Tag Archives: ruins

Great Basin .44-40

Winchester 1873

An extremely weathered Winchester 1873 rifle was found in Great Basin National Park by archeologists conducting surveys. The rifle was found leaning against a juniper tree with it’s stock partially buried in the dirt. How long it has been leaning against that juniper is impossible to know, but it’s safe to say it has been there for a very long time.

Lost 1873 Winchester

It’s not hard to imagine why it went undiscovered for so long, the unloaded Winchester looks like it is part of the juniper.

Great Basin '73 Closeup

According to the still visible serial number, this particular rifle was one of 25,000 Model 1873’s manufactured by Winchester in 1882. One could buy a ’73 back in 1882 for $25.

Photos courtesy of the National Park Service


USS Shaw hit at Pearl Harbor

The forward magazine of the USS Shaw explodes, while the ship is in dry dock at Pearl Harbor. 7 December 1941

Within months, the Shaw was repaired and served through the rest of WWII, earning 11 Battle Stars.

Photo courtesy of the United States Navy


Door Weatherstrip

Upper passenger door

A few years back, I was forced to replace the weatherstripping (as well as the glass and mirror) on the driver’s side door while parked in a driveway in the Twin Cities. I decided to replace the weatherstripping on the passenger door before I went back there and someone else decides that it is time for that weatherstripping to be replaced.

No more folded up pieces of cardboard between the glass panels to keep the rattle down to a minimum. These truly are strange times.

New weatherstripping

The Series door splits in half with two bolts. Overall, it came apart easily. The rivets holding the rubber seal between the two door panels had to be drilled out, as well as the lock mechanism and some of the screws holding the bottom track in place. I’m certain that the window track was original to the truck, so there were only remnants of sign that they once held weather-strip.

In some ways, working on an old vehicle, is like working an archeological dig.


Canyon de Chelly

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A spur of the moment side trip took us to Canyon de Chelly in Northern Arizona.
What an incredible sight. The canyon is owned by the Navajo Nation, and the vast majority of trails can only be hiked with a guide.
We didn’t get a guide, but ventured out to Massacre Canyon, where I took these pics.
Battery issues with the digital camera forced me to go back to film, Whoo Hoo!, but I was able to get a view to upload.
An absolutely phenomenal spot and one I will have to return to. Canyon de Chelly is loaded with cliff dwellings and petroglyphs.


ESP Rotunda


Catwalk

ESP Catwalk

ESP Catwalk


Second Level


Prison Stairway


Eastern State in B&W

Cell block in B&W

Doorway

Two story cell block

Exterior ESP

Double Decker Cell Block


Eastern State Penitentiary

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The exterior of Eastern State Penitentiary

Eastern State Penitentiary is a Gothic style fortress, surrounded by 30 foot high stone walls, near downtown Philadelphia. Opening in 1829, the Quaker inspired ESP was the world’s first penitentiary, designed to rehabilitate rather than punish.

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An 1855 engraving showing the “wagon wheel” design of ESP

Even today, the architecture of ESP is stunning. John Havilland designed the building, with a center “hub” and a series of cell blocks radiating outward like the spokes of a wheel. It quickly became a model for prisons world-wide, with over 300 similar institutions build on four continents. When one guard stood in the center of the “hub”, he could clearly see down each cell block just by turning around. At the time, it was the most expensive public building ever built. Eastern State Penitentiary had running water before the White House.

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A reconstructed cell as it was in 1829

ESP started out as a model for the “Pennsylvania System” of reform, which used solitary confinement for rehabilitation. Reformists felt that isolation led to reflection and ultimately penitence. Each prisoner was allowed one book – The Bible. Each cell received natural light from a single skylight, which represented the “eye of God”.

A cell today
The condition of one of the cells today

Upon entering the prison or leaving their cells, the guards put hoods over the prisoners heads, so that they would not be seen or recognized by other prisoners. Each cell had a small excercise yard, which was enclosed by high stone walls. Yard time was synchronized so no two prisoners next to each other would be out at the same time.

An individual excercise yard
An excercise yard off the cell

Initially, access to each cell was only from a small door through the excercise yard. Only a small portal opened into the cell blocks, which food was passed through. This eventually became impracticle, and cells were designed for prisoners to enter from the cell blocks through metal doors, which were then covered by heavy wooden sliding doors that blocked out the noise.

One of the cell blocks
One of the original cell blocks

As time went by, the Pennsylvania System of reform started to break down. Overcrowding forced ESP to house more than one prisoner per cell, cell blocks were built with two stories, and ESP evolved into a maximum security prison which housed the like of Willie Sutton and Al Capone.

Individual cell

Eastern State Penitentiary was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1966 and was closed in 1971.

Symetrical architecture
One of the double decker cell blocks

I highly recommend the tour at ESP if you are in Philadelphia. The architecture is amazing, the prison eerie, and the history immense. The self guided audio tour is narrated by Steve Buscemi, and is quite good. One gets a great feel for how the prison system “evolved” from 1829.

ESP Tower

Today, Eastern State Penitentiary operates as a museum and historic site, and is open year round with guided and self-guided tours. Special events include: “Terror Behind the Walls”, which is the annual Haunted House fundraising event taking place the weekend prior to Halloween. Each July for Bastille Day, a reinterpretation of the storming of the Bastille takes place with an actress playing the part of Marie Antoinette yelling, “Let them eat Tastykakes,” as thousands of Tastykakes are thrown down from the Gothic walls.

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Al Capone’s reconstructed cell.

Al Capone spent less than a year within ESP’s walls. He was there on a weapons charge, and seemed to have it slightly better than the other inmates. Personal effects included a phonograph, artwork, wing chair and lamps. Something tells me he ate better than the others too.