Sunshine Through the Window
Crane Fest
Calcite
Waiting for Sandhills
Sandhills
Autumn Comes to Big Marsh Lake
A Few More Cranes
Autumn, through my office window
Calcite
Where I Work
Secretary of State Building
7064 Crowner Drive
Reflection, with Swans & Geese.
Paul Bennett
Age 53: Mug Shot
Sky Full of Cranes
Calcite
Flying Low
Gear Down
Sandhill Cranes Overhead
Majestic
E.M. Bunce
Mind if We Join?
Rough Waters
Sunrise
Beach
Balconies
North American
Joan in the Woods
White Lilies
Engineers Day
Greater Buffalo
Coneflowers & Gayfeathers
Nothing Wrong with Marigolds
What's That?
Lily
Sun Flower
Sun Flower
Benson Ford
Birches
Birdhouse, with Incipient Sunflower
Another Glad
Gladiolus
B.H. Taylor
New River Bridge
Location
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
Keywords
Calcite


"Bow of S.S. Calcite
and conveyor and coal pile
ft of 17th St
Bay City, Mich.
Thursday Sept 1, 1938"
First of four photos in this set. Calcite was the first ship built for Bradley Transportation--US Steel's limestone fleet (then known as Calcite Transportation). The ship was named after the Port of Calcite--which was in turn named after the product (limestone, which is predominantly calcite) shipped from the Michigan Limestone Company's great mine south of Rogers City. All fits together nicely.
Calcite was built by American Shipbuilding at Wyandotte in 1912 and scrapped in 1961 (at which time her fleetmate William G. Clyde was renamed Calcite II).
This ship's pilot house has been preserved, on the grounds of Forty Mile Point Lighthouse, north of Rogers City (and Calcite).
Borucki's Lakers
and conveyor and coal pile
ft of 17th St
Bay City, Mich.
Thursday Sept 1, 1938"
First of four photos in this set. Calcite was the first ship built for Bradley Transportation--US Steel's limestone fleet (then known as Calcite Transportation). The ship was named after the Port of Calcite--which was in turn named after the product (limestone, which is predominantly calcite) shipped from the Michigan Limestone Company's great mine south of Rogers City. All fits together nicely.
Calcite was built by American Shipbuilding at Wyandotte in 1912 and scrapped in 1961 (at which time her fleetmate William G. Clyde was renamed Calcite II).
This ship's pilot house has been preserved, on the grounds of Forty Mile Point Lighthouse, north of Rogers City (and Calcite).
Borucki's Lakers
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.