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I would love to talk with someone in regards to this rock, and the ranch across the street from it. My grandmother, Emma Leone Dunne Woolley grew up in this home. Her father was William Kettringham Dunne. She was born in 1995, I believe. I have so many stories in my memory and in my grandfathers journal about this farm. My grandmother gave birth to my oldest uncle, Le Roie Woolley, Jr. in the little log cabin that used to be on this farm, but is now restored in the historic park where the gristmill is. There is a pond across from the Park, that my grandfather, who was somewhat of a jymnast, used to dive into from on top of some sort of harvester machine? i need to spark my memory on this one a bit.
I hope to hear from you. My email address is jeannepack@gmail.com
Initially I remember taking two trips down to the canyon looking for what really turned out to be the Navajo Bridge. Anyway...I know I took S. River Rd. out of St. George and then went to the schoolhouse. Problem is I can't remember if I took this picture before I got to the schoolhouse or after. I've tried it on Google Earth and Virtual Earth. I'll look where you suggest through that, since I'm now in VA. Thanks.
I know that everything in Texas is supposed to be the biggest but is a 195 foot cross bigger that a 500 ft cross. I refer to the cross at the Valle de Los Caidos in Spain.
At one point my mom served as one of the elderly Missionaries for the LDS Church. When she returned from her mission in 1990 she took this photo with her Kodak Star 110 camera. Before she passed away, she sent a copy of this photo to me after marking the spot with an arrow (like I couldn't see the heart!)
After obsessing about where I took this photo, I returned to the Navajo bridge after 21 years and found the spot where I took my original photo of the scene taken off of the Navajo Bridge in 1976.
A funny note on this picture. After that long of a time, I wanted to be sure I would always remember where I took it, and since Panaramio wasn't around then, I wound up taking 3 rolls of film of the exact same picture. Now that's obsessing!
While traveling accross the country in 1976, I took this picture off the south side of the original Navajo Bridge as indicated by my marker in Google Earth.
That original spot is gone, but not remembering where I took the picture put me on a quest that had me going back to differnt parts of the Western section of the Grand Canyon that eventually led to a clearer picture.
This one was taken with a Kodak Instamatic camera.
Taken from atop of the Dolphin Run Condomiums/Hotel in Virginia Beach, VA in April of 1999. The bungee jump is gone, now just a parking lot. This was my attempt to recreate a picture I took of the Gateway National Arch in St. Louis.
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diamond butte
I would love to talk with someone in regards to this rock, and the ranch across the street from it. My grandmother, Emma Leone Dunne Woolley grew up in this home. Her father was William Kettringham Dunne. She was born in 1995, I believe. I have so many stories in my memory and in my grandfathers journal about this farm. My grandmother gave birth to my oldest uncle, Le Roie Woolley, Jr. in the little log cabin that used to be on this farm, but is now restored in the historic park where the gristmill is. There is a pond across from the Park, that my grandfather, who was somewhat of a jymnast, used to dive into from on top of some sort of harvester machine? i need to spark my memory on this one a bit.
I hope to hear from you. My email address is jeannepack@gmail.com
Initially I remember taking two trips down to the canyon looking for what really turned out to be the Navajo Bridge. Anyway...I know I took S. River Rd. out of St. George and then went to the schoolhouse. Problem is I can't remember if I took this picture before I got to the schoolhouse or after. I've tried it on Google Earth and Virtual Earth. I'll look where you suggest through that, since I'm now in VA. Thanks.
I know that everything in Texas is supposed to be the biggest but is a 195 foot cross bigger that a 500 ft cross. I refer to the cross at the Valle de Los Caidos in Spain.
http://www.bluffton.edu/~sullivanm/spain/madrid/fallen/fallen.html
excellent, very interesting!
At one point my mom served as one of the elderly Missionaries for the LDS Church. When she returned from her mission in 1990 she took this photo with her Kodak Star 110 camera. Before she passed away, she sent a copy of this photo to me after marking the spot with an arrow (like I couldn't see the heart!)
After obsessing about where I took this photo, I returned to the Navajo bridge after 21 years and found the spot where I took my original photo of the scene taken off of the Navajo Bridge in 1976.
A funny note on this picture. After that long of a time, I wanted to be sure I would always remember where I took it, and since Panaramio wasn't around then, I wound up taking 3 rolls of film of the exact same picture. Now that's obsessing!
I took this photo with a Samsung Maxima Zoom 105
While traveling accross the country in 1976, I took this picture off the south side of the original Navajo Bridge as indicated by my marker in Google Earth.
That original spot is gone, but not remembering where I took the picture put me on a quest that had me going back to differnt parts of the Western section of the Grand Canyon that eventually led to a clearer picture.
This one was taken with a Kodak Instamatic camera.
Taken in April of 1999, the exact spot I took this photo now has boat slips. But then, it was just a lazy spring afternoon in Virginia Beach.
Taken from atop of the Dolphin Run Condomiums/Hotel in Virginia Beach, VA in April of 1999. The bungee jump is gone, now just a parking lot. This was my attempt to recreate a picture I took of the Gateway National Arch in St. Louis.