User:Marine 69-71/My pictures of historic Structures Part II

My uploaded pictures of Historic Structures, etc. Part II

This is part II of are some of the pictures that I took of other places, plus some non-historical, but nonetheless important pictures.



Oatman, Arizona
{{Gallery
 * title=Historic Oatman Oatman-Oatman Arizona and its Burros Marker.jpg
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 * File:Oatman-A-Welcome to Oatman sign.jpg|Oatman Highway/Old US 66 to Oatman
 * File:Oatman-Oatman Main Street.jpg|Oatman Main Street
 * File:Oatman-Oatman Drug Company Building-1915-1.jpg |The Oatman Drug Company Building built in 1915 and listed in the NRHP
 * File:Oatman-Oatman Drug Company Building-1915-2.jpg |Different view of the Oatman Drug Company Building
 * File:Oatman-Oatman Jail-1936-1.jpg |Oatman Jail established in 1936
 * File:Oatman-Oatman Jail-1936-6.jpg |Oatman Jail cell
 * File:Oatman-Oatman Memorial.jpg |Oatman Memorial
 * File:Oatman-Dakota Leather and Gifts Building.jpg|Dakota Leather and Gifts Building
 * File:Oatman-Olive Oatman Restaurant and Saloon-1.jpg |The Olive Oatman Restaurant and Saloon
 * File:Oatman-Fast Fanny's Place.jpg |Fast Fanny's Place (a former brothel}
 * File:Oatman-Gold Road Mine entrance.jpg|Entrance of the Gold Road Mine
 * File:Oatman-Burro.jpg|A Burro shares the street with cars

}}

Scottsdale, Arizona
The following photographs are of some of the historic structures in Scottsdale listed in the National Register of Historic Places National Register of Historic Places.

The German POW Great Papago Escape of WW II.

The McCormick-Stillman Railroad Park houses the Roald Amundsen Pullman Private Railroad Car which was built in 1928. On different occasions the Roald Amundsen Pullman Private Railroad Car reportedly carried Presidents Hoover, Roosevelt (FDR), Truman and Eisenhower. The Roald Amundsen Pullman Private Railroad Car was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on August 6, 2009, reference: #09000582.

Taliesin West was built in 1931 and is located at 12345 N. Taliesin Drive. Taliesin West was the winter home and school of architect Frank Lloyd Wright in the desert from 1931 until his death in 1959. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on February 12, 1974, reference: 74000457.

