Conversations
Here are conversations that have happened in the last week on Flickr Commons:
Watching the skiffs from the cliffs at Kincasslagh
- fraser donachie said:
- beachcomber australia said:
- Suck Diesel said:
- Kevin said:
- Mike said:
You'll get a needle to an anchor in Paddy Browne's
- 21 older comments, and then…
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O Mac said:
The Patrick Browne building is still there
maps.app.goo.gl/vzwrttpe2UvcFtPbA -
beachcomber australia said:
Graffiti in front of the Natioanal Bank -
REPUBLIC LIVES - WILL YOU DEFEND?
(I could be wrong!) -
Mike Grimes said:
O Mac Yes it is, it's Papa John's Pizza.
maps.app.goo.gl/Nc456Sg7gBo1fhvu5 -
mikeyashworth said:
Could be towards the latter end of your time period - the gas lamp column outside the bank has been decommissioned and is minus its lantern whilst on the adjacent post there's an early electric street lamp.
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beachcomber australia said:
Talking of Banks, the AIB on the right side is not yet there. When did it arrive ?
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beachcomber australia said:
The AIB is "c. 1940" . No real help to dating.
www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/30331... -
National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
beachcomber australia I read it as REPUBLIC LIVES - WILL YOU BE TRUE?
(I could be wrong!) -
beachcomber australia said:
[Aside]
"A sandstone crosshead was found in 1926 when building the Munster and Leinster Bank (now the Allied Irish Bank) in Tuam adjacent to the former site of the Augustinian Priory. averaging about 65cm. in diame ter; this circular shape may be secondary, Medieval pocked dressing suggesting a late fifteenth or sixteenth century re-shap ing. Also unusual is that it is carved on one face only, and that the two remaining arcs (segments of the encircling ring) linking the arms have differing inner projec tions, one stepped and the other almost semi-circular. . Etienne Rynne Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society , 1985/1986, Vol. 40 (1985/1986), pp. 125-129"
From - zenodo.org/records/10224930 -
National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
O Mac
Sadly adding to No Longer Standing album.
26_0069734 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
Fashion Valley Mall in San Diego. This building is still here. Originally I believe it was The Broadway, now it's Macy's.
26_0069736 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
Fashion Valley Mall in San Diego. This building is still here. Originally I believe it was The Broadway, now it's Macy's.
26_0069735 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
Fashion Valley Mall, San Diego. This building still stands today. I believe it was originally The Broadway, now it's Macy's.
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So Cal Metro said:
Fashion Valley Mall in San Diego. This building is still here. Originally I believe it was The Broadway, now it's Macy's.
26_0069730 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0071383 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Fingerprints on this slide?
During an approach, most aircraft have a nose-up attitude, Something that has always looked disturbing (to me) is that normal approach procedures for DC-9/MD-80/MD-81 involve pointing the aircraft nose down. I'm not a pilot but guess you do a flare to set the main gear down just before touch down. You obviously don't want the whole aircraft weight on the nose gear. -
So Cal Metro said:
Coming in high and trying to drop some altitude?
26_0071339 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
PSA MD-80 landing at San Diego.
26_0071333 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
American 727 landing at San DIego.
26_0071345 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
Pan Am 727 landing at San Diego.
26_0071384 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
Republic DC-9 landing at San Diego.
26_0071503 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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So Cal Metro said:
China Southwest Airlines, Boeing 757-200.
W. Reiferscheid, front portrait, cameo (LOC)
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swanq said:
Possibly the inventor of a "dirigible air ship".
See Rensselaer Journal, Volume 11, Number 30, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 January 1902
newspapers.library.in.gov/?a=d&d=RLJR19020102.2.67
"A model of a new dirigible air ship is on exhibition at Chicago. It represents the results of five years’ work on the part of William Reiferscheid of Streator, Ill."
There is a picture of Reiferscheid and his invention in Chapter 6. A possible match.
- livinghistoryofillinois.com/pdf_files/Biography%20in%20Bl...
Also a discussion in the chapter.
"But of course life went on. For one thing, this was the spring when Streator's own inventor, William Reiferscheid, built an airship to enter in competition at the St. Louis World's Fair later that summer. With the backing of the newly formed Chicago Aerial Navigation Company, Reiferscheid worked long and hard in Oriental Hall building a giant balloon, pointed at each end, from which hung a frame that in turn supported six propellers.
