Conversations

Here are conversations that have happened in the last week on Flickr Commons:

Galvanizing the Deise

  • 13 older comments, and then…
  • Mike Grimes said:
    Perhaps not a picture of the Déise, but of the Rathdowney GAA team in Laois? Rathdowney won the Laois County Final in 1911, however April would seem a bit early for a final. The jerseys certainly seem to match the ones in the photo in the link I've added below. If it is of Rathdowney, they won the county final in 1911 Rathdowney, 7-1, Clonaslee, nil, as mentioned on page 25 (38 in the pdf) of laoisgaa.ie/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/laois-bible-2.pdf

    Here's a picture of a Rathdowney team from 1911.

    hockeygods.com/images/16961-Rathdowney_GAA_Hurling_Team_1...
  • Mike Grimes said:
    Looks like the photo bomber was asked to leave for this one.

    catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000592693
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Mike Grimes Agree about the jerseys, but where does Mr Murphy of St. Ursula's Terrace come in with a Laois team?
  • Foxglove said:
    from the many photos of hurling teams on the NLI Flickr, it's interesting to see how the shape/design of the hurl changes over the decades...photo taken before AI...but the moustaches give me doubts
  • Mike Grimes said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons That's a good question, because there's no mention of a Murphy on St. Ursula's Terrace, Waterford in the 1911 census.
  • John Spooner said:
    Probably irrelevant, but on 9th April 1911, Tipperary beat Wexford in front of 13,000 spectators (brought by special trains) at Jones Road, Dublin. At stake were gold medals and a handsome shield presented by the Hon. Otway Cuffe. The tournament was promoted by Ring College, Waterford. (Limerick Leader - Monday 10 April 1911)
  • Niall McAuley said:
    Helping confirm the date, a few lads are wearing bits of plants. April 9th 1911 was Palm Sunday.
  • An Poc Ar Buile said:
    Perhaps the location is Fraher Field, Dungarvan? cf. the first photo here (incidentally, I think the 1920 date may be a few years too early) www.stradbally.com/gaaphoto.html
  • An Poc Ar Buile said:
    images.waterfordmuseum.ie/exhibit/web/DisplayImage/K02ukx...

PSA Born Digital Image

  • 11 older comments, and then…
  • Pig Pang said:
    Servus, San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives, PSA Born Digital Image is a masterpiece!

26_0071305 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    "It's dead, Jim."

26_0071350 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    I believe this is the user interface for a pre-microprocessor material handling system.

26_0071454 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Notice the tires are mismatched: not ideal if you're trying to test a new design.

26_0071485 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Mr. Peterson may have been a Punch Press Operator A and a Foreman. The mustacioed guy is in many of these.

26_0071468 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Apologies if I got the spelling wrong. It's not clear how this relates to Rohr. Could this be the Tijuana plant?

26_0071453 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    I see what looks like a General Motors Delco starter. See the two pipes going into the muffler? I think the engine may be a Detroit Diesel 8V71.

26_0071440 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Pie foot? I had to look it up. Apparently "pie" in Español means anatomical "foot" in U.S. English.

26_0071426 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This plant in Mexicali, Mexico, opened in December 1970. Aircraft sheet metal fabrication and subassembly were produced according to Rohr News, December 1990.

    This location may have produced harnesses and sheet metal parts for BART cars or those may have been produced at another location in Mexicali.

26_0071474 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This was likely to be custom-built track because WMATA cars apparently use 4 foot 8¼ inch gauge, a quarter inch narrower than U.S. standard. Also note this is temporary or test track. The third rail shroud is wood. Note the transit couplers.

26_0071574 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Guess: this is part of Rohr that archives all of the vital documents. If so, this goes with the microfilm series:

    You could focus stack the image above and this one:

26_0071565 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Two guesses:
    1. It's a vent in case some gas storage tank goes over pressure.
    2. It's the tailpipe for the engine on one of their marine vessel products.

26_0071602 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    My initial guess: Munich plant. Post a comment if you know, Still researching...

26_0071566 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Winder Transportation Systems gave the Rohr factory in Chula Vista as their address. They filed themselves into existence on 11/08/1972. Their existence seemed to end on 04/10/1979.

    According to a 1972 edition of Rohr News, this had been a nacelle factory from 1958 to the mid-1970s. They made nacelles for the Lockheed Aircraft Company's C-130 program. It switched to transit vehicle production about 1972.

    The terrain in the photo is flat and all of the cars are missing front license plates. The text says WMATA. This was in the U.S. state of Georgia per the 1975 Rohr annual report.

    You're shaking your head? "Chuck, you messed up!" you say? Please add a comment to correct anything that is not accurate or to amplify on a subject.

    Add a tag. I double dare you.

