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dupont253design
Founder and Creative Director for 253DESIGN, Web Boss & Community Development Manager for Northwestern Brothers Marketing and your daddy.
In relation to DuPont avid history buff of the DuPont area and maintain the site Save The History found here at www.savethehistory.com. I also as indicated above to web work for business and individuals for looking to make the most of their site on the smallest budgets they can afford here www.253design.com as well.
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dupont253design's conversations
Yes this was beached many many years ago. It was intact for a good many years until it recently broke it two. It was part of the Nisqually Spit/Break.
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Great composition! VOTE + LIKE
Greetings from Brazil.
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Very nice shot.
Voted.
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well done,,
my vote
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1934 Fort Nisqually reconstructed at Pt. Defiance Park by the Young Men’s business Club of Tacoma. The factor’s house and the granary, the oldest building in the state, were moved and the rest of the fort rebuilt. Black locust trees, raised from seed brought from England, are all that remain on the original site. Pacific Lutheran University conducted an archeological dig in 1987. The site was fenced and given to the National Archeological Conservancy in 1993.
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1832 The area to become Fort Nisqually was sited by Hudson’s Bay Company’s chief trader, Archibald McDonald. In cooperation with the Indians, his expedition built a storehouse for blankets, seeds and potatoes at the mouth of Sequalitchew Creek.
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