Conversations
Here are conversations that have happened in the last week on Flickr Commons:
Union Oil Gas, Sawtelle, Los Angeles, California (LOC)
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Matt Carroll said:
The color balance is off for this. I think it’s tungsten balanced film shot in daylight.
BP SDASM_06686 SDASM Historical Image
from SDASM Archives
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These Pictures are Entirely Bad said:
Replica or original plane?
Gas n' Go, Ashtabula, Ohio (LOC)
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Michael said:
I would love to see a nite time photo.
Happy Anniversary (Almost)
- 7 older comments, and then…
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beachcomber australia said:
30 April 1930 was a Wednesday ...
Hmm ... 42 College Road, Cork needs some TLC - maps.app.goo.gl/MheFwsWcaNbbCiE8A ! -
Mike Grimes said:
Mr. J. Murphy's former residence is certainly nothing like Mr. D. O'Connell's the other day.
www.myhome.ie/residential/brochure/42-college-road-cork-c... -
O Mac said:
National Library of Ireland on The Commons Your link opens to the same photo but the title states "Wedding, group of four :
commissioned by Mr. J. Cunningham, 42 College Road, Cork"
not Murphy. -
Aristide Mazzarella said:
👍
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
O Mac Thank you! Need to clean my pince-nez, or get my eyes tested. Maybe both...
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O Mac said:
John Cunningham 28years 10 months in April 1926. He worked for Messrs Dwyer's Washington St as a clerk (ledger) He'd two sisters, Frances (26) and Madge (22).
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John Spooner said:
Mike Grimes "immense potential" in estateagentese.
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Niall McAuley said:
Party 1 Name: Mary Ring
Party 2 Name: John Cunningham
Date of Event: 20/04/1930
District/Reg Area: Thomastown -
Niall McAuley said:
Witnesses Noel Murphy and Katherine Kearns
BP SDASM_06996 SDASM Historical Image
from SDASM Archives
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Stig Jarlevik said:
Hawker Siddeley AV-8A code WH02 and ex VMA-542.
Note that it carries the MASDC (Davis Monthan AFB) code 7A016.
It did so between 16 April 1986 and 16 Jan 1992 when it for some reason got a USAF code HL001
What was it doing at Gillespie Field?
Stig
BP SDASM_06944 SDASM Historical Image
from SDASM Archives
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CASSIDY PHOTOGRAPHY said:
I have met Jimmy Doolittle and have a First Printing of "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo" autographed by him.
A Blissful existence in Newbliss
- 18 older comments, and then…
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
derangedlemur Mr Lemur, would you check your FlickrMail when you have a minute?
26_0049907 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
What if there were a Lexan window in the plywood so the forklift driver could see where they're going?
26_0049916 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0026620 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Comments welcomed. The white stuff looks like tacky mat used to pull all the dirt off your shoe soles in areas with contamination standards. But I think it's something to do with leveling the assembly fixtures. They're doing something to shim the floor out so the assembly fixtures are perfectly level.
26_0026551 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
John Daly Boulevard is on the right. El Camino Real is on the right.
26_0026540 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Checking: I think this is on the Fremont line between Fremont and Union City.
26_0070206 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
It might be accounts payable or accounts receivable? There's a safe at lower left that looks like it's for a small amount of cash. There's possibly airbills for shipping parts on her desk.
If not used for journalism, I'd brighten her teeth. It looks like she's missing an incisor.
26_0070208 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Looks like a Western Union Telegram form at lower right. A binder at lower right says, "Chase Manhattan." It might be accounts payable or accounts receivable?
26_0070218 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
I think that's a serial number stamp being used by the employee at right. You set it to a starting number. Each time you stamp something the number increments by one.
If not, it may be a date stamp.
26_0070209 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0074553 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
These photos show Rohr Board members so it looks like an annual shareholders' meeting. So far, I can't find news accounts of the meeting.
26_0074548 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Fred Anderson is a common name. One of the employees with this name worked at Receiving Inspection in Riverside.