26_0071580 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    If you look at the device on the copy table, and the box with the meter under the window, they both have a Recorder logo on them. This was the Kodak microfilm product line.

    Another example on Flickr:

26_0071576 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This may be an example of architectural prestressed concrete products made by San Diego Prestressed Concrete Company?

26_0071577 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This may be an example of architectural prestressed concrete products made by San Diego Prestressed Concrete Company?

26_0071578 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This may be an example of architectural prestressed concrete products made by San Diego Prestressed Concrete Company?

26_0071651 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    I think this is a signal mockup to tell the train operator if the switch they're approaching is aligned as the operator expects?

26_0069719 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This construction site appears to be on the north side of Imperial Avenue near 15th Street in San Diego. The pole line along the street in the background may be along Imperial Avenue. You can help by posting comments if this is wrong. You can also add tags if you see something in this scene that some guy using a search engine could be looking for.

The Ulster TT at Dundrod, where heroes are forged

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • Mike Grimes said:
    The 1954 RAC Tourist Trophy was a motor race for Sports Cars which took place on 11 September 1954 on the roads around Dundrod, (County Antrim, Northern Ireland).

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1954_RAC_Tourist_Trophy
  • beachcomber australia said:
    GoogleMapsSatellite3D - maps.app.goo.gl/W3KMZbu33Ruhgaqa6
  • beachcomber australia said:
    11 September 1954 was a Saturday ...
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Mike Grimes Thanks for helping us establish an exact date for this one. And beachcomber australia, for the day of the week.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Why were all those TTs (this one, Isle of Man, etc.) called Tourist Trophies?
  • O Mac said:
    The "Tourist Trophy" was so called because it was the British round of a global series of "trials" for road-going automobiles (Tourers). It was the "International Tourist Trophy" hosted in the parts of the United Kingdom where such trials could legally take place on public roads.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    O Mac Thank you.
  • Foxglove said:
    as a "L" learner driver 40 odd years ago I practised my corners here :-) scared the pants of my brother...took him along here in a rental car a few years ago as part of the wake for my mother.....still scared the pants of him...there is also a fabulous "tree tunnel" along the road, featured often in my Ireland albums... yes I was driving looking through the viewfinder of a SLR...
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Foxglove Shocking behaviour altogether!

26_0071110 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    These are the same people, same clothing, with Dan Hearn and his (same) megaphone as are seen in the 1972 RX-2 photos. Do you think the dates in the text tags are wrong?

    Example:

University Chevrolet, NE 45th Street & Roosevelt Way NE, Seattle, Washington (LOC)

  • prima seadiva said:
    Building still there remodeled for a different business.
  • swanq said:
    See 2025 Streetview
  • Rex Mandel said:
    Exactly the time I was going to school at UW.

26_0069717 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This series is believed to have been shot about 7 months after Rohr acquired this line of business.

    San Diego Prestressed Concrete Company was a wholly-owned subsidiary of Rohr (1975 annual report). The company first filed corporate filings 07/23/1953. Corporate filings suggest Rohr bought the company on 02/04/1971. On that date, the address filed was, "850 Lagoon Dr., Chula Vista." It seems like they diversified too widely...

Unknown building

  • Abbie Hudson said:
    Found it! 915 Tower Road. Looking at Google street view, it was torn down sometime between Sept. 2017 and Aug. 2018

26_0071704 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    I think the PC AT display is a CGA or EGA but don't know how to tell from the photo. There's what looks like a modem to the right of the display.

    Your ideas and corrections are welcomed. Please add tags if there is something in the photo that a user (or search engine) might be seeking.

26_0070754 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Notice the California DMV "manufacturer" license plates on the buses above. Transit buses are very difficult to make, I claim. When Rohr bought Flxible, the coach on the right was winning bids in U.S. transit system purchases. I saw more General Motors coaches but there were a lot of Flxibles. There are many Flxible bus photos on Flickr.

Well-worn teacher's car in outback Queensland during the 1920s

  • Classic Cars Australia said:
    Great photo! Hard to beat a Ford T for that work!

Woman watches while two men try to get the rear of a car out of a creek, ca. 1925

  • Classic Cars Australia said:
    Probably still there!

