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Geoffrey Reiss

Colonial Sense: Architecture: Houses: Mount Vernon's South Lane - 0 views

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    Colonial Sense visited the home of our first President, Mount Vernon on October 5, 2011. Our first part at the tour was taken in the interior of George Washington's Mansion. As a three year old in 1735, George lived on the property with his father, Augustine Washington, and family. Augustine acquired the property from his sister in 1726. The Mansion at Mount Vernon did not exist as we know it today, although a home existed on the site. By 1740, the property was given to George's older half-brother, Lawrence Washington. Prior to his death in 1752, Lawrence razed the original house and built a new one and one-half story home wider and longer likely on the site of the original foundation. The initials "LW" were found on a small rectangular stone in the partition wall of the Mansion basement. The stone would have been originally as a foundation corner of Lawrence's newly constructed home. It would have been moved into the wall by George Washington during the reconstruction of the basement in the 1770's.
Lance Mosier

George Washington's Mount Vernon - Virtual Mansion Tour - 4 views

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    Virtual Reality Tour of Mount Vernon
Geoffrey Reiss

Colonial Sense: Journals: Journey to America: Chapter 7 - 0 views

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    Journey back from Gettysburg. -Unusual night in Oxford. -Praiseworthy custom of sitting with the sick by neighbors. -Guarding of the dead at night. - Two German immigrants travel to Cincinnati. -Journey by way of Little York, -Seitsville, Susquehanna Bridge, -Columbia, -Mount Pleasant, -Lancaster. -Signs of the inns. -Long way in the dark. -Night quarters with Quakers. -Joumey over a high mountain. -Free accommodation by English planters. -Fertility of the mountain valleys. Journey in darkness through a thick forest. -Night quarters in a farmhouse. -Journey to Reading. -Many new German immigrants. -Journey to my home at the Moselem.
Geoffrey Reiss

Colonial Sense: Fairmount Park - 0 views

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    Colonial Sense would like to share another yearly Christmas House Tour in one of the nation's oldest parks, Fairmount Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. We visited the Park on December 10, 2010. The mansion tours were begun 38 years ago with the help of V. Elizabeth Person who recently died.
John Brady

MILESAGO - Groups & solo artists database - 0 views

  • As the 70s began, newer acts rose alongside the survivors of the beat boom, who had regrouped with new bands and a new purpose. Performers like Blackfeather, Billy Thorpe & The New Aztecs, Daddy Cool and Spectrum led a "third wave", ushering in a more confident and mature era of original Australian music. Over the next five years bands like The Aztecs, Spectrum, Company Caine, Kahvas Jute, Ariel, Tully, Daddy Cool, Jeff St John & Copperwine, Tamam Shud, Chain, The La De Das, Madder Lake, Blackfeather and many others produced some of the finest rock music ever committed to record. A major Part of our task is to celebrate that music.
  • "I never had any idea that the band had become this popular, but something like this really gives you an indication. It's been really worth it, coming from the beginning, it seems to have built up; coming from a hundred people to 40,000 - it's unbelievable! The point is, we don't need overseas names, this must be obvious here! The only way to promote Australian music, is to make it purely Australian music, and, I mean, it's good to bring in a group that is a good (overseas) group, but most of these festivals ... I don't see why we shouldn't use our bands here".
  • Ultimately, overseas success failed to materialise, despite the band's determination and strenuous efforts. In retrospect, several factors combined to defeat them. Their 'pop' image, was certainly a factor in denying them lasting popularity, broader appeal and overseas recognition, especially in the late 70s when punk and new wave became a major force of musical fashion. Although Sherbet's earlier material could perhaps be criticised as being a bit lightweight, they did not lack the depth that was needed for to make the transition into the 'adult rock' market, and in fact Garth and others are adamant that their later material -- which was largely ignored -- was some of their very best, and as good as anything else around at the time. Crucially though, they suffered the same fate as so many bands before them -- they were denied the record company support that was vital to breaking them into an overseas market, and the local media began suffereing from "tall poppy sydnrome" and mounted increasingly harsh attacks on the band in the late '70s and early '80s.
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