Tempe, Arizona
{{Gallery Albert Miller }}
 * title=Historic Double Butte Cemetery Tempe-Double Bute Cemetery-1883.JPG (NRHP = National Register of Historic Places) (THPS = Tempe Historic Property Survey)
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 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Double Butte Mountain.JPG|The Double Butte Mountain.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Thanks A. Anderson.JPG|Grave site of Thanks A. Anderson. Anderson was the vice-president of the Tempe National Bank and served two terms as Mayor of Tempe. The first term was from 1930 to 1932 and the second term from 1934 to 1937. Anderson is buried in sec. 7–9.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Josph T. Birchett.JPG|Grave site of Joseph Thomas Birchett  (1875-1953). Birchett was the director of the Tempe National Bank. He served as Mayor of Tempe from 1912 to 1914. His house is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Birchett is buried in sec. 7–9.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-William W. Cole.JPG |The grave site of  William Wesley Cole (1902-1961). Cole served as Mayor of Tempe from (1937-1948). He is buried in Sec. E.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Margaret and Arron Cummins.JPG|The grave site of Margaret Cummins  (1853-1930) and Aaron Cummins  (1840-1919). The Cummins were a pioneers who acquired the undeveloped lot 10 of block 1 of the Farmers Addition in 1908. There the family built a house which is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Cummins is buried in sec. B.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Federick Diefenderfer.JPG|Grave site of Frederick Diefenderfer  (1873-1954). Diefenderfer was a pioneer in Tempe. He acquired an undeveloped lot in block 5 of the Farmer's Addition in Tempe. There he built a house which is now listed in the National Register of Historic Places. He is buried in sec. 7–8.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-James Lee Felton.JPG|The grave site of James Lee Felton (1874-1932). Felton served as Mayor of Tempe from (1926-1928). He is buried in Sec. 7–6–3.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Don J. Frankenberg.JPG| The grave of Don J. Frankenberg  (1873-1952) and his wife Carrie I. Frankenberg (1882-1963). Don J. Frankenberg was a member of the pioneer Frankenberg family who were ranchers in the Tempe area in 1888. In 1915 he was selected to experiment with Pima Long Staple Cotton as part of the program with the Government Experimental Farm at Sacaton, Arizona. Frankenberg was civic-minded, serving as president of Tempe Union High School and as Trustee of the Tempe Board of Education during the 1920s. He is buried in Sec. 6 -10.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Josephine Frankenberg.JPG|The grave site of Josephine Frankenberg  (? – 1949). Frankenberg was a nurse who nursed many victims of the Great Influenza epidemic of 1918, back to health. In 1919 she purchased a house which is listed in the National Register of Historic Places as the Josephine Frankenberg house. She lived in the house until her death in 1949. Frankenberg is buried in sec. B.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Clyde H. Gililland.JPG|The grave site of Clyde Harlen Gililland (1899-1968). Gililland served as Mayor of Tempe from (1960-1951). He is buried in Sec. B.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Charlotte Mullen Goodwin.JPG|Grave site of Charlotte Josephine Mullen Goodwin  (1884-1973). Charlotte was a pioneer and widow of Garfield Abram Goodwin. Her house is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. She is buried in sec. C.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Garfield Abram Goodwin.JPG|The grave of Garfield Abram Goodwin. In 1907, Goodwin owned a curio store which was located in a building which he built in Mill Ave. and which is known as the Goodwin Building. He served in various civil service positions in Tempe such as head of the Tempe Beach Committee, Secretary of the Arizona State teachers College Board of Education and as mayor if Tempe from 1924 to 1926. Goodwin is buried in sec. C.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Mary Adeline Gray.jpg|The grave site of Columbus H. Gray (1833-1905) and his wife Mary A. Gray (1846-1936).
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Roy Martin Hackett.JPG|The grave site of Roy Martin Hackett (1877-1945). Hackett was a pioneer who owned what is now the oldest fired brick building in Tempe. The building is listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1974, reference #74000458. He is buried in Sec. E.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Dr. Fenn John Hart.JPG| The grave of Dr. Fenn John Hart (1859-1935) and his wife Rosa Brown Hart (1870-1936}. Dr. Fenn J. Hart was the first Mayor of Tempe. He served as such from 1894 to 1896. Hart is buried in Sec. B of the Double Butte Cemetery.
 * File:Tempe-Double Bute Cemetery-1883-Charles Trumbull Hayden.JPG | The grave site of Charles Trumbull Hayden (1825-1900); Sec. B – 49. Hayden was the founder of the city of Tempe and the Arizona State University. He is the father of U.S. Senator Carl T. Hayden.
