Town Election Will Be

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Town Election Will Be •••f- _ '." <v ' •. '•> . ^ * -*•-7 -•' .!• '••'••I The Best The Only Advertising Newspaper Medium Published ,n tfefea H in. the • : ^fsNorthern ~ Wm i. f - •mmsmsmsm ^Town of '• t Connecticut Enfield, Ct. Fifty-Fifth Year—No. 17. THOMPSONVILLE, CONN., THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1935 Subscription $2.00 Per Year—Single Copy Sc. ^fll SK;SiTSjsfe ' w •j»v; STREET WIDENING PROPOSED i *• V- • J <V. - - -4} YESUKIEWICZ Lines eral Streets in North End. Town Election Will The possibility of another special gPfi.- « .; ^mmam town meeting loomed up today when LEAVES LABORS it was learned that a petition is be­ ing prepared by the property owners ,1 H TO PRACTICE in the vicinity of Alden Avenue and GROUP FOR LAW Be Two Church streets for approval of a plan I to widen the streets in that section. & Evidence That the District Representation Will Dr. J. Francis Burns of The proposed plan for the improve­ Secretary of Textile Or­ New York Has Opened ment has been prepared by Arthur ganization Severs Of­ Possibility of a Third Party Went Aglimmering; Be a Factor in the Party Caucuses to Be Held N. Jones of the Town Plan Commis­ An Office Here After sion and filed with the Board of Se­ ficial connections With With the Expiration of Time Limit for Filing* lectmen. It provides for the pur­ Next Month—More Candidates Are Mention- Several Years of Prac­ chase of land from A. F. Javorski Local Group Monday Yesterday—Much Quiet Talk But No Move­ and Salvatore Arnone for the pur­ '£| ed for Head of Republican Ticket. tice in New York. pose of widening Church street and Evening. ment Made to Place Ticket in Field. eliminating the dangerous corner at After practicing in New York City that intersection. labor movement as he is to continue More than ever before district for the past nine years, Dr. J. Fran­ That the early summer talk of a WEST SPRINGFIELD lines are going to figure in party cis Burns has returned this week to With the installation of his success­ third party in the local political field TOBACCO GROWERS politics here according to the present his native tpwn to take up the prac or as financial secretary at the exer­ this fall has come to naught was dis­ tice of medicine here. Dr. Burns has ENROLLMENT OF cises held Monday evening, Repre­ closed this week when the time limit indication. While this will be evi­ for filing with the Secretary of OPERATOR FINED dent to some extent in both organiza­ located his office in the O'Hear block sentative Stanley A. Yesukiewicz VOTE IN FAVOR OF at the corner of Pearl and High State's office was permitted to expire tions it will be decidedly more pro­ ceased his official connections with without any move in that direction nounced in the Republican group streets. In taking up practice here, THIRTY-EIGHT AT the local branch of the United Tex­ FOR WET DRIVING Dr. Burns is following a trend in the being made. Under the present sta­ This is due largely to the fact that tile Workers of America. The prin­ tutes governing such a situation, the FEDERAL CONTROL the Democratic selections for the medical profession in recent years to cipal reason for this is that Mr. Ye­ permanently locate in the smaller party name and list of candidates principal offices will consist of the CAMP VAGABOND sukiewicz plans to enter the Univer­ must be filed with the Secretary of $100 and Costs Imposed renomination of the present incum­ communities in preference to the sity of Pennsylvania next month to Retention of Federal larger cities. In keeping with this State sixty days before the town on Mass. Driver at Ses­ bents. On the Republican side the Nearly Twice the Num­ study law. He will not, however, en- election. As the town election this Supervision Is Over­ party must present a new group of year is on Monday, October 7, the sion of Court Tuesday; candidates, and it is in the seeking ber of Last Year Are last day for filing the party title and whelmingly Voted By of them that the district background list of candidates was yesterday. No Springfield Man Pays has developed and gives strong indi­ Registered at Camp at such notice having been filed with Growers—Enfield Dis­ cations of figuring in the selections the State Department or any action Fine for Faulty Brakes which the caucus will make. Pine Point Lake Which towards the same having been taken trict Unanimous. This week, for instance, comes a Opened Monday. here, the third party movement, so At a session of the Enfield Town J J**?. Pounced demand from the far as