26_0074573 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
As of 1970, Frank McReery held the title, "Executive Vice President." I'm unsure of his title at the time this photo was taken.
A decade or two after the alleged U.S./British 1953 overthrow of Iran's government, the Shah of Iran's government bought about 70 of this aircraft type. The numbers vary according to different authorities.
26_0063657 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
There is a moment in a parent's life where you are alarmed to discover your child has become a teen.
26_0063651 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
This photographer did a great job capturing the event.
The walls hold the stories!
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beachcomber australia said:
After 1913 ?
"Wakeman drew this monument in August 1880. It can be found in a recess in the north wall of the nave, just west of the rood-screen within Sligo's Dominican Friary. This is the O'Craian or Crean tomb of 1506 and is the earliest monument in the church.
What is immediately noticeable is that the lower part of the tomb was completely buried when Wakeman illustrated it. This is because the Board of Works reduced the ground level to the original level during the restoration of the friary in 1913 by Doctor Cochrane. ... ..."
From - www.askaboutireland.ie/reading-room/environment-geography...
MCCCCCCVI -
beachcomber australia said:
In August 2007 via Val

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Mike Grimes said:
Quite the dynasty...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crehan -
beachcomber australia said:
TombView ! - maps.app.goo.gl/cog6gBF6yPfkdRmu7
Great Northern Hotel, Warrenpoint, Co. Down
- 64 older comments, and then…
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Brian McCalmont said:
And 5 years later... I can confirm the bus was indeed Silver, as it seems all the Mourne Touring Companies Charabancs were. (Source advert from the Newry Telegraph January 1914)
26_0073758 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Nice capture of the airborne horseshoe.
Anyone know what park this is? I can't find any information. Yet.
Hey, it's Secretary Hegseth! 😄 (Kidding.)
26_0073725 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
I think the guy on the right may be Jack Walsh of the San Diego County Board of Supervisors. Why would he be at this picnic?
Burning the autumn leaves in Norwich, Connecticut (LOC)
- 13 older comments, and then…
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Anthony Knoll said:
2024 Street View! Someone important must currently live in the dark canary yellow house third to the right as it is completely blurred out on every capture! The house is still standing as the spire can be seen behind the second house in the most recent street view capture.
maps.app.goo.gl/bJtpjiTGS2YSHFv28
Is it a dog, is it a cat, is it a chicken in a hat?
- 3 older comments, and then…
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CASSIDY PHOTOGRAPHY said:
Pomeranian
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beachcomber australia said:
"THE COURTHOUSE.
Todays Court House and Heritage Centre now stands where an original building was built in 1735 as a barracks to accommodate a half company of soldiers but was also used also as a Court House from these early days. In the early part of the 19th century a Revenue Office was opened here and then during the famine an overflow of 120 people from the Work House were housed in the upper third story of the building.
During the same era General Sessions of the Peace were held in June and December and Petty Sessions the first Monday in every fortnight. A special court was also held every three weeks for the recovery of debts not exceeding ten pounds.
The building was burned down during 1920 and rebuilt and opened again in 1927. ..."
via - www.facebook.com/188759031195299/photos/a.185879658419152...
So photo before 1920. -
beachcomber australia said:
Patrick Comerford is interesting about the three-arched Market House (and cottages out of sight behind).
www.patrickcomerford.com/2020/10/town-planning-bridges-an...
Can anyone read the clock ? -
Dún Laoghaire Micheál said:
maps.app.goo.gl/YbhhDvc6pcA3FUSD7
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Niall McAuley said:
I see two dogs, but the white animal in the right foreground is a chicken, pecking.
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Niall McAuley said:
Not a million miles away in the catalogue, this Tralee shot is 1901-1911, probably nearer 1901:

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Niall McAuley said:
Horgan, O'Sullivan and Timothy O'Connor all present in 1901 and 1911, no help.