 * File:Tempe-Double Bute Cemetery-1883-Sen. Carl T. Hayden.JPG | The grave site of Carl T. Hayden  (1877- 1972); Sec. B-53. Hayden was the first United States Senator to serve seven terms. He served as Arizona's first representative for eight terms before entering the Senate, Hayden set the record for longest serving member of the United States Congress more than a decade before his retirement from politics.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Heang and Chiv.JPG|Grave site of Kang Chhun Heang  (1932-1987) and her son Leng Chiv  (1950-1990). Chinese pioneers buried in sec. G.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Estmer Hudson.JPG|The Grave site of Estmer W. Hudson  (1881-1972). Hudson was instrumental in developing a local cotton industry. In 1920, the California Department of Agriculture dubbed him the "father of cotton" in Arizona. It was Hudson who experimented with a more durable variety of Egyptian cotton, which was introduced in the region as a more disease-resistant strain than grown in the Southeastern states. By 1916, Hudson had successfully developed a new cotton — Pima, an improved strain of Yuma, produced from a hybrid Egyptian cotton. His house is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Hudson is buried in sec. 7-7.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Cyrus Grant Jones.JPG|Grave site of Cyrus Grant Jones  (?-1926). Jones was the first president of the Tempe National Bank. Jones is buried in Sec. B.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-John Knight.JPG|The grave site of John Knight (1854-1904). Knight served as Mayor of Tempe from (1897-1902). He is buried in Sec.B.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Hugh E. Laird.JPG| Hugh E. Laird (1882-1970) was the 12th and 15th elected Mayor of Tempe. He served two terms as such. The first term was from 1928 to 1930 and the second term was from 1948 to 1960. Laird is buried in the Sec. 2- 4 -1 of the Double Butte Cemetery.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Albert and Nettie Miller.JPG|Grave site of Albert E. Miller  (1859-1909) and Nettie Miller  (1870-1983). Albert was the son of Tempe pioneer Winchester Miller. He was a founding member of the Tempe National Bank. Miller is buried in sec. B.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-James T. Priest.jpg|The grave site of James T. Priest (1835-1903).
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888- Curtin W. Miller.JPG|The grave site of Curtin "Curt" W. Miller (1864-1943). Miller served as Mayor of Tempe from (1922-1924). He is buried in Sec. A.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Winchester Miller.JPG|Grave site of Winchester Miller (?-1893). Miller was a pioneer who made his home in Tempe. He was a former soldier in the Confederate Army of the United States who moved to Arizona after the American Civil War ended. Within a few years he had one of the most prosperous farms in the Valley. He was president of the Tempe irrigating Canal Company and served as Maricopa County Sheriff in the 1870s and 80s. He was also a trustee of the Tempe School District # 3. Miller is buried in sec. B.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1883-Gov. Benjamin B. Moeur.JPG | The grave site of Benjamin Baker Moeur (1869-1937); Sec. 04- 283. Moeur was the 4th Governor of Arizona (Arizona Governor, 1932:.1936).
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Congressman John R. Murdock.JPG| John Robert Murdock  (1885 - 1972) was a U.S. Representative from Arizona. He is buried in sec. 9–11.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Forest Egbert Ostrander.JPG|The grave site of Forest Egbert Ostrander (1877-1945) and his wife Miriam Austin Ostrander (1878-1949). Ostrander served as Mayor of Tempe from 1920 to 1922. He is buried in Sec. 7–6.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1883-Gov. John Howard Pyle.JPG | The grave site of John Howard Pyle (1906-1987); Sec. 04- 26. Pyle was the 9th Governor of Arizona (Arizona Governor, 1950–1954).
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Byron A. and Ida M. Redden.JPG|The grave site of Byron Alton Redden  (1871-1939) and his wife Ida M. Redden . Byron was a rancher and served as zanjero (irrigation canal manager) for 25 years. Redden bought the house, which was built in 1918, in 1920. The house is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Redden is buried in sec. 4-12
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Lowell Edward Redden.JPG|The grave site of Lowell Edward Redden  (1865-1944). Redden was a pioneer and farmer in Tempe. His house is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. He is buried in sec. C-1.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Juanita Rodriguez.JPG|Grave of Juanita Rodriguez (1886-1941).
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Benjamin Harrison Scudder.JPG|Grave site of Benjamin Harrison  (1871-1936) and Rebecca Scudder . The Scudders moved from Indiana to Tempe, Arizona. Benjamin Scudder became a school teacher and eventually was elected to the City Council. Both he and his wife are credited with the development of affordable housing in the region. Two of their houses are listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Scudder is buried in sec. 4–1–1.
 * File:Tempe-Double Butte Cemetery-1888-Charles H. Waterhouse.JPG|The grave site of Charles Henry Waterhouse (1861-1952). Waterhouse, together with Estmer W. Hudson, introduced in Arizona the new Egyptian cotton, commonly known as Pima cotton. In 1912, he was elected president of Salt River Valley Cotton Growers Association. Ib 1914, he helped organize the Tempe Cotton Exchange and built Tempe's first cotton gin He was also the president of the Arizona Cotton Growers Association from 1915 to 1919. He is buried in Sec D.

