Anacortes Museum Research Files
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
September 2012
SEPTEMBERdecember 2012 2006 / / volume volume 25 19 issue issue 4 4 HEADED FOR THE ARCTIC The tugs Drew Foss, right, and Wedell Foss took the oil rig Noble Discoverer out of Seattle’s Elliott Bay on Wednesday, June 27, heading for Port Angeles to hand off the rig to the Lauren Foss, which towed it to Dutch Harbor. Alki Point is in the background. Numerous Foss tugs, two barges and a derrick are supporting a Shell Arctic drilling project. (See article on page 3.) NEW TUGS WILL OPEN The introduction ofMore three than new any 12 monthsannounced in the recent early in history the summer of our com- of a holiday greeting:“Arctic-Class” tugs by pany,Foss Maritime 2006 was a year2012, in which and constructionFoss Maritime of movedthe first forward OPPORTUNITIES IN will open new opportunitiesstrategically in the in all areaswill of startour business.early next year, bringing Strategic Moves in 2006oil and gas industry, broaden the additional jobs to the yard on the company’s capability to take on Columbia River. OIL AND GAS SECTOR We believe that new courses charted in our harbor services, Align Us with This Mission:projects in extreme environments, “At Foss we innovate,” said marine transportation/logistics and shipyard lines of business, Provide Customers withand Servicesensure continued growth of Foss Gary Faber, Foss’ president and chief while not without risk, will further the growth and success of that are Without EqualRainier Shipyard. operating officer. “These vessels will The plan to build thethe innovative, company for decadesbe built to come. using Continued the latest insideadvances in 130-foot ocean-going tugs was technology and equipment. -
CENTENNIAL: Grand Prairie, Texas 1909-2009
CENTENNIAL: Grand Prairie, Texas 1909-2009 Foreword “Centennial” is a window into the growth and development of Grand Prairie, Texas, USA Compiled from City Documents and Public Records, the information presented is representative of actions and events in the City of Grand Prairie during its first 100 years. Grand Prairie was given its name by the Texas and Pacific Railroad based on its location on the southern edge of a geological region called “Grand Prairie” that is composed of Eagleford Shale stretching from Texas north through the Dakotas and into Canada. Compiled and Written as a Public Service by Katherine L. Houk May 1, 2008 (The author receives no compensation from sales of this book) CENTENNIAL: Grand Prairie, Texas 1909-2009 CENTENNIAL 2009! 100 YEARS OF GROWTH—GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXAS FOREWORD CHAPTER 1 GRAND PRAIRIE TODAY CHAPTER 2 THE CITY: 1980-2000 CHAPTER 3 THE CITY: 1960-1980 CHAPTER 4 THE CITY: 1940-1960 CHAPTER 5 THE CITY: 1920-1940 CHAPTER 6 THE CITY: 1909-1920 CHAPTER 7 PRE-1909 CENTENNIAL: Grand Prairie, Texas 1909-2009 CHAPTER 1: 2000-2009 GRAND PRAIRIE TODAY Grand Prairie, Texas, is celebrating its 100th birthday as an incor- porated city in 2009. With a population approaching 170,000 people, the city is no longer a stagecoach stop between Dallas and Fort Worth. In fact, Grand Prairie is the 7th largest city in North Central Texas, enjoying an international economy, with a tax base in excess of $10 Billion. In 2007, the City was the 6th fastest growing municipality in the United States. More than 20% of single family homes have no mortgage. -
2019 Centennial Report
