Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 003

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 003 Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 003 “By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail.” ~ Benjamin Franklin 003 ~ Ok “Gagal mempersiapkan, berarti Anda bersiap untuk gagal.” ~ Benjamin Franklin 003 ~ Ok Anda pernah merencanakan dan mempersiapkan sesuatu yang akan dilakukan? Apa saja persiapan Anda? Apakah Anda mempertimbangkan bila persiapan Anda tidak sesuai dengan rencana? Adakah potensi kegagalan? Percayakah Anda, bila gagal dalam persiapan, berarti Anda harus bersiap untuk gagal? Itulah yang dimaksudkan Benjamin Franklin, dikenal sebagai Bapak Pendiri Amerika Serikat, berkebangsaan Amerika, hidup dalam rentang tahun 1706-1790, ketika ia menyampaikan quote, ‘By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail.’ Secara bebas diterjemahkan, ‘Gagal mempersiapkan, berarti Anda bersiap untuk gagal.’ Orang yang gagal dalam perencanaan atau persiapan adalah orang yang sangat berpotensi menuai kegagalan. Persiapan adalah hal utama dalam setiap aktivitas. Sesederhana apa pun kegiatan yang akan dilakukan, butuh persiapan. Karena kegiatannya sederhana, maka persiapannya pun tidak kompleks. Tetapi untuk aktivitas yang besar, misalkan menyelenggarakan event sebesar dan semegah pesta Olimpiade, maka dibutuhkan persiapan yang benar-benar matang agar kegiatan tersebut dapat berhasil. Tidak ada cara lain yang lebih baik untuk berhasil, kecuali persiapan yang matang. Hidup kita pun demikian. Kita perlu merencanakan hidup seperti apa yang ingin atau yang mau kita jalani saat ini, terutama di masa depan. Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 003 Page 1 Orang yang melakukan perencanaan yang baik diawal hidupnya, cenderung akan memperoleh kehidupan yang lebih baik. Dibandingkan orang yang hidup ‘seadanya’ atau ‘semaunya’, orang yang merencanakan dengan baik, kemungkinan terhindar dari kehidupan yang sia-sia atau bahkan menjerumuskannya ke dalam ‘kegelapan’. Rencanakanlah hidup Anda dengan baik. Jangan meratap, ketika Anda memperoleh kehidupan yang kurang menyenangkan, hanya karena Anda tidak bersiap sejak awal. Manusia yang bijak, mampu memperkirakan kemungkinan terburuk di masa depan. Dengan demikian, ia dapat menempatkan kata ‘penyesalan’ diawal hidupnya. Sehingga, ia melakukan proses perencanaan dengan baik, mengidentifikasi potensi atau risiko kegagalan, pada akhirnya hidup yang ia peroleh, sesuai dengan apa yang sudah dipersiapkan. Mulailah sekarang! Jangan terlambat mempersiapkan. Bila menunda, kegagalan adalah buahnya. Indonesia, 24 Oktober 2018 Riset Corporation --- Benjamin Franklin Biography Diplomat, Inventor, Writer, Scientist (1706–1790) Benjamin Franklin is best known as one of the Founding Fathers who drafted the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. Who Was Benjamin Franklin? Benjamin Franklin (January 17, 1706 to April 17, 1790) was a Founding Father and a polymath, inventor, scientist, printer, politician, freemason and diplomat. Franklin helped to draft the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution, and he negotiated the 1783 Treaty of Paris ending the Revolutionary War. His scientific pursuits included investigations into electricity, mathematics and mapmaking. A writer known for his wit and wisdom, Franklin also published Poor Richard’s Almanack, invented bifocal glasses and organized the first successful American lending library. Benjamin Franklin’s Inventions and Discoveries Benjamin Franklin was a prolific inventor and scientist who was responsible for the following inventions: - Franklin stove: Franklin’s first invention, created around 1740, provided more heat with less fuel. - Bifocals. Anyone tired of switching between two pairs of glasses understands why Franklin developed bifocals that could be used for both distance and reading. - Armonica. Franklin’s inventions took on a musical bent when, in 1761, he commenced development on the armonica, a musical instrument composed of spinning glass bowls on a shaft. Both Ludwig van Beethoven and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart composed music for the strange instrument. - Rocking chair Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 003 Page 2 - Flexible catheter - American penny Franklin also discovered the Gulf Stream after his return trip across the Atlantic Ocean from London in 1775. He began to speculate about why the westbound trip always took longer, and his