the coming town election is With the Enfield district vote prac­ Court held Tuesday, Judge Guy p. North Thompsonville district that it concerned, is out. tically unanimous in favor, the Con­ Bushnell imposed a fine of ^lOO and ^ouid be considered m connection A total of 38 boys are registered necticut stalk tobacco growers voted th The ordinary procedure for initiat costs on Ralph W. Lewis of West I ^ .e nominee for the office of at Camp Vagabond, which opened at ing such a movement would"be"t"o! overwhelmingly in favor of retention Springfield, who had been presented selectman Not only +wthat butwl file a patition with the Secretary of of the crop production, according to on the charge of driving under the that area has its candidate already the Enfield Fish and Game Club's State for the inclusion of the party an announcement of District Agent influence of liquor. At the conclu­ in mind in the person of Kenneth W. camp at Pine Point on Monday aft­ ticket in the ballot for town election W. S. Middaugh, made yesterday. sion of the case Judge Bushnell re­ Leete. Mr. Leete has not been heard ernoon. This registration is practi and at the same time file the ticket The tabulation of the final result of mitted $75 of the fine in view of the from on the matter but his friends cally double that of last year when containing the list of nominees at the recent poll indicated that 2,050 defendant's financial circumstances. in the northern area have. They only 20 boys were registered which the office of the Town Clerk. As growers voted in favor and 60 against Lewis was presented in court by rea­ point out in the first place that it is a matter of great satisfaction to neither of these conditions have been the continuation of federal control. son of his car colliding several weeks time that the northern section of the the members of the Enfield Boys' complied with within the legal limit The growers voting in the nega­ ago with the machine of Samuel J. town be considered in connection W|ork Committee who are sponsor­ the matter is ended for this year. tive represent only 2.8 per cent of Meeker of New Haven, the collision with this office and that Mr. Leete ing the camp. This outcome was not unexpected the total votes cast, whereas the ov­ occurring in front of the residence of fits properly into the picture. On Wednesday night the boys held here, although there was consider- erwhelming majority claims 97.2 per a camp fire at the lake, returning to ce n Lewis Grant on upper Enfield street. Although not exactly a resident of able'talk during the late spring and | u t of the vote. Compared to the Lewis was represented in court by that district just now, he was for town about 8:30 o'clock. Several early summer of something: of that I whole total of eligible voters, who changes in the program for the week ust b Atty. Jacob Butler of Springfield. years and always maintained a keen sort being done thifc year. Consider-|^ A e growers under contract with At the same session of the court, interest in the affairs of the district. have been made. No overnight hike able of the talk originated with the | e a, , 2050 yes ballots are Mr. Leete now resides in Precinct 2, will be held, instead a daylight hike political club movement which got j to 84.7 per cent of the possible William E. Lynch of Springfield was to Old Newgate Prison will be made fined $5 after pleading guilty to the District 2. a Democratic stronghold DR. J. FRANCIS BURNS STANLEY A. YESUKIEWICZ well underway here last spring. Thecal vote. Mr. Middaugh's tabula- where he is said to have a consider­ today. About two-thirds of the boys young men and women who were ac- tion further shows that 87.2 per cent charge of operating a car with de­ will make the round trip on bicycles. fective brakes. Lynch was the driv­ able following also outside of his tendency Dr. Burns selected this organization of these of the eligible growers took the occa­ party. He comes of a family that The remainder of the boys will hike tirely cut off his affiliations with the j sion to return ballots; 308 did not. er of the automobile which several town where he was born 35 years to the prison on foot and will be as secretary of the Carpet and Rug weeks ago struck and injured Victor played an exceedingly prominent ago. He is the son of Mrs. Frances no way responsible for this third The question on which the stalk part in the civic and official life of picked up late in the afternoon and Division of the United Textile Union growers voted did not imply that the Delorge, town employee, incapacitat­ (Dineen) Burns of Pearl street.