The papers boasted that "scientists and the most skillful engineers who have examined Mr. Reiferscheid's model and drawings pronounce it the best and most scientific airship ever invented." Scientific perhaps, but practical no. The ungainly creation simply would not work. It ended its days on display in City Park, where curious and destructive boys made short work of its delicate structure."
More links related to the same man and his airship (but none with portraits)
- www.findagrave.com/memorial/272786848/william-reiferscheid
- patents.google.com/patent/US1291686
Jennie Lind, standing, at keyboard (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenny_Lind
'Johanna Maria "Jenny" Lind (Madame Goldschmidt) (6 October 1820 – 2 November 1887), was a Swedish opera singer, often called the "Swedish Nightingale". One of the most highly regarded singers of the 19th century, she performed in soprano roles in opera in Sweden and across Europe, and undertook an extraordinarily popular concert tour of the United States beginning in 1850. She was a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music from 1840.
Lind became famous after her performance as Agathe in Der Freischütz at the Royal Swedish Opera in 1838. Within a few years, she had suffered vocal damage, but the singing teacher Manuel García saved her voice. She was in great demand in opera roles throughout Sweden and northern Europe during the 1840s, and was closely associated with Felix Mendelssohn. After two acclaimed seasons in London, she announced her retirement from opera at the age of 29.
In 1850, Lind went to the United States at the invitation of the showman P. T. Barnum. She gave 93 large-scale concerts for him and then continued to tour under her own management. She earned more than $350,000 (equivalent to $13,545,000 in 2025) from these concerts, donating the proceeds to charities, principally the endowment of free schools in Sweden. With her new husband, Otto Goldschmidt, she returned to Europe in 1852, settling in England in 1855. She had three children and gave occasional concerts over the next three decades. From 1882, she was a professor of singing at the Royal College of Music in London for some years.' -
swanq said:
A very similar image was on sheet music thought to be from the 1840s
www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw251159/Jenny...
And another similar pose on sheet music:
- levysheetmusic.mse.jhu.edu/collection/188/061
H. Sienkewiczk, portrait bust (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henryk_Sienkiewicz
"Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Sienkiewicz (US: /ʃɛnˈkjeɪvɪtʃ, -jɛv-/ shen-KYAY-vitch, -KYEV-itch, Polish: [ˈxɛnrɨk ˈadam alɛkˈsandɛr ˈpjus ɕɛnˈkʲɛvit͡ʂ]; 5 May 1846 – 15 November 1916), also known by the pseudonym Litwos (Polish pronunciation: [ˈlitfɔs]), was a Polish epic writer. He is remembered for his historical novels, such as the Trilogy series and especially for his internationally known best-seller Quo Vadis (1895–1896)."
Countess Westmoreland, three-quarters bust, cameo portrait (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sybil_Fane,_Countess_of_Westmorland
"Sybil Mary Fane, Countess of Westmorland (20 August 1871 – 21 July 1910), born Lady Sybil Mary St Clair-Erskine, was a British aristocrat and socialite."
Her title after marriage was spelled Westmorland, without the "e."
See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westmorland and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Fane,_13th_Earl_of_Westmorland
W.H. Taft, portrait bust (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Howard_Taft
"William Howard Taft (September 15, 1857 – March 8, 1930) was the 27th president of the United States from 1909 to 1913 and the tenth chief justice of the United States from 1921 to 1930. He is the only person to have held both offices."
Cardinal Giddons, front portrait (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Gibbons
Notice -- "Gibbons" not "Giddons"
"James Gibbons (July 23, 1834 – March 24, 1921) was an American Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Baltimore for more than forty years, from 1877 until his death in 1921. Created a cardinal in 1886, he was the second American cardinal, after John McCloskey.
Ordained a bishop at age 34, Gibbons previously served as Apostolic Vicar of North Carolina (1868–1872) and Bishop of Richmond (1872–1877). In 1876, he published the apologetic book The Faith of Our Fathers, which became a best-selling work. During his time as Baltimore's archbishop, Gibbons became one of the most recognizable Catholic figures in the country. He defended the rights of organized labor and advocated for Americanism as a means of assimilation."