measurements of ocean temperatures led to his discovery of the existence of the Gulf Stream. This knowledge served to cut two weeks off the previous sailing time from Europe to North America. Franklin even devised a new “scheme” for the alphabet that proposed to eliminate the letters C, J, Q, W, X and Y as redundant. Franklin’s self-education earned him honorary degrees from Harvard, Yale, England’s Oxford University and Scotland’s University of St. Andrews in Scotland. In 1749, Franklin wrote a pamphlet concerning the education of youth in Pennsylvania that resulted in the establishment of the Academy of Philadelphia, now the University of Pennsylvania. Benjamin Franklin and Electricity In 1752, Benjamin Franklin conducted the famous kite-and-key experiment to demonstrate that lightning was electricity and soon after invented the lightning rod. His investigations into electrical phenomena were compiled into “Experiments and Observations on Electricity,” published in England in 1751. He coined new electricity-related terms that are still part of the lexicon, such as battery, charge, conductor and electrify. Was Benjamin Franklin President of the U.S.? Benjamin Franklin was never elected President of the United States. However he played an important role as one of seven Founding Fathers, helping draft the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution. He also served several roles in the government: He was elected to the Pennsylvania Assembly and appointed as the first postmaster general for the colonies as well as diplomat to France. He was a true polymath and entrepreneur, which is no doubt why he is often called the “First American.” Franklin’s Wife and Kids In 1723, Benjamin Franklin moved from Boston to Philadelphia and lodged at the home of John Read, where he met and courted his landlord’s daughter Deborah. After moving to London in 1724, Franklin returned to Philadelphia in 1726 to find that Deborah had married in the interim, only to be abandoned by her husband just months after the wedding. The future Founding Father eventually rekindled his romance with Deborah Read and he took her as his common-law wife in 1730. Around that time, Franklin fathered a son, William, out of wedlock who was taken in by the couple. The pair’s first son, Francis, was born in 1732, but he died four years later of smallpox. The couple’s only daughter, Sarah, was born in 1743. The two times Benjamin Franklin moved to London, in 1757 and again in 1764, it was without Deborah, who refused to leave Philadelphia. His second stay was the last time the couple saw each other. Franklin would not return home before Deborah passed away in 1774 from a stroke at the age of 66. Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 003 Page 3 In 1762, Franklin’s son William took office as New Jersey’s royal governor, a position his father arranged through his political connections in the British government. Franklin’s later support for the patriot cause put him at odds with his loyalist son. When the New Jersey militia stripped William Franklin of his post as royal governor and imprisoned him, in 1776, his father chose not to intercede on his behalf. When and Where Was Benjamin Franklin Born? Benjamin Franklin was born on January 17, 1706, in Boston in what was then known as the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Childhood Benjamin Franklin’s father, English-born soap and candle maker Josiah Franklin, had seven children with first wife, Anne Child, and 10 more with second wife, Abiah Folger. Ben was his 15th child and youngest son. Ben learned to read at an early age, and despite his success at the Boston Latin School, he stopped his formal schooling at 10 to work full-time in his cash-strapped father’s candle and soap shop. Dipping wax and cutting wicks didn’t fire the young boy’s imagination, however. Perhaps to dissuade him from going to sea as one of his brothers had done, Josiah apprenticed 12-year-old Ben at the print shop run by his brother James. Although James mistreated and frequently beat his younger brother, Ben learned a great deal about newspaper publishing and adopted a similar brand of subversive politics under the printer’s tutelage. When James refused to publish any of his brother’s writing, 16-year-old Ben adopted the pseudonym Mrs. Silence Dogood, and “her” 14 imaginative and witty letters delighted readers of his brother’s newspaper, The New England Courant. James grew angry, however, when he learned that his apprentice had penned the