Recommended publications
  • Board of Assessors R Complete!
    Ill •' \/ fc % i^lWv ^ Advertising Copy Must Reach Us WKfettii •••wm f*1'. • I Not Later Than Wednesday Noon. SHHI ^cai items Must Be Accompany " No Copy Will BB Accepted on j V; ied by the Sender's Correct Name' J |lp'?P TL 8LLAL,,: R ' and Must Reach Us Before 3 P. f "" S m. ® I M. Wednesday. THE OHIY NEWSPAPER PRINTED IN THE TOWN OF ENFIELD; COVERS MORE THAN TWENTY-TWO SUBIJRBAN ^DISTRICTS, COMBINING A POPUUJION OF MGRE THAN 25,000 BETWEEN HARTFORD ym.- AND SPRINGFIELD-IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN IT ESTABLISHED 1880 THOMPSONVIUiE, CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY, JANUARY 1922 Single Copy 5 Cents VOL. XXXXII., Board of Assessors r Progress Being Made New Police Planning Work For y:--. ; vjESt.<u«r:<- In "White Way" Plans Wilson Foundation •/VSJ Committee of the Board of Trade Complete! Its Work Appointed For This Purpose Meet Head Named Public Meeting May Be Held To and Make Considerable Headway Inaugurate the Locul Caiiijiaign With the Project of Installing For the Conununitys Part in the For Retail Ornamental Lights in the Busi­ AVoodrow Wilson Foundation FSPFI EVALUATION OF TAXABLE PROPERTY FINISHED TUESDAY, AND THE ness Section lof the Village. This Week Movement Which Opens Xext ••••••'Vi. V • . QBAND LIST DULY ATTESTED AND TURNED OVER TO THE TOWN Sunday. BLANKS ARE ISSUED BY STATE TAX COMMISSIONER BLODGETT FOR - The "White Way" Committee Clarence L. Parker of Wethersfleld 1 : The local campaign for the Wood- L, ... CLERK.—THE TOTAL INCREASE IS SUBSTANTIALLY THE will hold its second meeting in the in Tliis State Appointed Cliief of THE RETURNS TO BE MADE FOR THE NEW STATE TAX ON UN­ tawn building next Monday even­ the Local Police.—Assumed His row Wilson Foundation will be R>' \ ' SAME AS REPORTED IN THESE COLUMNS LAST ing at 8 o'clock.
    [Show full text]
  • RMS Titanic - Wikipedia
    RMS Titanic - Wikipedia http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/RMS_Titanic RMS Titanic Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera. « Nemmeno Dio potrebbe fare affondare questa RMS Titanic nave. » (Il marinaio A.Bardetta del Titanic alla signora Caldwell, il 10 aprile 1912.) Il RMS Titanic era una nave passeggeri britannica della Olympic Class , divenuta famosa per la collisione con un iceberg nella notte tra il 14 e il 15 aprile 1912, e il conseguente drammatico affondamento avvenuto nelle prime ore del giorno successivo. Secondo di un trio di transatlantici, il Titanic , con le sue Descrizione generale due navi gemelle Olympic e Britannic , era stato progettato per offrire un collegamento settimanale con l'America, e Tipo Transatlantico garantire il dominio delle rotte oceaniche alla White Star Classe Olympic Line. Costruttori Harland and Wolff Cantiere Belfast, Irlanda del Nord. Costruito presso i cantieri Harland and Wolff di Belfast, il Titanic rappresentava la massima espressione della Impostazione 31 marzo 1909 tecnologia navale, ed era il più grande, veloce e lussuoso Completamento 31 marzo 1912 Entrata in transatlantico del mondo. Durante il suo viaggio inaugurale 10 aprile 1912 (da Southampton a New York, via Cherbourg e servizio Queenstown), entrò in collisione con un iceberg alle 23:40 Proprietario White Star Line, (ora della nave) di domenica 14 aprile 1912. L’impatto Amministratore Delegato: (Joseph Bruce Ismay) provocò l'apertura di alcune falle lungo la fiancata destra Destino finale Naufragato il 15 aprile 1912. del transatlantico, che affondò due ore e 40 minuti più tardi (alle 2:20 del 15 aprile) spezzandosi in due tronconi. Caratteristiche generali Dislocamento 52.310 t Nella sciagura, una delle più grandi tragedie nella storia Stazza lorda 46.328 t della navigazione civile, persero la vita 1517 dei 2227 Lunghezza 269 m passeggeri imbarcati.