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Foxglove said:
Pre Dr Suess..definitely not a cat in the hat
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Niall McAuley But no hat.
The Høidahl-children ca. 1917
- 6 older comments, and then…
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Briella Hoidhal said:
Holy cow thats my family
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Briella Hoidhal said:
Dude if I could comment a photo I would, this is the exact photo in my great great granny Esthers photo album
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George Oates said:
Briella Hoidhal wow!
26_0057257 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The tank has an odd shape. This might be a Purple K or dry chemical system? Comments welcomed.
26_0057265 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Showing the importance of keeping aisles clear?
26_0057275 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0028379 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0028341 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Trains don't have steering wheels so this looks like a marine product.
26_0026499 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
Soldier's goodbye & Bobbie the cat, Sydney, ca. 1939-ca. 1945 / by Sam Hood
- 848 older comments, and then…
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Σταύρος said:
Lucky 🍀 cat 🐱
August 13, 1928
- 6 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
In the 1926 census, there are Stephen and Mary Healy of North Main St, Cork, but Stephen is a blacksmith, and this gent does not look like one to me...
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Niall McAuley said:
How about John and Amy Healy, also of North Main Street, Cork? He's a confectioner.
Married 14th April 1923, not an anniversary pic...
December 18, 1928
- 13 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
William Kelly on Catherine Street in is an Employer and Motor Car Proprietor in the 1926 census. Son John is only 15 then, 17 here, possiby one of the younger salesmen?
February 28, 1922
- 28 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
Here they are in the 1926 census, with daughters Anastatia and Mary.
October 18, 1922
- 17 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
In the 1926 census, Philip Heery at #10 is a general merchant, but employs two live-in barmaids, so he's not just selling soap!
Diaphalene for dainty lingerie
- 32 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
Here they are in the census of 1926.
I like the detail that Alice Grace, the live-in Draper's Assistant is subtitled (Hosiery). Old Mr. Brennan couldn't be dealing with that!
Hudson's Timber yard, Blackwattle Bay, Sydney, ca. 1920-1925
- 12 older comments, and then…
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xprocessed said:
Nice work State Library of New South Wales on hitting Explore! ⭐ ⭐
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Steb (Thx for 6.6 Million Views) said:
Great picture and Congratulations on being featured in Explore.
F.C. Stevens, portrait bust, photograph by Hall (LOC)
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swanq said:
There appear to be two politicians with the name Frederick C. Stevens.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_C._Stevens_(New_York_politician)
"Frederick Charles Stevens (June 5, 1856 - March 14, 1916) was an American politician from New York who served in the state senate and state legislature as well as Superintendent of Public Works."
and
Frederick Clement Stevens
bioguide.congress.gov/search/bio/S000878
"a Representative from Minnesota; born in Boston, Mass., January 1, 1861; moved with his parents to Searsport, Maine; attended the common schools of Rockland; was graduated from Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, in 1881 and from the law department of the University of Iowa at Iowa City in 1884; was admitted to the bar in 1884 and commenced practice in St. Paul, Minn.; member of the State house of representatives 1888-1891; elected as a Republican to the Fifty-fifth and to the eight succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1897-March 3, 1915); unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1914 to the Sixty-fourth Congress."
This Bioguide entry shows a 1908 photo, with a hairline that is not a good match to this photo. -
swanq said:
The portrait in the Bioguide entry is a clip from

Stevens is second from left. -
swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_State_Department_of_Public...
indicates that Frederick Charles Stevens was New York State Superintendent of Public Works from January 14, 1907 - January 4, 1911.
His Find A Grave Memorial
- www.findagrave.com/memorial/68969637/frederick_charles-st...
shows a portrait clipped from a newspaper that is a good match to this Bain photo. -
Jon (LOC P&P) said:
Thanks for looking into this swanq. I found a few other photos and I do believe this is Frederick Charles Stevens. We'll update the catalog record.