letters. Tired of his brother’s “harsh and tyrannical” behavior, Ben fled Boston in 1723 although he had three years remaining on a legally binding contract with his master. He escaped to New York before settling in Philadelphia and began working with another printer. Philadelphia became his home base for the rest of his life. Living in London Encouraged by Pennsylvania Governor William Keith to set up his own print shop, Franklin left for London in 1724 to purchase supplies from stationers, booksellers and printers. When the teenager arrived in England, however, he felt duped when Keith’s letters of introduction never arrived as promised. Although forced to find work at London’s print shops, Franklin took full advantage of the city’s pleasures—attending theater performances, mingling with the
Recommended publications
  • Signers of the United States Declaration of Independence Table of Contents
    SIGNERS OF THE UNITED STATES DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE 56 Men Who Risked It All Life, Family, Fortune, Health, Future Compiled by Bob Hampton First Edition - 2014 1 SIGNERS OF THE UNITED STATES DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTON Page Table of Contents………………………………………………………………...………………2 Overview………………………………………………………………………………...………..5 Painting by John Trumbull……………………………………………………………………...7 Summary of Aftermath……………………………………………….………………...……….8 Independence Day Quiz…………………………………………………….……...………...…11 NEW HAMPSHIRE Josiah Bartlett………………………………………………………………………………..…12 William Whipple..........................................................................................................................15 Matthew Thornton……………………………………………………………………...…........18 MASSACHUSETTS Samuel Adams………………………………………………………………………………..…21 John Adams………………………………………………………………………………..……25 John Hancock………………………………………………………………………………..….29 Robert Treat Paine………………………………………………………………………….….32 Elbridge Gerry……………………………………………………………………....…….……35 RHODE ISLAND Stephen Hopkins………………………………………………………………………….…….38 William Ellery……………………………………………………………………………….….41 CONNECTICUT Roger Sherman…………………………………………………………………………..……...45 Samuel Huntington…………………………………………………………………….……….48 William Williams……………………………………………………………………………….51 Oliver Wolcott…………………………………………………………………………….…….54 NEW YORK William Floyd………………………………………………………………………….………..57 Philip Livingston…………………………………………………………………………….….60 Francis Lewis…………………………………………………………………………....…..…..64 Lewis Morris………………………………………………………………………………….…67
    [Show full text]
  • Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 026
    Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 026 “If you would be loved, love, and be loveable.” ~ Benjamin Franklin 026 ~ Ok “Jika Anda ingin dicintai, mencintailah, dan jadilah seorang yang dapat dicintai.” ~ Benjamin Franklin 026 ~ Ok Apakah Anda ingin dicintai? Mampukah Anda mencintai orang lain sebagaimana Anda ingin dicintai? Tahukah Anda bagaimana cara mencintai? Dapatkah Anda dicintai seperti Anda ingin mencintai orang lain? Mencintai dan dicintai merupakah dua kondisi yang saling mendukung dan berada dalam posisi seimbang. Seseorang yang ingin dicintai maka ia harus mampu mencintai. Demikian juga, seseorang yang mau mencintai, maka ia pun harus dapat dicintai. Demikianlah yang pernah disampaikan Benjamin Franklin, dikenal sebagai Bapak Pendiri Amerika Serikat, berkebangsaan Amerika, hidup dalam rentang tahun 1706-1790, melalui quote-nya, ‘If you would be loved, love, and be loveable.’ Secara bebas diterjemahkan, ‘Jika Anda ingin dicintai, mencintailah, dan jadilah seorang yang dapat dicintai.’ Cintai merupakan dua arah! Saling mencintai merupakan wujud bila kita memiliki cinta dan kita dapat memperoleh cinta. Setiap orang yang dapat saling berbagi dan saling meneguhkan merupakan buah dari cinta sejati. Tidak ada cinta satu arah! Hal yang sulit kita mau mencintai bila kita sendiri tidak mau dicintai. Demikian juga, hal yang mustahil kita memperoleh cinta bila kita pun tidak berniat untuk mencintai. Tuhan telah menganugerahkan cinta kasih kepada manusia. Maka sudah seyogyanya kita mampu mencintai semua ciptaan-Nya, terutama sesama manusia. Orang-orang yang dipenuhi cinta kasih adalah orang-orang kaya, terlepas dari kekayaan harta benda yang dimilikinya. Seseorang yang kaya raya secara materi dan kebendaan, bila ia tidak memiliki cinta kasih, sesungguhnya ia orang yang miskin. Brainy Quote ~ Benjamin Franklin 026 Page 1 Kita mampu mencintai bila kita juga mau dicintai.
