this effect using long exposure and adjusting my zoom while the shutter was open.
Permission granted for journalism outlets and educational purposes. Not for commercial use.
Must be credited. Photo courtesy of South Dakota Public Broadcasting.
©2023 SDPB/ Tim Tushla
The Eastern State Penitentiary (ESP[4]) is a former American prison in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is found at 2027 Fairmount Avenue between Corinthian Avenue and North 22nd Street in the Fairmount section of the city, and was operational from 1829 until 1971. The penitentiary refined the revolutionary system of separate incarceration first pioneered at the Walnut Street Jail which emphasized principles of reform rather than punishment.[5] Notorious criminals such as bank robber Willie Sutton and Al Capone were held inside its innovative wagon wheel design. When the building was erected it was the largest and most expensive public structure ever constructed, quickly becoming a model for more than 300 prisons worldwide. It was designed as a panopticon.