100YEARS INDEFENSE OFFREEDOM CENTENNIALREPORT In 1920—just after World War I—a small group of people met in a Beacon Home of ACLU of Massachusetts co-founder Hill home to resist a widespread government clampdown on immigrants, Margaret Shurcliff | Boston anti-war dissenters, and labor organizers. These Bay Staters joined the call Carol Rose, executive director at the ACLU of of Massachusetts-born ACLU founder Roger Baldwin. Together, they formed Massachusetts, stands outside the historic residence where a small group of activists the Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts—the first ACLU state affiliate in founded the organization in 1920. the nation. The ACLU has always been rooted in courage and guided by a vision: to extend the promise of civil rights and civil liberties to all people. In 1920, the U.S. Supreme Court had yet to uphold a single free speech claim. So- called radicals were rounded up and deported in droves. Activists languished in jail for distributing anti-war literature and for promoting contraception and equal rights. Women won the right to vote just that year, and the Voting Rights Act was decades away. Equal rights for LGBTQ people were unthinkable. And yet, the ACLU dared to envision how, by standing together in support of civil rights and civil liberties, we could create a more just and equitable nation for all. Much has changed in the last century—but our role has not. For 100 years, the ACLU has been the leading defender of freedom here in Massachusetts and nationwide. The ACLU has grown from a small group of idealists to a vast resistance movement. -
Hanging on to the Edges Hanging on to the Edges
DANIEL NETTLE Hanging on to the Edges Hanging on to the Edges Essays on Science, Society and the Academic Life D ANIEL Essays on Science, Society I love this book. I love the essays and I love the overall form. Reading these essays feels like entering into the best kind of intellectual conversati on—it makes me want and the Academic Life to write essays in reply. It makes me want to get everyone else reading it. I almost N never feel this enthusiasti c about a book. ETTLE —Rebecca Saxe, Professor of Cogniti ve Science at MIT What does it mean to be a scien� st working today; specifi cally, a scien� st whose subject ma� er is human life? Scien� sts o� en overstate their claim to certainty, sor� ng the world into categorical dis� nc� ons that obstruct rather than clarify its complexi� es. In this book Daniel Ne� le urges the reader to unpick such DANIEL NETTLE dis� nc� ons—biological versus social sciences, mind versus body, and nature versus nurture—and look instead for the for puzzles and anomalies, the points of Hanging on to the Edges connec� on and overlap. These essays, converted from o� en humorous, some� mes autobiographical blog posts, form an extended medita� on on the possibili� es and frustra� ons of the life scien� fi c. Pragma� cally arguing from the intersec� on between social and biological sciences, Ne� le reappraises the virtues of policy ini� a� ves such as Universal Basic Income and income redistribu� on, highligh� ng the traps researchers and poli� cians are liable to encounter. -
The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce
m ill iiiii;!: t!;:!iiii; PS Al V-ID BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME FROM THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND THE GIFT OF Henrg W, Sage 1891 B^^WiS _ i.i|j(i5 Cornell University Library PS 1097.A1 1909 V.10 The collected works of Ambrose Blerce. 3 1924 021 998 889 The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924021998889 THE COLLECTED WORKS OF AMBROSE BIERCE VOLUME X UIBI f\^^°\\\i COPYHIGHT, 1911, Br THE NEALE PUBLISHING COMPANY CONTENTS PAGE THE OPINIONATOR The Novel 17 On Literary Criticism 25 Stage Illusion 49 The Matter of Manner 57 On Reading New Books 65 Alphab£tes and Border Ruffians .... 69 To Train a Writer 75 As to Cartooning 79 The S. p. W 87 Portraits of Elderly Authors .... 95 Wit and Humor 98 Word Changes and Slang . ... 103 The Ravages of Shakspearitis .... 109 England's Laureate 113 Hall Caine on Hall Gaining . • "7 Visions of the Night . .... 132 THE REVIEWER Edwin Markham's Poems 137 "The Kreutzer Sonata" .... 149 Emma Frances Dawson 166 Marie Bashkirtseff 172 A Poet and His Poem 177 THE CONTROVERSIALIST An Insurrection of the Peasantry . 189 CONTENTS page Montagues and Capulets 209 A Dead Lion . 212 The Short Story 234 Who are Great? 249 Poetry and Verse 256 Thought and Feeling 274 THE' TIMOROUS REPORTER The Passing of Satire 2S1 Some Disadvantages of Genius 285 Our Sacrosanct Orthography . 299 The Author as an Opportunity 306 On Posthumous Renown . -