    [Show full text]
  • Benjamin-Franklin-Ppt
    The Biography of Benjamin Franklin By Zia Kara How to Use This Presentation I hope you enjoy this presentation and learn as much as I did! This presentation is designed to be interactive and to be used as to how you want to see the information. There is anindex at the beginning of the presentation that will begin your discovery of this great man, Benjamin Franklin.index Use this to learn about his life, his inventions and his struggles. Just click on any text to start your adventure! Index Benjamin Franklin lived a busy and industrious life spanning 84 years. Birth and Childhood 1706 -1718 Apprenticeship 1718 Family 1730 - 1745 Vocation 1728-1748 Inventions 1747 - 1752 Political Life 1757 - 1790 Old Age and Death 1790 References Birth and Childhood Benjamin Franklin was born on January 17, 1706 in Boston, Massachusetts. He was the fifteenth child of seventeen children and also the youngest boy. Franklin only had two years of school but continued to educate himself by reading. A picture of Benjamin Franklin Back to Index Apprenticeship When Franklin was 12 became a printing apprentice to his brother James, a printer. His brother owned the New England Courant. As James did not allow Franklin to write for the newspaper, Franklin wrote letters to the paper as a middle-aged woman named ''Silence Dogood''. At 17 years old, Franklin ran away to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as his brother Franklin as an apprentice. found out that he was the Back toone Index who was writing the letters. Family In 1730, Franklin marriedFamily Deborah Read Rogers.
    [Show full text]
  • Proposed Bridge Toll and PATCO Fare Schedules
    Proposed Bridge Toll and PATCO Fare Schedules July 2008 Dear DRPA and PATCO Customers: Thank you for your interest in the Delaware River Port Authority and Port Authority Transit Corporation. We appreciate the opportunity to present to you the proposed changes to the toll and fare structures. For the last several years, we have committed to cost-savings measures that have enabled us to operate without changes to our toll or fare structures. However, we now face a very challenging time as our future needs will require us to find additional revenue sources to fund our Capital Program which is critical to maintaining the safety, security and serviceability of our assets. We are confident that with the feedback received from you, our customers, we will be able to propose a plan to our Board of Commissioners that will enable us to face the challenges that lie ahead. We value your opinion and look forward to your comments and suggestions. Yours truly, John J. Matheussen Chief Executive Officer, Delaware River Port Authority President, Port Authority Transit Corporation The Delaware River Port Authority The Delaware River Port Authority of Pennsylvania and New Jersey is a regional transportation agency. DRPA’s lines of business, collectively called “the Authority,” operate under the motto “We Keep the Region Moving.” DRPA traces its roots back to 1919 when leaders from the two states began planning for a bridge across the Delaware River. That bridge, now known as the Benjamin Franklin Bridge, was once the longest suspension bridge in the world. Today, more than 80 years after its opening, the Benjamin Franklin Bridge remains a key transportation artery and a regional landmark.
