I am a Ex 82nd Airborne Trooper and now a retired amateur photographer and I take photos for fun and passion. I enjoy the art of photography, and appreciate the ability to preserve memories and, as a photographer, I am always looking for ways to improve and find different ways to explore and capture the world around me. When I first discovered that I had the ability to fly with a camera, it opened a whole new world of photographic opportunities for me! moments.
Saturday, July 19, 2014
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Milwaukee: North Point Lighthouse
North Point Lighthouse
Beautiful old lighthouse. On the hill w with great area view on Milwaukee and lake Michigan
White and Red North Point Lighthouse Stands Out Against Summer Green
Beautiful views from this historic gem that is often overlooked in
Milwaukee, WI. This is definitely one of the local historic landmarks
that should not be missed...
Lovely bike ride and a great view. Hidden gem in Milwaukee.
The first lantern burned mineral oil. A new lens, installed in 1868.
The Walking bridge sits high on the bluff of Lake Michigan.
One of the bridges on the bluff, get for hiking and biking.
The present light source is a 25,000 candlepower lamp rotated electrically and controlled by an automatic clock.
The Lions guard the bridge entrance.
The light house tower is 74ft tall.
Path light and light house.
North Point Lighthouse Marker
Milwaukee was judged one of the most natural places for a harbor on the Great Lakes.
North Point Lighthouse From the Rear
Lion on nearby pedestrian bridge
Lake front pathway going north from the light house.
A Great Porch Characterizes the Front of the North Point Lighthouse
The original lighthouse at Milwaukee was put up for auction in 1855 and sold to E.M. Shoyer & Co. for $860.
The original lighthouse was built in 1855. Shore erosion in the 1870's required a new lighthouse to be constructed. Finished in 1887, it was first lit in January, 1888. Beautiful Lake Park was being planned around North Point Lighthouse. As the trees grew in the park, they obscured the light and the U.S. government discontinued funding in 1907. In 1909, money was funded to raise the tower and the work building an additional 35 feet was finished in 1913, making the tower 74 feet high.
Saturday, July 12, 2014
Titan Missile Museum A Rare Journey Into Cold War History
Titan Missile Museum
A Rare Journey Into Cold War History
The Titan Missile Museum is the only remaining Titan II site open to the public, allowing you to relive a time when the threat of nuclear war between the U.S. and the former Soviet Union was a reality.
The Titan II was capable of launching from its underground silo in 58 seconds and could deliver a nine megaton thermonuclear warhead to its target more than 5,500 miles away in less than thirty minutes.For more than two decades, 54 Titan II missile complexes across the United States stood "on alert" 24 hours a day, seven days a week, heightening the threat of nuclear war or preventing Armageddon, depending upon your point of view.
This is how the 3 man relief crew arrived.
This is the silo cap.
This is the only gate into the site.
This is a liquid oxygen fueling truck.
This is part of the radar anti intruder alarm system.
This is all you see of the site from ground level.
This is the main entrance.
This is the control room.
The whole complex is anti sway proof due to these large springs.
Test equipment and the safe that holds the launch code.
Seismographs and Manuals.
Access to the crew area.
The hallway to the silo and missile.
Protective suits.
Part of the missile
More of the missile
One of the umbilical cords.
Looking up at the warhead
Looking down to the access platforms.
Looking down at the warhead.
"Duck and Cover!" Bomb shelters, the Berlin Wall, weekly tests of the
Emergency Broadcast System, the piercing sounds of air raid sirens, and
the Space Race. These are the hallmarks of the "Cold War" era.
The Titan Missile Museum showcases the dramatic vestiges of the Cold
War between the U.S. and former Soviet Union and provides a vivid
education about the history of nuclear conflict-a history of keeping the
peace.
At the Titan Missile Museum, near Tucson, Arizona, visitors journey
through time to stand on the front line of the Cold War. This preserved
Titan II missile site, officially known as complex 571-7, is all that
remains of the 54 Titan II missile sites that were on alert across the
United States from 1963 to 1987.
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