Maude Gonne McBride, three-quarters standing (LOC)
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Mitch Barrie said:
William Butler Yeats' muse, he proposed to her four times.
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maud_Gonne
"Maud Gonne MacBride (Irish: Maud Nic Ghoinn Bean Mhic Giolla Bhríghde; born Edith Maud Gonne; 21 December 1866 – 27 April 1953) was an Irish republican revolutionary, suffragette and actress. She was, contrary to her own claims of Anglo-Irish descent, English on the sides of both parents, and was won over to Irish nationalism by the plight of people evicted in the Land Wars. MacBride actively agitated for Home Rule and then for the republic declared in 1916. During the 1930s, as a founding member of the Social Credit Party, she promoted the distributive programme of C. H. Douglas. Gonne was well known for being the muse and long-time love interest of Irish poet W. B. Yeats."
E. Phillips Oppenheim, bust (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._Phillips_Oppenheim
"Edward Phillips Oppenheim (22 October 1866 – 3 February 1946) was an English novelist, a prolific writer of best-selling genre fiction, featuring glamorous characters, international intrigue and fast action. Notably easy to read, they were viewed as popular entertainments. He was featured on the cover of Time magazine in 1927."
Anne Warner, three-quarters standing (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_Warner_(novelist)
"Anne Richmond Warner French (October 14, 1869 – February 3, 1913) was an American popular humorous author, best known for her local color stories about the character Susan Clegg.
Anne Warner was born on October 14, 1869 in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the daughter of lawyer William Penn Warner and Anna Elizabeth Richmond. In 1888, when she was 18, she married Charles Elting French, a Minneapolis flour manufacturer twenty five years older than her. They had two children: Anna Hathaway French (April 6 1892-December 17, 1892) and Charles Elting French (born September 19, 1896)."
Jos. Folk, three-quarters bust, cameo portrait (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_W._Folk
"Joseph "Holy Joe" Wingate Folk (October 28, 1869 – May 28, 1923) was an American lawyer, reformer, and politician from St. Louis, Missouri. He was Governor of Missouri from 1905 to 1909."
Wu Ting Fang, Chinaman, New York (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_Ting-fang
"Wu Ting-fang (Chinese: 伍廷芳; 30 July 1842 – 23 June 1922) was a Chinese calligrapher, diplomat, lawyer, politician, and writer who served as Minister of Foreign Affairs and briefly as Acting Premier during the early years of the Republic of China. He was also known as Ng Choy or Ng Achoy (Chinese: 伍才; pinyin: Wǔ Cái)."
Mrs. Chow Tzchi (LOC)
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swanq said:
The Bemidji daily pioneer. (Bemidji, MN), Jun. 13 1904.
- www.loc.gov/resource/sn86063381/1904-06-13/ed-1/?sp=1&...
"REGRET IS EXPRESSED.
China Will Make Proper Amends for Killing of Correspondent.
Washington, June 13. - Secretary Hay has received a call from Mr. Chow Tzchi, the first secretary of the Chinese legation here, who expressed the deep regret of his government at the reported killing near Newchwang of the American newspaper correspondent, Etzel, by Chinese soldiers who suspected him of being a pirate.
The legation has received no details, but the secretary was able to assure Secretary Hay that his government would make all proper amends for the unfortunate affair if the reports were true."
Mary Garden, bust, copyright by Mishkin, New York (LOC)
Leslie Shaw, portrait bust (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L._M._Shaw
"Leslie Mortier Shaw (November 2, 1848 – March 28, 1932) was an American businessman, lawyer, and politician. He served as the 17th Governor of Iowa and was a Republican candidate in the 1908 United States presidential election. He was Secretary of the Treasury from 1902 to 1907."
26_0052078 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
At the time this photo was taken, NASA/JPL ran a backbone of analog Collins single-sideband multiplex microwave radios. The microwave hops interconnected buildings at the site. You can see the antennas in this photo.
26_0022959 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
“When I land without tearing the airplane up, I feel good.”
— Chuck Yeager
26_0028322 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Looks like a Ford chassis to me.