    [Show full text]
  • SEPTA Suburban St & Transit Map Web 2021
    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z AA BB CC Stoneback Rd Old n d California Rd w d Rd Fretz Rd R o t n R d Dr Pipersville o Rd Smiths Corner i Rd Run Rd Steinsburg t n w TohickonRd Eagle ta Pk Rolling 309 a lo STOCKTON S l l Hill g R Rd Kellers o Tollgate Rd in h HAYCOCK Run Island Keiser p ic Rd H Cassel um c h Rd P Portzer i Tohickon Rd l k W West a r Hendrick Island Tavern R n Hills Run Point Pleasant Tohickon a Norristown Pottstown Doylestown L d P HellertownAv t 563 Slotter Bulls Island Brick o Valley D Elm Fornance St o i Allentown Brick TavernBethlehem c w Carversvill- w Rd Rd Mervine k Rd n Rd d Pottsgrove 55 Rd Rd St Pk i Myers Rd Sylvan Rd 32 Av n St Poplar St e 476 Delaware Rd 90 St St Erie Nockamixon Rd r g St. John's Av Cabin NJ 29 Rd Axe Deer Spruce Pond 9th Thatcher Pk QUAKERTOWN Handle R Rd H.S. Rd State Park s St. Aloysius Rd Rd l d Mill End l La Cemetery Swamp Rd 500 202 School Lumberville Pennsylvania e Bedminster 202 Kings Mill d Wismer River B V Orchard Rd Rd Creek u 1 Wood a W R S M c Cemetery 1 Broad l W Broad St Center Bedminster Park h Basin le Cassel Rockhill Rd Comfort e 1100 y Weiss E Upper Bucks Co.
    [Show full text]
  • Abou T B En Fran Klin
    3 Continuing Eventsthrough December 31,2006 January 17– March 15, 2006 LEAD SPONSOR B F o O u f O o nding Father nding r KS 1 In Philadelphia EVERYONE IS READING about Ben Franklin www.library.phila.gov The Autobiography Ben and Me Franklin: The Essential of Benjamin Franklin BY ROBERT LAWSON Founding Father RBY BENeJAMIN FRAsNKLIN ource BY JAGMES SRODES uide One Book, One Philadelphia The Books — Three Books for One Founding Father In 2006, One Book, One Philadelphia is joining Ben Franklin 300 Philadelphia to celebrate the tercentenary (300 years) of Franklin’s birth. Franklin’s interests were diverse and wide-ranging. Countless volumes have been written about him. The challenge for the One Book program was to choose works that would adequately capture the true essence of the man and his times. Because of the complexity of this year’s subject, and in order to promote the widest participation possible, One Book, One Philadelphia has chosen to offer not one, but three books about Franklin. This year’s theme will be “Three Books for One Founding Father.” The featured books are: • The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin by Benjamin Franklin (various editions) • Ben and Me by Robert Lawson (1939, Little, Brown & Company) • Franklin: The Essential Founding Father by James Srodes (2002, Regnery Publishing, Inc.) The Authors BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, author of The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, was born in 1706 and died in 1790 at the age of 84. He was an author, inventor, businessman, scholar, scientist, revolutionary, and statesman whose contributions to Philadelphia and the world are countless.
    [Show full text]
  • Independence National Historical Park
    National Park Service No. 117 - July 2018 U.S. Department of the Interior NPS NEWS Independence Welcome to National Historical Park Welcome to Independence National Historical Park Historic The Historic Philadelphia Gazette is always FREE July across the land means reworks, barbecues, concerts this year! Bring your blankets and a picnic Philadelphia! keeping cool in hot humid weather. For us in to the Mall. On July 1, there will be a Gospel Philadelphia, it's a time to celebrate the birth of performance, followed on July 2 by excerpts from our great nation - one of the most important some favorite Broadway shows. As usual on July 3, Can’t you just feel the history in the heart of IN THIS ISSUE events in the United States of America! is we will host a spectacular performance by the America’s Most Historic Square Mile during the Independence Day marks the 242nd birthday of Philly POPs. Of course, don’t miss the Indepen- month we celebrate Independence? ere’s no Page 2 the United States and there’s no more patriotic dence Day activities on Independence Mall: the better time to experience all there is to see and Independence Week Events place to do so than at Independence National annual Independence Day Parade, Celebration of do here. You’ll meet History Makers, hear from Historical Park. We are excited to share the story Freedom Ceremony, and the Let Freedom Ring National Constitution Center storytellers, join the Continental Army and more. of American Independence and the struggle for Ceremony at the Liberty Bell.