Quaker State gas, Youngsville, Pennsylvania (LOC)

Frank Hawkins Buick, Seattle, Washington (LOC)

Peg House Gas, Route 101, Leggett, California (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    See
    Peg House, Redwood Gifts, Route 101, Leggett, California (LOC)

Hat & Boots Texaco, Seattle, Washington (LOC)

  • prima seadiva said:
    Station gone. Hat and Boots repainted moved to nearby park
  • swanq said:
    See
    Day 161/365 - Giant Hat and Giant Boots

The Can Pile, Casselton, North Dakota (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    See
    The Can Pile, Casselton, North Dakota (LOC)

The Can Pile, Casselton, North Dakota (LOC)

Dick Dunkle Gulf, Bedford, Pennsylvania (LOC)

Bomber Gas, Route 99 E., Milwaukie, Oregon (LOC)

The Can Pile, Casselton, North Dakota (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    See
    The Can Pile, Casselton, North Dakota (LOC)

Gas station, Santa Claus, Arizona (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Claus,_Arizona
    "Santa Claus (also known as Santa Claus Acres) is an uninhabited desert place in Mohave County, Arizona, United States. Originating in 1937, Santa Claus lies approximately 14 miles (23 km) northwest of Kingman, Arizona, along U.S. Route 93 between mile markers 57 and 58, immediately north of Hermit Drive and just south of both Grasshopper Junction, Arizona, and the Junk Art of Chloride, a group of metal statues in Chloride, Arizona, that include a flamingo made out of a motorcycle gas tank Characterized in 1988 as "a little roadside place on the west shoulder of U.S. Route 93," Santa Claus receives traffic from motorists driving between Phoenix, Arizona, and Las Vegas, Nevada, or Hoover Dam."

Cecilia's Flower Shop (gas Station), Silver City, New Mexico (LOC)

Friendship House Antiques (gas station), Prescott, Arizona (LOC)

Golden Eagle Gas, San Diego, California (LOC)

  • swanq said:
    This could be the same gas station as in
    Golden Eagle gas pumps, 8th & Market Streets, San Diego, California (LOC)

26_0071077 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    William G. White speaking and Irving J. Symons seated to his right in the image.

26_0071928 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This might be Toulouse in France?

26_0071046 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Bob Wilson at right. Burt Raynes at left. Check the hat.

26_0071978 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Structural test?

26_0070881 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    TACV = Cabo Verde Airlines?

26_0070826 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Please turn this 90 degrees counterclockwise when possible.

26_0071463 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    The curve suggests this may possibly be showing compounding interest. May be related to credit union or investment in company stock?

26_0070711 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This image could be rotated 90 degres counterclockwise.

26_0063170 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Please rotate this 90 degrees clockwise if possible.

26_0069782 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Forklift driver's hardhat says, "E. Nelson." This has been added to the tags. Thanks for a good scan of the image!

26_0069792 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    My archives suggest Rohr's factory radio system had 5 VHF high band frequencies near 153 and 158 MHz. They were in Manufacturers Radio Service.

    The mobile radio looks like a Motorola (model series) D23AAT Dispatcher with a die cast microphone. These were tube type radios with acorn or peanut tubes. The final power tube was a 2E24. They have helical antennas.

26_0070615 Rohr Collection Image

26_0042662 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This image could be rotated 180 degrees.

26_0042663 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    This image could be rotated 180 degrees.

Beacon gas, South Milwaukee, Wisconsin (LOC)

26_0036655 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    I can't identify the model of this one. Can you? Sure is B I G!

26_0035517 Rohr Collection Image

  • Chuck Walla said:
    Several sources claim this 1972 illustration is by James N. Devin. One source claims it was distributed by the John Birch Society. One source claims the illustration was a response to President Nixon's establishment of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. I can't find any original catalog information at Library of Congress. Can you? I'll tag the file once the name and other data are confirmed by an official source.

Bomber Gas, Route 99 E., Milwaukie, Oregon (LOC)

  • Kevin said:
    For those curious, this aircraft is being restored to flying condition in Salem Oregon. They took it down in 2014, but I did see it at this station and bought gas there from time to time until then.

    b17alliance.com/history

British Library digitised image from page 285 of "The Invasion of Britain by Julius Cæsar"

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • fraser donachie said:
    www.flickr.com/people/191990756@N02/ yes, you’re right … presumably ‘inning’ is an old term for what we now call ‘reclaiming’ …

Ah lads, I'm stoney broke, any chance of a loan?

  • beachcomber australia said:
    29 October 1956 was a Monday ...
  • Foxglove said:
    Hoped to raise £12m ...In mid 1950s Ireland's economy slumped.
    National Loan, 1956. - Statement by Minister for Finance. – Dáil Éireann (15th Dáil) – Wednesday, 24 Oct 1956 – Houses of the Oireachtas share.google/mCTCB9lHax9YQKYBz
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    beachcomber australia You sure?
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    Foxglove I don't think we've encountered Mr Sweetman. Unless he is in one of our Tynan photos with all the politician at events in Donegal.
  • beachcomber australia said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons I'm sure, to be sure!
  • John Spooner said:
    A summary of the 1956 National Loans appeared in the Sligo Champion on Saturday 29th December 1956 (which was a Saturday)
    National Loans
    The First National Loan of 1958 (£20,000,000) was opened on 13th February and closed on 17th February. Subscriptions amounted to £8.700,000. The second Loan ( £12,000.000) was opened on 29th October and closed on 2nd November. Subscriptions totalled £9,166,300. The raising of the bank rate in Britain in March while the Loan was actually on offer had a serious effect on the first Loan and on the Irish economy. The Suez crisis and the Anglo-French invasion of Egypt affected the prospects of the second Loan and caused petrol rationing and a trade increase in the price of petrol (December 6th).