Queen of Greece, seated (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophia_of_Prussia
"Sophia of Prussia (Sophie Dorothea Ulrike Alice, Greek: Σοφία Δωροθέα Ουλρίκη Αλίκη, romanized: Sofía Dorothéa Oulríki Alíki; 14 June 1870 – 13 January 1932) was Queen of Greece from 18 March 1913 to 11 June 1917 and again from 19 December 1920 to 27 September 1922 as the wife of King Constantine I.
Constantine was Duke of Sparta before he became King of Greece. -
Jon (LOC P&P) said:
Thanks swanq, we'll add her name.
Late King of Portugal as young man, standing in uniforn, three-quarters (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_I_of_Portugal
"Carlos I (Carlos Fernando Luís Maria Víctor Miguel Rafael Gabriel Gonzaga Xavier Francisco de Assis José Simão; 28 September 1863 – 1 February 1908), known as "the Diplomat" (o Diplomata), "the Oceanographer" (o Oceanógrafo) among many other names, was King of Portugal from 1889 until his assassination in 1908. He was the first Portuguese king to die a violent death since King Sebastian in 1578, the only one to be assassinated, and penultimate Portuguese head of state to die a violent death." -
swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_I_of_Portugal#/media/File:Du...
shows him at a similar age. So the date of this photo might be ~1888. -
Jon (LOC P&P) said:
Thanks swanq, we'll add his name to the catalog record.
Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, standing, three-quarters (LOC)
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swanq said:
This does not look a good match for Teddy Roosevelt's first wife
- www.nps.gov/people/alice-hathaway-lee-roosevelt.htm
After her death on Feb 14, 1884 Roosevelt was devastated. His second wife was a friend from his childhood and teenage years, Edith Kermit Carow. They were married in December 1886.
.
This photo was featured in
- www.kansascity.com/entertainment/article479486.html
which gives it a date of 1895. -
Jon (LOC P&P) said:
Thanks swanq, we'll add her name to catalog record so it's clearer which wife she is.
Crown Princess of Germany, portrait bust (LOC)
- 1 older comment, and then…
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swanq said:
See her husband at

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Jon (LOC P&P) said:
Thanks swanq, we'll add her name to the catalog record.
Margaret Shonts, standing three-quarters (LOC)
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meredith said:
It's interesting that the official, original description includes the word, "standing", when the subject is clearly sitting.
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Jon (LOC P&P) said:
Good point meredith, I'll ask our catalogers to remove it.
The home of the Liberator
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beachcomber australia said:
Phew! Still standing in 2011 via Tom Halpin

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beachcomber australia said:
" ... While the O'Connell family had previous associations with the area, it was Daniel O'Connell's grandparents, Domhnall Mór Ó Conaill and Máire Ní Dhonnchadha Dhuibh, who built or extended the house in the 1700s.[3] The oldest part of the house, built in 1702, was demolished in 1967 for safety reasons during the restoration work. Daniel O'Connell built the two-storey south wing facing the sea and the library wing to the east in 1825, the oldest surviving part of the house. The chapel was added in 1844 and was modelled on the ruined monastery chapel of Derrynane (Ahamore) Abbey on nearby Abbey Island. Restoration work was completed in 1967, when the house was officially opened to the public as a museum by the then president Éamon de Valera. ..."
From - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derrynane_House -
Mike Grimes said:
Here's his birthplace, in slightly worse condition, at the Eastern entrance to Cahirsiveen.

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beachcomber australia said:
Via Trove, some good and bad news ...
1846 - Tenants in strife - trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/226465215?searchTerm=%...
and trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/36244986?searchTerm=%2...
1892 - Hat brush ! - trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/111319138?searchTerm=%...
1926 - File book found - trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/291964969?searchTerm=%...
1929 - Colourful description of the house - trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/118065843?searchTerm=%... -
beachcomber australia said:
Part of the 1929 glowing description linked above ...