    [Show full text]
  • Ken Marschall Analasys on Morrogh Image
    Ken Marschall - Artist To Kenshin Hiro and Paul Lee: The caption in the Castleknock Chronicle, where the other purported "last photograph" was published, simply says: "The last photo of the Titanic, taken by Mr. John Morrogh at Red Bay, Crosshaven, after the vessel had left Queenstown." In his 2004 article for Encyclopedia Titanica, Senan Molony shares his research into the man and his life, including rather remarkable detail on the day the photograph was taken, that Morrogh and a group chased the ship along the coast by car, that a tripod was used, and even adds quotes from participants. I have not seen the apparently contemporary account to which he refers. Mr. Molony confuses a photo taken by Kate Odell with another first-class passenger, Stanley May, and appears to hypothesize some circumstances around the event, using words like "certainly," "very likely" and "probable." Assuming you're both aware of Molony's article, here are the reasons I am dubious about the Morrogh photo being the last: • As Titanic swung counterclockwise on her anchor during the period that the two Queenstown tenders were at her sides, the view from the shore south of Crosshaven (i.e., angle of the ship) would closely match that in the Morrogh photo just as she was hoisting her anchor. • There were a lot of clouds that day, and we're lucky that the sun broke through for Morrogh as he tripped his camera's shutter. The sunlight on the bridge matches two much closer photographs taken from the departing tender Ireland, one by Francis Browne and the other by Kate Odell, as does the amount of smoke (or lack of it) from funnels.
    [Show full text]
  • Fr Browne: Defamation, Anonymity, and Some Missing Photographs? by Senan Molony
    www.encyclopedia-titanica.org This article is copyright Encyclopedia Titanica and its licensors © 2004 It may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form without permission. Fr Browne: Defamation, anonymity, and some missing photographs? by Senan Molony THIS is a tangled tale; but one that explains how an impoverished student priest came to be travelling first class on the most luxurious ship every constructed – and how some of the pictures he took on board may still be missing. Fr Francis Browne, a man of no property, captured priceless images of the RMS Titanic’s first and only voyage. While justly famous, there are tantalising indications that the known Fr Browne trove is incomplete – and that other glimpses may remain to be discovered. Much of the background to this mystery lies, ironically, in wireless telegraphy… and the intense interest in the subject displayed by Fr Browne prior to the maiden voyage. Fr Francis Browne, Bishop Browne, and Fr William Browne. An uncle and his two nephews. Courtesy of Senan Molony www.encyclopedia-titanica.org FR BROWNE: THE MISSING PHOTOGRAPHS IT is already widely known that Fr Browne’s ticket for the Titanic was bought for him by his uncle, who happened to be the Lord Bishop of Cloyne, a diocese whose seat is St Colman’s Cathedral, towering high on a terrace above Queenstown, Co Cork, the White Star liner’s last port of call. Why a Catholic Bishop bought an expensive ticket for his nephew on an apparent whim can now be explained. The Bishop won the money, and more, in a libel award delivered exactly a month before the ship sailed – BISHOP OF CLOYNE VINDICATED Foul Calumny Refuted A Scottish Paper's Charges Most Rev Dr Browne Examined Protestant Witnesses' Testimony £200 DAMAGES FOR BISHOP £50 for Each of Six Priests This is a report of the case from the Weekly Freeman, datelined Edinburgh, on Friday March 15, 1912: At ten o'clock today in the Court of Session, the hearing of the action brought by His Lordship the Bishop of Cloyne against Messrs D.