    [Show full text]
  • Septa-Phila-Transit-Street-Map.Pdf
    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q v A Mill Rd Cricket Kings Florence P Kentner v Jay St Linden Carpenter Ho Cir eb R v Newington Dr Danielle Winding W Eagle Rd Glen Echo Rd B Ruth St W Rosewood Hazel Oak Dr Orchard Dr w For additional information on streets and b v o o r Sandpiper Rd A Rose St oodbine1500 e l Rock Road A Surrey La n F Cypress e Dr r. A u Dr Dr 24 to Willard Dr D 400 1 120 ant A 3900 ood n 000 v L v A G Norristown Rd t Ivystream Rd Casey ie ae er Irving Pl 0 Beachwoo v A Pine St y La D Mill Rd A v Gwynedd p La a Office Complex A Rd Br W Valley Atkinson 311 v e d 276 Cir Rd W A v Wood y Mall Milford s r Cir Revere A transit services ouside the City of 311 La ay eas V View Dr y Robin Magnolia R Daman Dr aycross Rd v v Boston k a Bethlehem Pike Rock Rd A Meyer Jasper Heights La v 58 e lle H La e 5 Hatboro v Somers Dr v Lindberg Oak Rd A re Overb y i t A ld La Rd A t St ll Wheatfield Cir 5 Lantern Moore Rd La Forge ferson Dr St HoovStreet Rd CedarA v C d right Dr Whitney La n e La Round A Rd Trevose Heights ny Valley R ay v d rook Linden i Dr i 311 300 Dekalb Pk e T e 80 f Meadow La S Pl m D Philadelphia, please use SEPTA's t 150 a Dr d Fawn V W Dr 80- arminster Rd E A Linden sh ally-Ho Rd W eser La o Elm Aintree Rd ay Ne n La s Somers Rd Rd S Poplar RdS Center Rd Delft La Jef v 3800 v r Horseshoe Mettler Princeton Rd Quail A A under C A Poquessing W n Mann Rd r Militia Hill Rd v rrest v ve m D p W UPPER Grasshopper La Prudential Rd lo r D Newington Lafayette A W S Lake Rd 1400 3rd S eldon v e Crestview ly o TURNPIKE A Neshaminy s o u Rd A Suburban Street and Transit Map.
    [Show full text]
  • Benjamin Franklin 1 Benjamin Franklin
    Benjamin Franklin 1 Benjamin Franklin Benjamin Franklin 6th President of the Supreme Executive Council of Pennsylvania In office October 18, 1785 – December 1, 1788 Preceded by John Dickinson Succeeded by Thomas Mifflin 23rd Speaker of the Pennsylvania Assembly In office 1765–1765 Preceded by Isaac Norris Succeeded by Isaac Norris United States Minister to France In office 1778–1785 Appointed by Congress of the Confederation Preceded by New office Succeeded by Thomas Jefferson United States Minister to Sweden In office 1782–1783 Appointed by Congress of the Confederation Preceded by New office Succeeded by Jonathan Russell 1st United States Postmaster General In office 1775–1776 Appointed by Continental Congress Preceded by New office Succeeded by Richard Bache Personal details Benjamin Franklin 2 Born January 17, 1706 Boston, Massachusetts Bay Died April 17, 1790 (aged 84) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Nationality American Political party None Spouse(s) Deborah Read Children William Franklin Francis Folger Franklin Sarah Franklin Bache Profession Scientist Writer Politician Signature [1] Benjamin Franklin (January 17, 1706 [O.S. January 6, 1705 ] – April 17, 1790) was one of the Founding Fathers of the United States. A noted polymath, Franklin was a leading author, printer, political theorist, politician, postmaster, scientist, musician, inventor, satirist, civic activist, statesman, and diplomat. As a scientist, he was a major figure in the American Enlightenment and the history of physics for his discoveries and theories regarding electricity. He invented the lightning rod, bifocals, the Franklin stove, a carriage odometer, and the glass 'armonica'. He formed both the first public lending library in America and the first fire department in Pennsylvania.