26_0021993 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
There were no laser printers or PCs in 1974. Microprocessors were not yet common. No bar codes were used in the mails. There was no internet. A Pitney Bowes postal meter machine printed postage and addresses either were on printed labels by data processig people or handwritten.
In fact, the U.S. Postal Service still used horse drawn wagons to move mail between towns. No, I'm kidding about the wagons.
26_0021514 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0071603 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
That looks like a big-butt shaker table.
26_0018076 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Could be rotated 90 degrees clockwise. Crane or hoist testing apparatus? Casting tool?
26_0018069 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Tall guy in the back row is Larry something.
26_0018056 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0016327 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
I think the name tag says Dave or Jake something.
Earl Yarmouth, front standing, with dog (LOC)
- 1 older comment, and then…
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Σταύρος said:
Smashing portrait
HCM00035
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Michael Lehmann said:
Thanks much for adding The Belleville Circa 1975 Bamboo Terrace to CRWDP!
Have tagged for the pool-index :-)
Hospital Corpsmen enhance lifesaving skills and Navy medical readiness
from Navy Medicine
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k said:
Great action video!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The times they are a changing!
- 10 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
The 1914-15 motor directory is available at the lennon-wylie pages, and IM only went to 373 that year.
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Niall McAuley said:
The town hall tower without a clock: Following an ambush in which two police officers were killed on 19 July 1920, the Black and Tans set fire to the town hall in retribution. The building was gutted internally by the fire, but the shell remained intact and the building was completely restored in 1926
Was the Street named after the Hotel or vice versa?
- 8 older comments, and then…
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beachcomber australia said:
Evidently originally called Exchequer Street ...
... In October 1837, property owners on the eastern end of Exchequer Street petitioned the Wide Streets Commission to rename their section of the street, aiming to shed the area's longstanding poor reputation that deterred high-quality tenants. The Commission granted the request, officially designating the eastern portion towards Grafton Street as Wicklow Street; the origin of the name "Wicklow" lacks clear documentation but may derive from the nearby County Wicklow ... "
And ...
"... At Nos. 6-8, the Wicklow Hotel—later known as Glendenning House—served as an early 20th-century hospitality venue, extensively remodelled circa 1907 by architect George O'Connor into a seven-bay four-storey structure with commercial elements.[21] Further alterations in the 1940s and 1950s, including a 1945 front wall rebuild by Thomas McNamara with concrete dressings and a circa 1950 partial reconstruction, adapted it for mixed retail and pub use while retaining its carriage archway. The site held cultural significance, hosting Dublin publisher Fergus O'Connor, who operated from there, producing nationalist postcards, early writings by Seán O'Casey, and related materials amid Ireland's independence struggles; O'Connor's imprisonment post-Easter Rising highlights its ties to nationalist circles. ...
More at - grokipedia.com/page/wicklow_street -
Mike Grimes said:
Streetview.
maps.app.goo.gl/Vos2zNtgEciM9tEM7 -
beachcomber australia said:
Crikey! ...
"The Wicklow Hotel was a regular meeting point and place of leisure for Michael Collins and his associates who frequented the hotel for midday dinner or evening drinks, where all the staff knew them.
On the 28th of January 1921, the head porter of the Wicklow Hotel was shot dead in the hallway of the hotel. All eye witness statements led to Collins and his men being behind the execution.
But why would Collins be involved in the shooting of head porter Doran? Because Collins and his men had been informed that Doran was also working as a spy for the British, providing information to the Deputy Chief of British Intelligence in Ireland, Colonel Hill Dillon."
From - marysbar.ie/our-history/
Edit: Via Trove the porter was called William Doran - trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/23515885
Could he be the man in the doorway ?! -
Architecture of Dublin said:
www.dia.ie/works/view/39202/building/CO.+DUBLIN%2C+DUBLIN...
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Niall McAuley said:
The dia confirms 1907 remodelling, and this is the 7 bay result, so after 1907. Does not look new here, but the lady at left looks like prewar fashion...
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
beachcomber australia well done on finding links to both O'Connor and Collins!
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Could this be an O'Connor selfie? Is that him in the doorway?