" ... The Open Door
There is no formidable or ostentatious entrance: the drive might be part of the green lane leading to it, just as the grounds of the house mingle imperceptibly with the surrounding woods. There is no note of hostility or aggression to mar this soft approach, no injunctions sending tradesmen to the back door, or warning you to beware of the dog; no barbed wire, no locked doors marked 'Private,' no threats to trespassers. Derrynane has never condescended to such, things. Even the shrubs are left to your honor. The gate is open, the drive is free; even the hall-door stands wide and inviting. No echo of the civil war seems to have resounded here; not a faintest breath of the strife left its mark on it. How did it persist, so loved and imperturbable, when the best in our national life had turned sour and offensive? In searching for an answer, we were more attracted by the ordinary coats and hats hanging in the hall than by the crossed swords on the staircase. We were led into the dining-room, and the maid proceeded to show us the handsome pieces of silver presented to O'Connell by admirers, lifting some eggs out of a dish to enable us to examine it. But the eggs were more important than any inscription; and the remains of a recent meal on the table had more significance than Robert Emmet's heavy gun, or the pistol used in the duel with D'Esterre. Touches of Continuity. Similarly, a copy of yesterday's paper lying on a chair meant more than the signature of Louis XVII. on the wall under the date of 1790. Walking through the rooms, we noted avidly those evidences of present-day life: a basket of needlework on the drawingroom table; an open, book on the library shelf, near a chair with creased cushions; and we were more glad of the little recent shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes by the altar than even of the Papal rescript permitting the erection of the Chapel. For those touches of continuity are what give Derrynane its unique character. Here you do not come to a dryasdust museum; you' art not met at the door by a paid official, ready to overwhelm you with, the guide-book patter. You have come to the home of gentlefolk, in which life has flowed on continuously and tranquilly since the Liberator's day. The present occupants of the house are two ladies, the great-granddaughters of Daniel O'Connell. Therefore a partial explanation of its permanence is that Derrynane House has never passed into alien hands— its custodians have always been of the Liberator's flesh and blood, the surest interpreters and the most jealous guardians of its spirit. ... "
26_0026306 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Guess: this may be 137th Avenue in San Leandro. The then-quarry in the background may be part of Lake Chabot Regional Park today.
26_0026289 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The street at the left edge of the track is San Leandro Street, Oakland. Businesses visible in this image:
Firestone truck tire center, 6601 San Leandro Street
Allstate Plywood, 6315 San Leansdro Street
This is the Fremont Line.
Please post a comment if you notice an error in tags or other identification.
26_0026274 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
A memorial now exists at left of frame. To the left of the street running along the left edge of the frame is Lafayette hillside memorial, a memorial for veterans who died in Iraq and Afghanistan.
26_0026552 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
A rare photo of the 1974 truck that BART used to collect money from ticket machines. They use a tractor trailer rig last time I saw this. More people use cards to pay so likely much less money inside.
26_0026462 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
26_0026225 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
People are looking at newspapers instead of smart phones. There are no video surveillance cameras, or phony video cameras, in the cars back in 1974.
26_0026190 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Dublin, Richmond, Fremont, and Daly City were end-of-the-line in those days.
26_0026195 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
Civic Center sign is blurry but readable in this image.
26_0026174 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
The DO NOT BOARD sign in 1974 identifies destination. In recent years, number of cars in the consist have been added. Example:
RICHMOND 7 CAR TRAIN APPROACHING
FREMONT 9 CAR TRAIN 6 MIN
I believe the signs shown here were incandescent light bulb arrays. There's a standardized yellow color used in modern signage because it's supposed to work best with the broadest range of low-vision humans. Modern signs look like the 400+ NIT daylight viewable LED arrays but I don't know if that's what they're using.
A matching audio announcement goes over the station loudspeaker system. In the 2020s, announcements are generated by some kind of voice synthesizer. Stations have almost entirely hard surfaces which reflect the announcements making intelliigibility vary depending on where you stand with respect to speaker locations.
Train horn is some kind of electronic 400-cycle tone.