    [Show full text]
  • Making “Chinese Art”: Knowledge and Authority in the Transpacific Progressive Era
    Making “Chinese Art”: Knowledge and Authority in the Transpacific Progressive Era Kin-Yee Ian Shin Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2016 © 2016 Kin-Yee Ian Shin All rights reserved ABSTRACT -- Making “Chinese Art”: Knowledge and Authority in the Transpacific Progressive Era Kin-Yee Ian Shin This dissertation presents a cultural history of U.S.-China relations between 1876 and 1930 that analyzes the politics attending the formation of the category we call “Chinese art” in the United States today. Interest in the material and visual culture of China has influenced the development of American national identity and shaped perceptions of America’s place in the world since the colonial era. Turn-of-the-century anxieties about U.S.-China relations and geopolitics in the Pacific Ocean sparked new approaches to the collecting and study of Chinese art in the U.S. Proponents including Charles Freer, Langdon Warner, Frederick McCormick, and others championed the production of knowledge about Chinese art in the U.S. as a deterrent for a looming “civilizational clash.” Central to this flurry of activity were questions of epistemology and authority: among these approaches, whose conceptions and interpretations would prevail, and on what grounds? American collectors, dealers, and curators grappled with these questions by engaging not only with each other—oftentimes contentiously—but also with their counterparts in Europe, China, and Japan. Together they developed and debated transnational forms of expertise within museums, world’s fairs, commercial galleries, print publications, and educational institutes.
    [Show full text]
  • An Article on Thomas Byles by Fergus Mulligan
    Titanic and the Beda: Fr Thomas Byles n Fergus Mulligan I balanced all, brought all to mind, The years to come seemed waste of breath, A waste of breath the years behind In balance with this life, this death. W.B. Yeats, 1919 2012 is the 100 th anniversary of the sinking of RMS Titanic , the most famous maritime disaster of all time. In James Cameron’s film Titanic as the ship foundered a Catholic priest is seen praying with his fellow passengers and reciting from the Book of Revelation. This man was not a figment of Cameron’s imagination: his name was Fr Thomas Byles, 1870-1912, PP of Ongar in Essex, and he trained at the Beda College and was ordained in Rome in 1902. Fr Byles was travelling to New York to officiate at the wedding of his brother William. The night before he left for Southampton his friend, Mgr Edward Watson, called in to say goodbye and share a glass of wine. His final words to Fr Byles were unintentionally ominous: ‘I hope you’ll come back’, his fear being that the priest would find more interesting work in the US and decide to stay. Thomas Byles’ background Thomas Byles was born Roussel Davids Byles on 26 February 1870 in Shelton, Staffs. He took the name Thomas on entering the Church. 1 He was the son of Rev. Dr Alfred Byles, a Congregational minister and his wife, Louisa Davids. He went to Leamington College and Rossall School, Fleetwood and in 1894 entered Balliol College Oxford to read Maths, History and Theology.
    [Show full text]
  • A Catalogue Raisonné Polly P
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research: English, Department of Department of English 5-1993 Paintings and Drawings in Willa Cather's Prose: A Catalogue Raisonné Polly P. Duryea University of Nebraska-Lincoln Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/englishdiss Part of the American Art and Architecture Commons, American Literature Commons, Illustration Commons, Interdisciplinary Arts and Media Commons, Modern Literature Commons, Other American Studies Commons, Other History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons, and the Women's Studies Commons Duryea, Polly P., "Paintings and Drawings in Willa Cather's Prose: A Catalogue Raisonné" (1993). Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research: Department of English. 93. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/englishdiss/93 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the English, Department of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research: Department of English by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS IN WILLA CATHER'S PROSE A CATALOGUE RAISONNE' by Polly P. Duryea A DISSERTATION Presented to the Faculty of The Graduate College in the University of Nebraska In Partial Fulfillment of Requirements For the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Major: English Under the Supervision of Professor Susan J. Rosowski Lincoln, Nebraska May 1993 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. DISSERTATION TITLE PAINTINGS AND DRAWINGS IN WILLA CATHER'S PROSE A CATALOGUE RAISONNE BY Polly Patricia Duryea SUPERVISORY COMMITTEE: r\ APPROVED DATE Sig! nr iffa Susan J.