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Mike Grimes said:
National Library of Ireland on The Commons maybe proudly showing his work off. He did many a building in Dublin, including that great watering hole, The International, also on Wicklow Street, in 1911..
www.archiseek.com/tag/george-l-oconnor/ -
Suck Diesel said:
“Shooting of Doran, Wicklow Hotel:
We used to go round to maids and boots in the different hotels and get information from them. Collins got information from Paddy O'Shea that Doran was giving information to the British. Collins used to dire in the Wicklow Hotel regularly and was satisfied that Doran was a British agent.
There was a delay in executing this spy, we had been trying to get him for a fortnight, and Tobin turned to me one day and asked me would I carry out the execution. I said I would if I got Dan MeDonnell to go along with me, so the two of us were detailed to carry out the job.
Dan MoDonnell already knew Doran, and the two of us walked to the door of the hotel and asked for Paddy O'Shea.
Just then Doran came out of one of the rooms, I think it was the dining-room, and Dan McDonnell said, "That's Doran". I produced my revolver and shot him through the head and the heart, and McDonnel1 shot him through the stomach. We had a covering party and we had no difficulty in getting away”
marysbar.ie/our-history/
26_0023291 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Old school multimedia, Have you ever turned a slide tray upside down and discovered the locking ring had not been installed 5 minutes before shown time? 😮
26_0023087 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
That Federal siren probably draws more current than the truck's starter motor.
26_0024088 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0021306 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Amtrak dining car? Not a boat?
26_0018414 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Trichloroethane is misspelled above. Use only under adult supervision.
26_0026505 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Looks like a headset jack under the console writing surface.
26_0026434 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
"You can be sure if it's Westinghouse."
Handset cords that retract into the console are part of what's called a panel phone. Single speaker with volume control was possibly for the original VHF conventional simulcast train channel on 160.410 MHz.
26_0026362 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0026430 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Guess: is that Rohr's Arriflex 16mm movie camera?
Me: "The BART employee appears to be reading a printout inside the acoustic cabinet and taking notes with a pen. That's how it was done in 1974."
My friend: "That, and five dollars, will buy you an espresso drink at Starbucks."
26_0026405 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
In any center with a similar function, the persons whose desks are closest to the screens are responsible for a subset of the system, (on the display in front of them). The person in the back (right of frame) is the shift supervisor.
I am told the original 1970s BART communications backbone was a single-sideband, frequency-division multiplex analog coaxial cable system akin to Bell System L-Carrier. If true, the SCADA and block signals all ran over the coaxial cable.
These images are sub-snapshot level quality.
The blessings of Saint Patrick be upon you all!
- 1 older comment, and then…
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beachcomber australia said:
☘️
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
beachcomber australia ☘️
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Clive Varley said:
🇮🇪
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La Belle Province said:
And to us all. And the beautiful St. Patrick's Breastplate prayer is in my mouth today.
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Foxglove said:
Wow, never realised he was bald ! My perception of Patrick is wholly changed, enjoy the holiday
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crack jackson jr said:
💚💚💚
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Swordscookie said:
La Belle Province it blows my mind and IMHO the Gaelic version is even more beautiful.
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AMTER said:
Éirinn go Brách
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Galilla S said:
Wait, did he title his writings himself and call himself a Saint? 😮😄
26_0047122 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The antenna on the cab roof is an Excalibur VHF antenna. Some of these were OEMed by Excalibur and branded Motorola. They often had a white radome over them but the radome could be destroyed without affecting the antenna's function.
26_0019255 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Odd paint. Is this an early Panavia Tornado with the reheat on?
26_0043237 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
These are apparently Rohr's effort to make horn antennas for the Bell System. These were an artifact of five nines reliability. Most of the 3500-4000 MHz links these carried have been transitioned to (reliable) fiber.
In a WalMart culture, where everyone is trying to get something for nothing, there's no room for five nines reliability.
Suggested reading: Sagan, Scott, The limits of Safety: Organizations, Accidents, and Nuclear Weapons
Installed horn antennas:
26_0044601 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
I think the original concept for this vehicle was to have a modular engine/transmission/drive axle. This is a guess based on how the structural parts were made for this-here coach. If a correct guess, this may have been the artists concept of a mobile shop or jig that allowed the drive system to be swapped out.