No Power shortage here!
- 16 older comments, and then…
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John Spooner said:
The second daughter or Mr & Mrs Frank Power of "Suir
ViewVille", * Waterford, was Noreen. In 1943 she got engaged to Cyril Lewis, son of the late Wm Lewis of Fermoy and Mrs Lewis of Llandudno.
(Waterford Standard - Saturday 12 June 1943)
*The paper actually says "Suir Ville".
Was Frank Power the Waterford seed merchant who took over his father William's business at 25 King Street in 1895 ? (Waterford Star - Saturday 14 December 1895) -
Mike Grimes said:
Something here about Suir View.
humphrysfamilytree.com/Flanagan/meagher.html -
John Spooner said:
Mike Grimes I'm coming to the conclusion (tentative) that Suir View Waterford is the Krazy Kataloger at work, the Powers of Suir View, Clonmel are red herrings, and 'our' Powers lived at Suir Ville, as in Noreen's engagement announcement.
A few mentions of "Miss Power" of Suir Ville in Waterford papers in the 1920s. -
O Mac said:
The photograph was taken at the rear of Suir Ville on the Newtown Rd Waterford . Those two narrow windows can be seen on the porch in this NIAH photo.
www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/22830...
maps.app.goo.gl/FxEA1QV7U2D5H1Db8 -
John Spooner said:
Waterford Standard - Saturday 05 January 1929 reported the prizewinners of the Children's Fancy Dress Ball, but I'm a little confused by the 'Most original boy's and girl's costume' winners.

A boy named Dorothy? Who identifies as a pillar box? -
John Spooner said:
A Katherine Power was bridesmaid at Noreen's wedding in 1943. Waterford Standard - Saturday 06 November 1943 printed a group photo taken at the wedding, but unfortunately in the BNA it is reproduced as a black splodge.
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John Spooner said:
Dog News (sort of)
Waterford Standard - Saturday 06 November 1937:There seems to be an exodus of most of our young ladies from Waterford, and the latest gleanings from those quarters elicit the fact that Dorothy Power, youngest daughter of Mr. F. Power, Newtown, has gone to Dun Laoghaire. where she will lake a six months’ training course in one of the biggest kennels in the East of Ireland.
Dorothy has shown a keen interest in dogs of every description, and I am sure that an extensive training in County Dublin will do much to extend her knowledge in that direction. -
John Spooner said:
I'm not sure how this qualifies as news, but Waterford Standard thought it worth publishing on Saturday 6 May 1950:
Outbreak Of Fire
A small outbreak of fire occurred on Monday evening in a shed at Newtown, the property of Mr. Frank Power, seed merchant. The fire, which caused practically no damage, was almost under control when the fire brigade arrived, making ti unnecessary to operate the large hose. -
John Spooner said:
Frank's brief obituary In the Irish Independent on 20 January 1955. It only mentions 2 sons and 2 daughters.

The Happy Couple
- 71 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
In 1926, the Major is in Limerick with the Army. The form records that he has 1 son.
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Niall McAuley said:
Patricia and son Paddy are with some Foleys (Her parents!)
Nice. La Jetee Promenade et la Promenade des Anglais (LOC)
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swanq said:
For some history and a generated image of what it might look like today if the dome still existed
- thegoodlifefrance.com/amazing-pier-crystal-casino-nice-fr...
And a photo of previous pier is in this post.
www.facebook.com/groups/OldPhotographsOfficial/posts/6288...
Give the carte to me
- 8 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
In the 1926 census, I see Denis Toomey in Clonmel, a motor driver. He is 23 and works for the Condensed Milk Company of Ireland (Clonmel branch).
26_0026630 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
More Power to your elbow sir!
- 40 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
Here they are in the 1926 census
All Rushing to the Port in Portrush?
- 38 older comments, and then…
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xprocessed said:
Awesome job National Library of Ireland on The Commons reaching Explore! 📷 ✨ 🌟
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Steb (Thx for 6.6 Million Views) said:
Great picture and congratulations on Explore.