Romantic Textualities, 22
R OMANTICT EXTUALITIES LITERATURE AND PRINT CULTURE, 1780–1840 • ISSN 1748-0116 ◆ ISSUE 22 ◆ SPRING 2017 ◆ SPECIAL ISSUE : FOUR NATIONS FICTION BY WOMEN, 1789–1830 ◆ www.romtext.org.uk ◆ CARDIFF UNIVERSITY PRESS ◆ Romantic Textualities: Literature and Print Culture, 1780–1840, 22 (Spring 2017) Available online at <www.romtext.org.uk/>; archive of record at <https://publications.cardiffuniversitypress.org/index.php/RomText>. Journal DOI: 10.18573/issn.1748-0116 ◆ Issue DOI: 10.18573/n.2017.10148 Romantic Textualities is an open access journal, which means that all content is available without charge to the user or his/her institution. You are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search or link to the full texts of the articles in this journal without asking prior permission from either the publisher or the author. Unless otherwise noted, the material contained in this journal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 (cc by-nc-nd) Interna- tional License. See https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ for more information. Origi- nal copyright remains with the contributing author and a citation should be made when the article is quoted, used or referred to in another work. C b n d Romantic Textualities is an imprint of Cardiff University Press, an innovative open-access publisher of academic research, where ‘open-access’ means free for both readers and writers. Find out more about the press at cardiffuniversitypress.org. Editors: Anthony Mandal, Cardiff University Maximiliaan -
Skeletal Remains Found
A3 SATURDAY/SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5-6, 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SINCE 1874 | $2 WEEKEND EDITION Lake City Reporter LAKECITYREPORTER.COM SUNDAY + PLUS >> FOOTBALL HAMILTON CO. Thirsty man Suwannee Hemp arrested for High’s Moore production commits to facility rolled voyeurism in Duke out in Jasper 6B Live Oak. Sean of the South SEE 5A SEE 12A SEE BELOW Skeletal Big game draws big visit remains found Discovery made while man looked for homeless friend. Staff report Looking for a friend Thursday evening, a man found more than he was looking for: skeletal remains. The Lake City Police Department said the bones were discovered in a wooded area near Levings Forest Products on NW Railroad Ave. around 8:20 p.m. Thursday. The LCPD release states a man was in the area searching for a homeless friend that had been living near there. During his search, he found the remains of an unknown individual in a tent, the release states. According to LCPD, there were no signs of foul play. Investigators also don’t yet know the race and sex of the deceased. Photos by JEN CHASTEEN/Special to the Reporter Anyone that may know the identity of the Columbia High had a special guest deceased — or has any other information for Friday night’s Region 1-6A about the incident — is asked to contact final as Gov. Ron DeSantis and his LCPD and speak with Investigator Gutshall daughter Madison attended the at 386-752-4343. Tigers’ game against St. Augustine The Florida Department of Law at Tiger Stadium. ABOVE: DeSantis Enforcement assisted LCPD investigators in performed the pre-game coin flip. -
Grimes County Bride Marriage Index 1846-1916