In real life, it's hard to beat a Detroit Diesel and an Allison Automatic transmission for operating cost and reliability. Look at most any refuse truck, transit bus, or firefighting vehicle and that's what you'll find. Fleet managers frame the problem in a Detroit/Allison way. The market is set up to support this framework. Still, this is a worthwhile concept.
26_0015399 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
I'm not sure exactly what's going on here. They're measuring impacts. They're sending a mass down that PVC pipe and it's hammering the surface, then they're measuring the "dent." Adding tag impact test to these images. There's this set of color images and a series of black-and-white photos. The material they're impacting varies as does the impact surface. Guess: measuring how much vibration gets conducted when an explosive bolt goes off?
26_0070867 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
This PBX attendant (operator) appears to be holding a message form. Before voice mail, the attendant(s) would take a message on paper then either page you or wait for you to call in to retrieve your messages.
Attendants also filled out a paper ticket recording each long distance call. For example, if you called the Auburn, Washington plant, the attendant would fill out a paper form and your department would get billed for the call.
The odd ball on the pen is used to dial the rotary dial at right. Sore fingers? Just did your nails? The pen gets worn instead of you.
Many photos show Rohr employees with Pac*Tel Motorola Bravo numeric pagers on their belts.
26_0071037 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0071471 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Beautiful. The CP-140 Aurora, P-3, and Electra L-188 all used a nacelle that looks similar to this. These were installed on Allison turboprops. There appeared to be at least three different propellers used with these engines. The props could be feathered. If this is incorrect, please post a comment below to correct me.
26_0071450 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
This appears to be a damaged copy of a NASA public domain image. Agree? Disagree? In those days, it was probably printed on a 35mm slide and used in sales presentations...
26_0070864 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
I'm searching for the nomenclature of this Western Electric PBX attendant console. If you know it, kindly add a source in comments below or tags.
The PBX behind this looks like a Western Electric 702 (step-by-step, electromechanical) which were very popular in Pacific Telephone territory at the time. I have a tough time telling 701, 702, and 740s apart. Note that all 1970s-era Rohr Chula Vista images show rotary dials, suggesting step-by-step.
The plugs and jacks look like bantams rather than quarter-inch phone plugs. Do you agree?
In some installations, long distance calls tripped a mechanical counter. There would be a backboard with a bunch of mechanical counters. Each counter registered ZUM Units or something billable. Somebody from Pacific Telephone would come in with a Polaroid once a month and take photos. The photos would be how the user was billed.
You can almost hear that 600 Hz + 120 Hz dialtone...
26_0071577 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The statue looks like works identified as Mayan but I don't know Mayan art. Can anybody say more about the statue? Please comment below.
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jessamyn west said:
Chuck Walla I think it's one of these?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chalchiuhtlicue#/media/File:Teotihu...
From this article.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chalchiuhtlicue -
Chuck Walla said:
Looks like a match. Thank you jessamyn west! I've added a couple of tags to help Aztec culture seekers.
Contradicting/amplifying comments welcomed below.
Grafton Street
- 48 older comments, and then…
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Sameer Malik said:
A glimpse into the early 1900s—when cities were transforming with the rise of automobiles and modern life.
Echoes of an era when empires stood, and modern cities were just beginning to take form.
A Garland for Reginald
- 5 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
No Garlands in the 1901 or 1911 census in Waterford.
I am liking James Garland in 1911. -
National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Niall McAuley Shame we have no visible reg. no.
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beachcomber australia said:
25 April 1912 is a Thursday ...
Mr Poole's sign is still on his old premises behind -
"Visitors are invited to inspect
Poole's Stores & Library 134 Quay
Tourist Depot Photographic Studio" -
O Mac said:
There are seven cars registered to a J Garland, Manager of Humber Ltd, on Abbey St in the 1912/13 Motor Directory.
There's also a James Garland 44 "Travelling Salesman Motor Cars and Cycles" in the 1911 census.
Maybe he was trying to flog a car to Poole? -
beachcomber australia said:
Google Lens is nudging me towards a Humber -
www.justcars.com.au/cars-for-sale/1910-humber/JCMD3769793 -
Niall McAuley said:
I think James Garland, Commercial Traveller, lived to be 80.