November 29, 1926
- 13 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
1926 census news! Here is Mrs. Ethel Breen, 26. Her husband, Laurence, is a Hotel Proprietor and Merchant on Turkey Road, Tramore, still the location of the Hibernian Hotel today.
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Niall McAuley said:
Per her marriage record of 1929, she was née Ethel Maud Boyce, father was John Boyce, Merchant, Waterford.
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Niall McAuley said:
Here she is in 1911, her father is a pawnbroker.
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Niall McAuley said:
I don't see a record of her death. Her daughter, also Ethel Breen, married in 1943.
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Niall McAuley said:
Laurence died in 1930 after a car accident.
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Niall McAuley Delighted with all this! We never even had Ethel, just "Mrs" Breen.
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Niall McAuley said:
National Library of Ireland on The Commons we'll be finding Census26 info for the next ten years!
Anybody here seen Kelly?
- 11 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
In 1926, Kelly has a new wife, Mary, and a daughter Marie Therese of 8 months.
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Niall McAuley said:
From Marie Therese's birth record, her mother was née Doolittle.
Married Sept. '24, James recorded as a widower.
I note that his father James was also in the tobacco trade. -
Niall McAuley said:
First wife Julia died in 1922 of Chronic Interstitial Nephritis, which is a new one on me. Wikipedia says it is usually caused by reaction to medications these days, but I think more likely infections back in the day.
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National Library of Ireland on The Commons said:
Niall McAuley Our very first actual Doolittle in the wild!
I found the only Doolittle in the country in 1926. Recorded as Xavier, though transcribers missed the Frs for Francis Xavier. He was from Lancashire. And a patient at Belmont, where we visited a while back.
[aside] A fair few of the Brothers of Charity in Belmont came from Lancashire.
Pol Plancon, portrait bust, copyright by A. Dupont (LOC)
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Mark Azali said:
incredible aura
King Manuel of Portugal, portrait bust, in uniform (LOC)
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swanq said:
Presumably a photo of King Manuel II
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuel_II_of_Portugal
as a young child.
Note: Manuel I was king from 25 October 1495 – 13 December 1521 -
Mark Azali said:
broccoli cut would look better
Mabel Taliaferro (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mabel_Taliaferro
"Mabel Taliaferro (born Maybelle Evelyn Taliaferro; May 21, 1887 – January 24, 1979) was an American stage and silent-screen actress, known as "the Sweetheart of American Movies." -
Mark Azali said:
What a baddie
26_0031257 Rohr Collection Image
from SDASM Archives
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Chuck Walla said:
One or more of the Rohr bus prototypes has a modular power system. So far, it's unclear to me whether this was intended for maintenance. When the engine wears out, you pull the power system and replace it with a spare. Or was it to allow a motive power switch: from diesel to turbine to ?
Crown Prince of Germany, on horse, in uniform (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm,_German_Crown_Prince
"Wilhelm, German Crown Prince, Crown Prince of Prussia (Friedrich Wilhelm Victor August Ernst; 6 May 1882 – 20 July 1951), was the eldest child of the last German emperor, Wilhelm II, and his consort Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein. As Emperor Wilhelm's heir, he was the last German Crown Prince and Crown Prince of Prussia, until the abolition of the monarchy."
He married Duchess Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin in 1905.
See her at
The search for the perfect pint is like unto the quest for the Holy Grail
- 21 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
No Doyle's in the 1926 census, but I can't search or filter for Publicans, so finding who is running it will take a while.
I see an Edward Brennan, publican, on Main Street.