    [Show full text]
  • MTA Response to Questions
    Responses to Questions MTA public meeting on the replacement of the York Toll Plaza York Middle School April 3, 2008 Table of Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Purpose of MTA & Accountability 3. Purpose of Toll Collection and York Plaza 4. York Plaza Conditions and Concerns (Deficiencies) 5. Feasibility Study & Proposed Facility 6. What Would it Take to Build at the Existing Location? 7. Site Identification & Screening Process 8. Environmental Considerations 9. Right-of-Way Considerations 1) Introduction On April 3, 2008, the Maine Turnpike Authority staff held a well attended public meeting at the York Middle School in York Maine to update residents and receive comments and questions regarding an ongoing study about the replacement of the York Toll Plaza. Recognizing that such a large forum does not always provide an opportunity to answer all questions adequately, MTA staff recorded questions with the intent of providing written answers. This document contains those answers. It is important to note that the Turnpike Authority, at the urging of the York Board of Selectman and in response to concerns raised by local citizens, has significantly adjusted the process and schedule of this study since the April 3, meeting. Most notably, the Turnpike Authority has agreed to commission a more in-depth study of the feasibility of reconstructing the toll plaza at the existing location. These adjustments in process and schedule had to be accurately reflected in the answers contained in this document and thus prolonged its completion. This is not intended to be the conclusive response to all local questions and concerns, but is rather just another step in the process to enhance the dialogue on this important and challenging issue.
    [Show full text]
  • [Pennsylvania County Histories]
    #- F 3/6 t( V-H Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2018 with funding from This project is made possible by a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services as administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Education through the Office of Commonwealth Libraries https://archive.org/details/pennsylvaniacoun71unse Tabors of the most noted Jesuits__ ; country, and there the first mass in the State was celebrated. The church dates i--tdelphi _ cally by Jesuit missionaries from" Mai-y- i-Jand. then the headquarters of Catholicism (in tms country.The arrival of a large num¬ ber of emigrants from Ireland gave a great impetus to Catholicism in this city,and the membership increased so rapidly that an l/dl, the -ecclesiastical authorities of Maryland sent Rev. Joseph Greaton, S J-, to Philadelphia to establish a church rather Greaton.when he came to this city had a letter of introduction to a vervactive Catholic who resided on Walnut’ Street above Third,and that fact led to the estab¬ lishment of St. Joseph’s Church in its present -locality. That the popular feeling in Philadel¬ phia was opposed to Catholicism at that The Venerable Edifice Was time ,s shown by the fact that when Founded a Century and & * x a Half Ago. iSlfX 5i?Ap«1g' ; primitive looking church hnitdTf11 and srtsaj*i' bbV™« IT MET WITH OPPOSITION. frame chapel,and in February3 ^7JV1 e"®f0 State oTp was celebrated 7n the Eminent Jesuits and Other Eeelesi- thaf asties Who Have Labored in i. 32* *»Xdgite SSLf “tv the Parish — Charities to Which the Church Ci * r.nS'.siTs;.
    [Show full text]
  • Getting to the Convention Center
    Getting to the Convention Center BY TRAIN The Philadelphia Convention Center is easily accessible from all surrounding areas by the SEPTA rail system. The “Market East” stop is right at the convention center. Anyone with a Medicare Card rides for $1 each way. Click on this link to access train information www.septa.org Amtrak’s Acela Express puts Philadelphia’s 30th Street Station just one hour and 10 minutes from New York City, and only one hour and 40 minutes from Washington, DC. The Convention Center is 1 ½ miles from 30th Street Station by taxi. There is also SEPTA train service from 30th Street Station to Market Street East. BY PLANE Philadelphia International Airport is 11 ½ miles from the Convention Center by train or taxi. There is also SEPTA train service from the airport to the convention center. BY CAR From Route 76 (Schuylkill) Take Route 76 to Exit 344/I-676 East. Take I-676 East and exit at Broad Street/Route 611 (2nd exit). You will be on Vine Street. Follow signs for Vine Street/PA Convention Center to 12th Street (4 traffic lights). Make a right onto 12th Street. The entrances to the Convention Center are located two blocks ahead at the NE and NW corners of 12th and Arch Streets. From Interstate 95 North Take I-95 North to Exit 22 Central Philadelphia / I-676. Stay in the left lane of this exit. Follow signs for I-676 West to the 1st exit (Broad Street). This exit brings you up to 15th Street. Get into left lane and follow the sign for 611/Broad Street and make a left turn on to Vine Street.
    [Show full text]