Fulton 

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26 creative works found

  • Atlanta’s landmark theater, the Fox on Peachtree Street takes center stage in this original photo of this Atlanta Icon. Vivid blues and reds make this one an eye catcher. Part of a series of Atlanta Icons I’m working on…

  • Depicts an old shed slumping into the autumn landscape, recalls a simpler time and way of life. This actually exists inside the metro Area of Atlanta, in an area fast giving way to subdivisions and shopping malls. Had to catch it before it was gone…

  • Please yourself; anywhere will do. / Sooner or later; it is all the same. / How much farther to Moukden? / At what place northward is there a big inn? / At that village there in front, if there is a good inn we will put up. / This inn has not hung out its sign; it can’t be open for business. / Where shall we put up for the night? / It is quite early yet, and too soon to put up. / The sun will soon be set, drive a little faster. / We shall see as we go on; wherever we happen to be at dark, there we will put up. / This note is off my route and I have no means of using it. / At any other place, I could not get rid of it. / No matter where you go, this note is current. / Take a broom and sweep the k’ang before spreading the bedding…....

  • Took this in Rockport, Texas at the Fulton Mansion

  • Lake Neahtahwanta, Fulton, New York.

  • Livin' in Upstate...
    by Phillip Moore

    So, now we’ve settled down in Central New York. The town is Fulton, Oswego County. Hopefully, I’ll be able to get some seasonal stuff u…

    So, now we’ve settled down in Central New York. The town is Fulton, Oswego County. Hopefully, I’ll be able to get some seasonal stuff up soon. I’m writing this to let everyone know what I am up to, because I don’t have as much time to devote to the site as I would like. I’m a full time student now, getting a degree in Studio Art and Design, and working full time as well… / My camera’s growing a few cobwebs of late, but I’m hoping to dust it off a bit and snap a few this weekend. You’ll know soon if I capture anything worth sharing. I love being able to check in and see everyone’s new work. Keep it coming, and thanks for the support.

  • Acrylic on canvas…..about 18” x 24”. This is another painting I did for the beginning of a chapter in a school textbook. It was to demonstrate a little history lesson about the first boat powered by steam. The Clermont was built by Robert Fulton in 1807, and was used to carry passengers between New York City and Albany on the Hudson River. The trip was 150 miles long and took about thirty two hours. For the first time, man did not have to depend on his muscles or the power of the wind to move his ships.

  • Christmas 2007 on Fulton St in New Orleans, La. The street was coved and lights and fleur de lis hung everywhere. Everything was Purple and Gold… Not traditional Christmas colors… but it was beautiful! No flash photograph… This image is straight out of the camera…

  • American engineer and inventor. Designed and built steamboats.

  • THIS ACTOR WAS A REAL GEM TO PHOTOGRAPH AND HIS HOSPITALITY WAS SECOND TO NONE….A FINE FILM AND STAGE ACTOR…PERHAPS BEST KNOWN FOR ‘PLAYING’ THE ROLE AS ‘MR MACKAY’ IN THE WODERFUL ‘PORRIDGE’ SERIES FOR BBC TV WITH RONNIE BARKER….THE PHOTOGRAPH WAS PART OF MY PORTRAIT EXHIBITION SERIES…’FACES IN MY TIME’...SADLY FULTON IS NO LONGER WITH US…..LOVELY MEMORIES THOUGH.. / PHOTOGRAPHED IN NATURAL LIGHT.

  • This is a windmill in Fulton Illinois. It was made and pre-assembled in the netherlands. My uncles general contracting company (Wilvar Contruction) laid the foundation, while the windmill itself was assembled by dutch craftsmen. It is fully operational, and sits atop a flood dike along the mississippi river. Sony a330 f/10 1/320sec iso100 18mm

  • Fulton, MO. This photograph was taken viewing the Church through an opening in the Berlin Wall section. Both items having been rebuilt on American Soil, both with a long history. / / Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury / Its History as quoted from the Westminster College Website: / “The story of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury’s relocation from London to Westminster College ..” “The church was first built in London near the turn of the 12th century. It was destroyed by the Great Fire of London in 1666 and then rebuilt in 1676 by Sir Christopher Wren, the famous English architect. In the 17th century, the church was recognized as the social and religious center for a number of England’s major figures. The church, slightly damaged in World War I when a zeppelin bomb struck the churchyard, was gutted in the blitz of London in 1940, when a German incendiary bomb struck the center of the roof. For 25 years after the attack, the church sat roofless and moss-grown, slated for demolition. It was in the early 1960’s that the proposal was made for the creation of a memorial to Sir Winston Churchill and his famous “Iron Curtain” speech, which he delivered at Westminster College in 1946. In 1965, the church was dismantled in London and shipped, 7,000 stones in all, to Westminster College, where it was reassembled and restored to the condition we see today. It serves as the ecumenical, inter-denominational chapel for the college. In the 17th century, the church was recognized as the social and religious center for a number of England’s major figures including John Milton and William Shakespeare.”

  • I was glad to get this before they repaint. The area is being spruced up quite a bit. Featured in Abstract Macro Urban Art (eg Grungy), September 21, 2009. / Canon EOS Xsi, 24-70mm

  • A taste of winter is in the air on this early morning in autumn. This image was captured on the shore of Lake Neatahwanta in Fulton, New York.

  • The Mississippi River above St. Louis Missouri, is not “Big Muddy,” as they call it in the south. Except at flood stage, the water is a brilliant blue, dotted with islands, all part of the Great Upper Mississippi Wildlife Preserve which spans three states. In some areas, the river winds through high stone bluffs and rock formations formidable enough to attract climbers from across the Heartland. In the 1800’s river-towns in northern Iowa and Illinois could be rowdy places! There were “war boats” in the water in those days… not what it sounds like, though. War boats were “floating houses of ill repute” which would go from island to island, to avoid the law whilst doing “business.” In some areas the river is relatively narrow. This made for many shootings from one bank to the other, especially during the Civil War. Both Iowa and Illinois were Union States – officially – but there were many southern sympathizers in the ranks, so brawls and gun-fights were not uncommon in that era. It was not that uncommon to be shot at from the other side of the water – thus making loitering around the riverbank a somewhat risky thing to do. One “scalawag” of the period was so unpopular with lawmen in the town of Fulton, they tore up the railroad tracks to be sure he couldn’t hop a train and get away! Today, Fulton is a pretty, peaceful town known for the annual Dutch Days Parade and Festival. Much of the town was settled by people from the Netherlands and they retain great pride in their heritage. Although this photo shows only one, there are two bridges spanning the river from Illinois to Clinton, Iowa. This is due to the fact that Lyons, formerly an independent town, was annexed to Clinton in the not-too-distant past. Prior to that time, the towns were in heated competition with each other, both determined to complete the first bridge. This is the view from “De Immigrant,” Fulton’s authentic Dutch wind mill over-looking the river.

  • JACK BITES (SHAPE/FULTON POETRY)
    by anaisnais

    B R I G H T / N I G H T S / F R O S T S / S T R I K E

  • Downtown Disney, DisneyWorld, Tampa, Florida, USA Olympus SP570 UZ

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