One of the Facebook history stories says Bella Duff owned another pub on Back Street, and Isabella Duff is indeed a publican on back street, 1926. The story says About 1930 The Trigo on Main Street and Cyclists’ House came into single ownership and to avoid the need for double staffing, The Trigo which had only a six day licence opened on weekdays, while The Cyclist’s House a "Bona Fide house" with a seven day licence remained closed except on Sundays and race days. Miss Leonard was followed as owner by Patrick J. Reynolds and he in turn sold out to two brothers of the name Carroll
Miss Annie Leonard is living with Bella Duff in 1926,
So I think this pub must have gone Doyle (1911), Brennan (1926), then became the Trigo Inn under Miss Leonard around 1930, later the White House, Graingers, and now the White House again.
Prince George of Greece, seated, in uniform (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_George_of_Greece_and_Denmark
"Prince George of Greece and Denmark (Greek: Γεώργιος, romanized: Geórgios; 24 June 1869 – 25 November 1957) was the second son and child of George I of Greece and Olga Konstantinovna of Russia. He served as high commissioner of the Cretan State during its transition towards independence from Ottoman rule and union (Enosis) with Greece."
Mercedes Godoy, standing (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercedes_Godoy
uses this photo
"Mercedes Godoy (March 16, 1890 – after 1932) was a Mexican socialite in the United States, and author of When I Was a Girl in Mexico (1919)." -
swanq said:
The book she wrote, When I Was a Girl in Mexico, is online at:
- hdl.handle.net/2027/loc.ark:/13960/t6sx73h5x
The heads on the Ramsbottoms!
- 20 older comments, and then…
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Niall McAuley said:
First visit to the 1926 census, I see it is still Coote St. and Queenstown, but the co. Council is Laoisor maybe Leix
J.G. Shurman, standing, three-quarters (LOC)
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swanq said:
Typo in title transcription. Last name is Schurman.
Could be
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Gould_Schurman
"Jacob Gould Schurman (May 2, 1854 – August 12, 1942) was a Canadian-American educator and diplomat, who served as President of Cornell University and United States Ambassador to Germany."
"In 1892, he became the third president of Cornell University, a position he held until 1920. He received an LL.D (honoris causa) from the University of Edinburgh in March 1902."
This is definitely him.
president.cornell.edu/the-presidency/jacob-gould-schurman/
uses a clip from a copy of this portrait in their collections, a platinum print.
See exhibits.library.cornell.edu/presidents/catalog/152-9846
Theodore Roosevelt, holding child (LOC)
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swanq said:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt
"Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (October 27, 1858 – January 6, 1919) was the 26th president of the United States, serving from 1901 to 1909. Roosevelt served as vice president under William McKinley for six months, and became president after McKinley's assassination in 1901. Upon assuming the office, he was 42 years old, making him the youngest person to serve as president."
"In 1880, Roosevelt married socialite Alice Hathaway Lee. Their daughter, Alice Lee Roosevelt, was born on February 12, 1884. Two days later, the new mother died of undiagnosed kidney failure, on the same day as Roosevelt's mother Martha died of typhoid fever. In his diary, Roosevelt wrote a large "X" on the page and then, "The light has gone out of my life." Distraught, Roosevelt left baby Alice in the care of his sister Bamie while he grieved; he assumed custody of Alice when she was three."
"On December 2, 1886, Roosevelt married his childhood friend, Edith Kermit Carow, at St George's, Hanover Square, in London, England. Roosevelt felt deeply troubled that his second marriage was soon after the death of his first wife and he faced resistance from his sisters. The couple had five children: Theodore "Ted" III in 1887, Kermit in 1889, Ethel in 1891, Archibald in 1894, and Quentin in 1897." -
swanq said:
This is a crop from a larger group photo, apparently from 1895
- www.alamy.com/stock-photo-tr-family-1895-civsvc-comm-1406...
If the date is 1895, the baby is Archibald.
The same image is at
- www.loc.gov/pictures/resource/ppmsca.39691/
The LoC description includes:
"Summary: Photo shows Theodore Roosevelt and his family, possibly around Christmas 1894, with Roosevelt on the left holding Archibald, Theodore III is standing next to Alice, with Kermit and Ethel in front of Edith on the right."