BRIDE GROOM DATE MONTH YEAR BOOK PAGE ABEL, Amelia STRATTON, S. T. 15 Jan 1867 ABSHEUR, Emeline DOUTMAN, James 21 Apr 1870 ADAMS, Catherine STUCKEY, Robert 10 Apr 1866 ADAMS, R. C. STUCKEY, Robert 24 Jan 1864 ADKINS, Andrea LEE, Edward 25 Dec 1865 ADKINS, Cathrine RAILEY, William Warren 11 Feb 1869 ADKINS, Isabella WILLIS, James 11 Dec 1868 ADKINS, M. J. FRANKLIN, F. H. 24 Jan 1864 ADLEY, J. PARNELL, W. S. 15 Dec 1865 ALBERTSON, R. J. SMITH, S. V. 21 Aug 1869 ALBERTSON, Sarah GOODWIN, Jeff 23 Feb 1870 ALDERSON, Mary A. LASHLEY, George 15 Aug 1861 ALEXANDER, Mary ABRAM, Thomas 12 Jun 1870 ALLEN, Adline MOTON, Cesar 31 Dec 1870 ALLEN, Nelly J. WASHINGTON, George 18 Mar 1867 ALLEN, Rebecca WADE, William 5 Aug 1868 ALLEN, S. E. DELL, P. W. 21 Oct 1863 ALLEN, Sylvin KELLUM, Isaah 29 Dec 1870 ALSBROOK, Leah CARLEY, William 25 Nov 1866 ALSTON, An ANDERS, Joseph 9 Nov 1866 ANDERS, Mary BRIDGES, Taylor 26 Nov 1868 ANDERSON, Jemima LE ROY, Sam 28 Nov 1867 ANDERSON, Phillis LAWSON, Moses 11 May 1867 ANDREWS, Amanda ANDREWS, Sime 10 Mar 1871 ARIOLA, Viney TREADWELL, John J. 21 Feb 1867 ARMOUR, Mary Ann DAVIS, Alexander 5 Aug 1852 ARNOLD, Ann JOHNSON, Edgar 15 Apr 1869 ARNOLD, Mary E. (Mrs.) LUXTON, James M. 7 Oct 1868 ARRINGTON, Elizabeth JOHNSON, Elbert 31 Jul 1866 ARRINGTON, Martha ROACH, W. R. 5 Jan 1870 ARRIOLA, Mary STONE, William 9 Aug 1849 ASHFORD, J. J. E. DALLINS, R. P. 10 Nov 1858 ASHFORD, L. A. MITCHELL, J. M. 5 Jun 1865 ASHFORD, Lydia MORRISON, Horace 20 Jan 1866 ASHFORD, Millie WRIGHT, Randal 23 Jul 1870 ASHFORD, Susan GRISHAM, Thomas C. -
Sound Explorations Educator Packet 2017.Pub
Sound Explorations Educator Packet (360) 379-0438 PO Box 1390 Port Townsend, WA 98368 Email: [email protected] Fax: (360) 379-0439 www.soundexp.org Dear Educator, Thank you for choosing Sound Experience for a fun and exciting, hands- on learning experience aboard Adventuress for your group! This is an active learning and working voyage designed to enhance the curriculum in your classroom and build community through experiential programming aboard the schooner Adventuress. This pre-trip packet contains important information about your upcoming voyage. Please read it over thoroughly and utilize the checklist to ensure all required documents are turned in prior to the trip. Included is an overview of curriculum for the Sound Explorations program, history and information about the ship, required paperwork, and reference and resource lists you may use with your class before or after the trip to enhance the learning experience. You may visit http:// www.soundexp.org/index.php?page=teacherinfo for a few suggested activities for before and after your voyage. I will contact you approximately three weeks before your trip to cover any last minute details and gather any additional information about your group and program interests relevant to this trip. We do our best to tailor the experience within our ability. Please do not hesitate to call if you have any questions or concerns. Sincerely, Amy Kovacs Education Director Sound Experience P.O. Box 1390 Port Townsend, WA 98368 (360) 379-0438, ext. 2 (Phone) (360) 379-0439 (FAX) E-mail: [email protected] Website: www. soundexp. org Welcome! Sound Experience welcomes you to the historic schooner Adventuress for a voyage of exploration on Puget Sound. -
100 YEARS R Centennial Celebration March 28, 2015 PRESIDENT’S WELCOME
F VIN B O CE U N L N C E Y S R # A 1 T 5 O 1 R Light UpTHROUGH Vincennes ROTARY F VIN Vincennes Rotary Club B O CE U N Vincennes, Indiana USA L N C E Y S R # A 1 T 5 O 1 100 YEARS R Centennial Celebration March 28, 2015 PRESIDENT’S WELCOME Vincennes Rotary Club District 6580 Club No. 151 P.O. Box 71 Vincennes, Indiana 47591 March 28, 2015 Ladies and Gentlemen: Vincennes is Indiana’s first city, and this historic community lays claim to many other Indiana firsts—first bank, first newspaper, first university, first hospital, and the capital of the Indiana Territory, before Indiana became a state.DOUGLAS It seems E. STEELE fitting, PRESIDENT that Vincennes should also be home to the first Rotary club chartered in a town of less than 25,000 people, a town that Rotary International thought was too small to sustain a club! After nearly two years of persistence, and with the help and sponsorship of the Terre Haute Rotary Club, Vincennes received its charter, and the rest is history. We not only became a viable Rotary club but have been an active, vibrant club that is doing what good Rotary clubs do—making a difference in their community and beyond! Welcome to the Vincennes Rotary Centennial Celebration, and thank you for helping us celebrate our successful, first 100 years. Last October, we were the first club in District 6580 to conduct a three-year visioning process which, I feel confident, will help us to positively kick off our second 100 years. -