    So not an unqualified success.
  • Suck Diesel said:
    The poor take up seemed to reflect a lack of confidence in the Irish economy.
    And probably justified too.

    Bye the bye, I’m old enough to remember the petrol queues during Suez, never mind the 1970s, same again coming up?

Hat & Boots Texaco, Seattle, Washington (LOC)

  • prima seadiva said:
    Station gone. Hat and Boots repainted moved to nearby park

McKay Lincoln Mercury, Seattle, Washington (LOC)

  • prima seadiva said:
    Building still there and still a car sales place, now Maserati.

Skip's Skelly Service Station, Omaha, Nebraska (LOC)

  • Abubakr Saeed said:
    Great historical collection!

H.M. Kittle

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • Σταύρος said:
    Cool 😎

Helen Czech with dogs from Whitehorse-to-Winnipeg dog sledding trek, Edmonton, Alberta, 1946

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • Provincial Archives of Alberta said:
    d156156156 Thanks for the information! The article states that she flew from Whitehorse to Edmonton because women weren't allowed on the Alaska Highway (very strange, considering many women were involved with the construction of said highway) but doesn't state how she got from Edmonton to Winnipeg. There are other articles that mention support teams so perhaps she travelled in a support vehicle.

3D Perspective View from the Surface of Venus

Fishy Scouts and Banjaxed Airplanes

  • 3 older comments, and then…
  • beachcomber australia said:
    Some good information about the scouts and the crash here - www.greatwarforum.org/topic/213990-air-accident-dublin-19...
  • John Spooner said:
    Here's the account of the presentation of the Silver Cross to the scouts which appeared in the Irish Times on 5th December 1919
    Irish Times - Friday 05 December 1919
  • John Spooner said:
    A Lt. Goodnoh was placed 2nd in the 220yds at the Royal Air Force (Ireland) Sports held at Landsdowne road on Saturday 9th August 1919 (Dublin Daily Express - Monday 11 August 1919).
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner beachcomber australia Thanks, both of you. Never mind a Silver Cross. They should have been given all the badges! And every Camp ever after must have been very dull affairs by comparison.
  • John Spooner said:
    According to RAF records, Scott Tracey Goodnoh, born about 1894, service date 17th June 1917.

    Further delving finds 6-year-old Scott T Goodnoh in the 1900 US census, in Hartford, Connecticut, and 17-year-old American Scott Goodnoh in Quebec in the Canadian 1911 census. Finally in Canadian death registers, Scott Goodnoh died aged 97 on 4/7/1991 in Montreal.
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner Unusual names are yer only man. Goodnoh is a little easier than air mechanic Gray?
  • John Spooner said:
    National Library of Ireland on The Commons Indeed. Scott Tracey Goodnoh became a dentist. Here's his entry in the 1926 McGill University yearbook
    Scott Tracey Goodnoh
  • National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
    John Spooner Excellent. Home cooking. And "Efficiency, man, efficiency".
  • beachcomber australia said:
    You probably already knew there is a photo on the next page of the album of "Lieut: Goodnoh R.A.F., Air Craftsman Gray (Taken at Gormanston Aerodrime)." Goodnoh on the left.

    See Image 20 - catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000535308

Atlas ICBM Prelaunch--'(no text)

  • 1 older comment, and then…
  • Dirk de Vor said:
    See also photo: PictionID:45181007 - Catalog:14_017241 - Title:Atlas 60D Details: Erection of Missile 60D; Pad 11; View from Tower Prior to Mating Date: 06/14/1960 - Filename:14_017241.TIF - - - - - Image from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection"" You will see the same vehicles on the right hand side, including the VW Beetle

No Drones were harmed in this strike!

38th Bomb Grp 039

Convair Atlas

  • 2 older comments, and then…
  • Dirk de Vor said:
    Was launched from Launch Complex 11. Because of a problem with the yaw gyro motor, which was not running, it broke up at the forward end of the LOX tank at T+43 seconds. To prevent a recurrence of this, Convair developed the Spin Motor Rotation Detection system, a collection of sensors designed to ensure proper gyroscope operation and which would prevent the launch if the motors were not running at the proper speed. It was not fully phased into Atlas vehicles until 1961 however