    [Show full text]
  • The Shanachie, Volume 24, Number 1
    Vol. XXIV No. 1 Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society 2012 www.ctiahs.com Library of Congress picture he Titanic still haunts Irish-America. As recently as two years 21 knots. Built in Belfast by Harland and Wolff, the ship was hailed T ago, a headstone was finally placed in St. Joseph’s Cemetery in as a marvel of modern science and technology. It was expected to set West Roxbury, Mass., over the grave of Kate Buckley of County new record speeds for Atlantic crossings. The Titanic arrived at Cork, one of the many Irish women Queenstown’s outer anchorage about who died when the “unsinkable” be- Do any readers have stories of a survivor or a victim of 11:30 a.m. that day. The eager pas- hemoth struck an iceberg and sank in the Titanic catastrophe? If so, please let us know. Con- sengers waiting at the White Star mid-Atlantic just 100 years ago. This tact us through the phone numbers listed on our web- Line pier in the inner harbor were April, on the 100th anniversary of the site, www.ctiahs.com. For information on some Titanic ferried out to the ship along with 194 tragedy, a monument will be dedicat- centennial events during 2012, please check page 8. sacks of mail by two tenders, the ed to the memory of Jane Carr of Ireland and the America. A few County Sligo who worked as a domes- passengers were debarking after tic servant for years in Windsor Locks, before dying on the Titanic enjoying the day and a half voyage from Southampton, England, to while returning to Connecticut from a visit to her family.
    [Show full text]
  • The Sinking of Titanic
    The Sinking Of Titanic JESUITS TREACHERY AT ITS FINEST WORLD HISTORY BY : PG / BG -- Historian Do you still remember the Hollywood block-buster movie film TITANIC with actor Leonardo de Caprio ? A romance and love story happened during the ship’s voyage from England to America ? Well, it is not the real story or perhaps just a part of the story. What you’ll read below is the true story as to what really happened to the famous cruise ship called Titanic. The information you’ll read below are not conspiracy theory, but rather well-recorded in the books of World History. The greatest tragedies in the last two hundred years can be traced to the Jesuits. We will now show that the Jesuits planned and carried out the sinking of the Titanic, and we will show why they did it. Since the early 1830’s, America did not have a central bank. The Jesuits desperately wanted another central bank in America so that they would have a bottomless reservoir from which to draw money for their many wars and other hideous schemes around the world. In 1910, seven men met on Jekyll Island just off the coast of Georgia to establish a central bank, which they called the Federal Reserve Bank. These men were Nelson Aldrich and Frank Vanderlip, both representing the Rockefeller financial empire; Henry Davison, Charles Norton, and Benjamin Strong, representing J.P. Morgan; and Paul Warburg, representing the Rothschild banking dynasty of Europe. We have already seen that the Rothschilds were the banking agents for the papacy’s Jesuits, holding “the key to the wealth of the Roman Catholic Church.” Nelson Aldrich Frank Vanderlip Representing Rockefeller’s financial empire Cohorts of the Jesuits Men who favored the creation of the Federal Reserve Bank wanted by the Jesuits Henry Davison J.