Minutes of Meeting
MEETING SUMMARY IRTPO TECHNICAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE November 8, 2018 Member Attendance List Members not in Attendance Pete Schrum, Island Transit Don Meehan, District 1 Citizen Rep. Connie Bowers, Island County Public Works Alex Warner, City of Oak Harbor Cac Kamak, City of Oak Harbor Christine Boswell-Still, District 2 Citizen Rep. Bob Monize, District 3 Citizen Rep. Beverly Mesa-Zendt, Island County Planning Stan Berryman, City of Langley Ports Representative Elizabeth Sjostrom, WSDOT Brian Tyhuis, NAS Whidbey Island Facilitator Sharon Sappington, Island County EDC Brian Wood, IRTPO Staff Owen Dennison, Town of Coupeville Other Attendees Thera Black Jack Lynch, Clinton Community Council Nick Pinch, Island Transit Stacy Clauson, WSDOT Public Transportation Ronald Still, citizen (Navy employee) Mehrdad Moini, WSDOT Local Programs Meeting began at 1:00 PM Action Items: Prepare draft Bylaws revisions Bring transportation funding presentation to TAC Capture elements of RTP conversation and bring them to the IRTPO Board Actions: Summary from July meeting was approved Updates: IRTPO developments from October TAC meeting were reviewed: The EB cancelled its December meeting. The EB approved the 2019 Regional Transportation Improvement Program and the projects were sent to WSDOT for inclusion in the STIP. o Sponsors will be able to obligate those projects in January. If a project is in the 2018 STIP, sponsors can still obligate this year (but, will be using 2019 funds). The Board approved the consolidated grant rankings/gradings from the Transportation Equity Committee and these were forwarded to WSDOT Public Transportation. o It was noted that the County Connector transit service was among the top ranked. -
November 1, 1888
9 r- :<■ *. Buchanan R ecord, X PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY., TOUHST O .H Q LH ES . I am prepared to attend all cases in iny line upon short notice and in the hest manner. TERMS. SI.SO PER YEAR lUYAULE JN ADVANCE. EMBALMING A1VEPJ1SIHE RATES MADE KNOWN OK APPLICATION, VOLUME XXII. BUCHANAN, BEKRIEN COUNTY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 1, 1888. NUMBER 4 0 . A SPECIALTY. OFFICE—In Record Building,OakS tree t T H E S IN O F O 3H S S I0 N . with the tube glued to my ear, too off, and thus gained twenty minutes. An Anaconda Killed in the Streets Satisfaction guaranteed in both prices and A FINE PIECE OF work. I also keep a full line of much numbed and bewildered to move, Then I arose, yawning, and went of Hew York. JU noA-RUT E. SANGSTEB. until suddenly the old Irishman spoke: sleepily about the store, counting up Business Directory. “Shure‘, mum, does she wurrk?” tbe sales, making entries in the book, It came out of the manhole of a sew It isn’t the thing you do, dear, I started as if I had been shot, and etc., etc. er near the corner of First Street and PICTURE FRAMES, It’s the thing you leave undone almost shrieked, aloud, so great was Just as I'was closin g the doors, a Second Avenue, on "Wednesday after SABBATH SERVICES. Which giyes you a bit of a heartache the shock of hearing a human voice at man came in for some fluid of digitalis. noon, October 3, just as school was And Mouldings for framing, always on ERVICES are lidd every Sabbath at 10:20 At the sotting ortho sun.