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Suck Diesel said:
www.facebook.com/groups/IAmWaterford/posts/1545797842596848/
In colour -
John Spooner said:
I wonder if James Garland, car salesman, started his career as James Garland, bicycle salesman. On 6th November 1893 the Irish Independent reported on a case of bicycle fraud. James Garland, manager of the Seddon Company's Depot, Bachelor's walk, had taken a 10s deposit on a £10 bicycle, and neither the balance nor the bicycle was seen again until it turned up in a pawn shop. This MO was carried out at several other bike shops, The accused was remanded.
Hmm. Not sure. The paragraph noting his death in Ireland's Saturday Night on 15th March 1947 mentions motor-cycles and bicycles but not cars, and working for the Dunlop Company and Humber Ltd, as well as his work with the Motor and Cycle Traders' Benevolent Fund.
Edit: but the Irish Independent mentions his 60 years in the cycle and motor trade.
Humber, like Singer, Rover and many others, was a bicycle company which switched to cars. -
Niall McAuley said:
James is a Commercial Traveller Cycles in 1901.
At the birth of daughter Madge in 1897, a Commercial Traveller.
At the birth of son Ernest in 1895, Manager of Pneumatic Tyre Company.
His marriage to Mary Keatinge in 1894, a Commercial Clerk. I think his father, also James, was a Library Porter in TCD.
Street in Berlin, Germany
- 2 older comments, and then…
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r.csavo said:
Parochialstraße
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bundesarchiv_B_145_Bild-P...
oldthing.at/AK-Berlin-Haeuserreihe-in-der-Parochialstrass...
Edmonton Tire Company commercial set at CFRN-TV, Edmonton, Alberta, 1956
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jessamyn west said:
I enjoy this image but... why does she have a rifle? Is this at a sports show?
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Provincial Archives of Alberta said:
jessamyn west No, it was a television commercial! Unfortunately the commercial is lost to time so we can only imagine how they worked a rifle into it.
James Campbell Percy and friends
- 9 older comments, and then…
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Suck Diesel said:
Humber 11 hp Tourer, 1912
The arrest of Flora Drummond, Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst, WSPU offices at Clement's Inn, 1908.
from LSE Library
- 4 older comments, and then…
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Nicolas Appel said:
Good work! Congrats on making it to explore!
26_0071219 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Do Amazon and WalMart recognize good truck drivers?
How much can these be adjusted by an amateur? Input was a noisy JPeG. By horsing with the exposure, the texture of the wood paneling and the purse came out a little. With a slight rotation, lighting flattened, and some dirt cleaned off, this is what I think it should look like: [http://www.flickr.com/photos/195176867@N05/55152152776/]
26_0071253 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Vice President of Rohr "Keith" in the background.
At left: a Hasselblad superwide w/motor winder?
26_0071255 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
This appears to have been shot during the Prince of Wales visit.
At center: Keith ___rtlinger, Vice President, New Product Development. Tag on guy at right says "rain lobby 16."
Remember shorthand? I can't see if these two are taking shorthand...
26_0071250 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0071260 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
According to Wikipedia, the Prince may have been serving aboard HMS Jupiter (F60) at the time this visit occurred.
26_0071304 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Image should be viewed after being rotated 180 degrees. Coach is upside down in this photo.
26_0016184 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Guess: they're troubleshooting a noise or coupling problem between the braided wiring when the product is vibrating?
26_0016211 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0071447 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Making DynaRohr titanium material?
26_0071511 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
This would be viewed after rotating it 90 degrees counter clockwise. U-tube manometers? (The original u-tube.)
26_0071519 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Trust reverser scale model mockup?
CO 1069-367-3
- 2 older comments, and then…
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Jackie Stclair said:
boneshaker boneshaker
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Jackie Stclair said:
boneshaker My mother is a Wolford. This is my mother's uncle. Do you live in England?
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Jackie Stclair said:
He was knighted in 1954.
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Jackie Stclair said:
His daughter was the first beauty queen of Guyana. Her name is Phyliis Woolford
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Jackie Stclair said:
boneshaker do you have pictures with him and his brother? His brother died but we are not sure the age. We don't know anything much and would like see pictures. My mom would like to see pictures of her grandfather