    [Show full text]
  • Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection) Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection)
    [PDF-smk]Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection) Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection) Titanic photographs - Titanic Front page Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection): Daniel ... Amazon.com: Customer reviews: Titanic in Photographs ... Thu, 25 Oct 2018 01:21:00 GMT Titanic photographs - Titanic Front page Photographs by a White Star Line employee who served on many ships and alongside crew who were involved in the maiden voyage of Titanic. The images are mainly incisive portraits documenting life for the crew aboard the great liners. Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection): Daniel ... Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection) [Daniel Klistorner, Steve Hall, Bruce Beveridge, Art Braunschweiger, Scott Andrews, Ken Marschall] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The name Titanic has become synonymous with catastrophe , the story of this luxurious liner legendary. [Read now] Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection) Amazon.com: Customer reviews: Titanic in Photographs ... But for that Titanic enthusiast, "The Titanic in Photographs" is a nice addition for the bookshelf. Most, although not all, of the photos have been printed elsewhere, but seldom in such a handy, widely inclusive manner. pdf Download Titanic in Photographs (Titanic Collection) by Steve Hall ... In this evocative collection of photographs the authors of Titanic The Ship Magnificenttell her full story, from the shipyards of Harland & Wolff and its early vessels, with the backdrop of the great race to build the biggest and best passenger liner, to the frenzy of excitement surrounding her launch. Fri, 26 Oct 2018 07:17:00 GMT Art & Photography | Collection | Titanic Hotel Belfast Titanic Hotel Belfast is home to a permanent collection of over 500 artworks, artefacts and photographs back to the Golden Age of Ocean Travel.
    [Show full text]
  • Mattaponi Indian Reservation King William County, Virginia Heritage
    1 CONTINUITY WITHIN CHANGE: VIRGINIA INDIANS NATIONAL REGISTER PROJECT UNDERREPRESENTED COMMUNITIES GRANT PROGRAM - HISTORIC PRESERVATION FUND P15AP00020 Mattaponi Indian Reservation King William County, Virginia Heritage Properties of Indian Town: The Mattaponi Indian Baptist Church, School, and Homes of Chiefly Lineages October 2017 College of William & Mary Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Anthropology Department of Historic Resources Williamsburg, Virginia Richmond, Virginia Anthropological Research Report Series Research Report Series Number 7 Number 23 2 PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY BLANK 3 Mattaponi Indian Reservation King William County, Virginia Heritage Properties of Indian Town: The Mattaponi Indian Baptist Church, School, and Homes of Chiefly Lineages Authors Buck Woodard, Ph.D., Co-Principal Investigator Danielle Moretti-Langholtz, Ph.D., Co-Principal Investigator Contributors Martha McCartney Megan Victor, MA Nicholas Belluzzo, MA College of William & Mary Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Anthropology Department of Historic Resources Williamsburg, Virginia Richmond, Virginia Anthropological Research Report Series Research Report Series Number 7 Number 23 4 This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Underrepresented Communities Grant Program administered by the Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior. 5
    [Show full text]
  • Titanic - the Fatal Voyage
    Titanic - The Fatal Voyage 0. Titanic - The Fatal Voyage - Story Preface 1. TITANIC - INSIDE AND OUT 2. TITANIC'S CREW 3. MAIDEN VOYAGE 4. THE PASSENGERS 5. ICEBERGS 6. TITANIC'S WIRELESS 7. ICE WARNINGS IGNORED 8. ICEBERG RIGHT AHEAD 9. A DOOMED SHIP 10. DOOMED PASSENGERS 11. WIRELESS TRANSMISSIONS 12. RESCUE OF THE LIVING 13. RECOVERY OF THE DEAD 14. NEWSFLASH! 15. HEROES 16. A DISINTEGRATING VESSEL 17. THE REST OF THE STORY RMS Titanic leaving Southampton, England on April 10, 1912. Photo by F.G.O (Francis Goldophin Osbourne) Stuart, a Scottish photographer who turned many of his photographs into postcards. Image online, courtesy U.S. National Archives. Not even God himself could sink this ship. White Star Line Employee at Titanic's launch May 31, 1911 Frank Browne’s uncle had given his nephew a unique present: a ticket for the first two legs of Titanic’s maiden voyage. As the world’s largest ship left her home port of Southampton to pick up passengers in Cherbourg, France and Queenstown (Cobh), Ireland, Frank (soon to be ordained as a Jesuit priest) was aboard. Such a gift was everything the picture-taking young man could have imagined. But there was one more thing he desired: to stay aboard Titanic as the world’s largest ship completed her maiden voyage to New York. An American millionaire offered to pay his way. Excitedly, Frank sought permission from his superior. The answer was not what the traveler wanted to hear: Get off that ship! Turns out, it was the best message Frank could have received.
    [Show full text]