Topock, Arizona
The Old Trails Bridge was the longest arch bridge in America until 1928.

Puerto Rico and other places
California

The Dominican Republic

Florida {{Gallery }}
 * title=Fort Lauderdale, Florida
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 * File: Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Bonnet House-1900-5.jpg |The Bonnet House was built in 1895 and is located at 900 Birch Road. In 1919, the owner, Hugh Taylor Birch, gave the property to his daughter Helen and artist Frederic Clay Bartlett as a wedding gift. The property was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on July 5, 1984; reference #84000832.
 * File: Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Bonnet House-1900-2.jpg |Entrance of the Bonnet House.
 * File: Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Bonnet House-1900-6.jpg|Different view of the front of the Bonnet House.
 * File: Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Bonnet House-1900-7.jpg|Some of the buildings located within the grounds of the Bartlett Estate.
 * File:Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Bonnet House-1900-8.jpg|More buildings in the grounds of the Bartlett Estate.
 * File:Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Bonnet House Theater-1900-1.jpg|Fort Lauderdale's first Theater, the "Island Theater", located in the grounds of the Bartlett Estate (Bonnet House}.
 * File: Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Stranahan House-1901.jpg|The Stranahan House was built in 1901 and is located at 335 Southeast 6th. The lower floor of the house once served as a trading post and the upper floor as a community hall. The house also served as a general store and a bank. The owner of the house, Frank Stranahan, committed suicide by drowning in the New River in front of his home. The house was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on October 2, 1973, reference #73000569.
 * File: Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Bugsy Siegel House-1930.jpg|The Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel House located in Fort Lauderdale, Florida along the riverside of New River. This was the residence of the infamous mobster known as Bugsy Seigel.
 * File: Florida-Fort Lauderdale-Dr. Willard Van Orsdel King House-1950.jpg|The Dr. Willard Van Orsdel King House was built in 1951 and is located at 1336 Seabreeze Boulevard. On February 21, 2006, it was listed in the National Register of Historic Places; reference #06000059.
 * File: Florida-Fort Lauderdale Haytt Hotel-by FLW-1957.jpg |The Hyatt Regency Hotel was built in 1957 and is located 2301 SE 17th Street. The hotel was designed by Richard F. Humble a follower of Frank Lloyd Wright.
 * File:Florida-Everglades National Park-3.jpg|An alligator in the Everglades National Park

Georgia

Mexico

New Mexico

New York {{Gallery }}
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 * File:Simpson Street Station.jpg|The historic Simpson Street (IRT White Plains Road} elevated station was built in 1904 and opened on November 26, 1904. It is located on the Junction of Westchester Ave., between Simpson St. and Southern Blvd. in the Bronx, New York. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on September 17, 2004.
 * File:976SimpsonSt.jpg|This building was built in 1909 and is located at 976 Simpson Street in the Bronx, New York. The building is where I lived the first 13 years of my life. It is conserved by the Bronx as historical because of its architectural features

Puerto Rico

Tennessee

Important, but not historical
My uploaded pictures of the Historic Structures of Phoenix


 * View "My Pictures of Historic Properties of Phoenix".

My uploaded pictures of Historic Structures, Part I


 * See Part I of "My pictures of historic Structures", which includes Adamsville (Ghost town), Agua Caliente (Ghost town), Anthem, Apache Grove, Apache Junction, Arlington, Ash Fork, Avondale, Bellemont, Benson, Bisbee, Black Canyon City, Bouse, Brigham City (Ghost town), Buckeye, Bullhead City, Bylas, Cameron, Camp Verde, Carefree, Casa Grande, Cave Creek, Chandler, Chino Valley, Clarkdale, Claypool, Clifton, Cochise, Cocopah Indian Reservation. Cool Springs, Coolidge, Cornville, Cottonwood, Dateland, Dewey-Humboldt, Dos Cabezas (Ghost town), Douglas, Dragoon, Eagar, Ehrenberg, El Mirage, Elfrida, Eloy, Fairbank (Ghost town), Flagstaff, Florence, Fort Apache, Fort Huachuca, Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation, Fort Thomas, Fort Tyson, Fountain Hills, Gadsden, Geronimo, Gila Bend, Gila County, Gila River Indian Reservation, Gilbert, Gillett (Ghost town), Glendale, Globe, Goldfield (Ghost town), Goodyear, Grand Canyon Village, Guadalupe, Hackberry, Hayden, Hereford, Holbrook, Hyder (Ghost town), Indian Gardens, Jerome, Joseph City, Kearny, Kingman, Lake Havasu City, Litchfield Park, Mammoth, Mayer, McNary, Mesa, Miami, Morristown, New River and Nogales.

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