Sunday, May 6, 2012

Whimsical Windows - Outside/In

Toby most graciously hosts the fun architectural meme, Whimsical Windows/Delirious Doors. We look for unique portals, and look around for same. 

Today, I am using pictures that have ben seen before, yet given the look at these windows I am able to show a unique set of perspectives of one room, one outside and one in...


This house is known as the Humphreys Homestead, home of the local Derby Historical Society. The house was completed in 1698, and was considered a mansion in those days. The neat period windows are the classic 12-over-12 arrangement. 

Inside, we see the same room, Lady Humphreys Parlor, the luxurious (in that day) sitting room to host guests. Stark these days perhaps...opposite sides of the same room, a look at the past as it was...

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Shadow Shot Sunday 2 - Fire Museum

1982 American LaFrance, built in Elmira, New York
Shadow Shot Sunday 2 is back, and weekly shadow hunting is a must for this weekend meme.Last week, Patti and I were invited to the soft opening of the new Ansonia (Connecticut) Fire Museum, a very unique and local one set in our small city. Given our size (19,000), this is a fine one, showcasing our history of fire fighting. Given that there were no benefactors, the work, dedication and passion of the local volunteer department has led to a magnificent look at our history.

1962 American LaFrance
1946 Mack, built in Allentown Pennsylvania














There are several old trucks sitting inside this building, the old machine shop in the original school. We see in these three vehicles the improvements over the three years from open cabs to now enclosed and safer places for the ride to the fires. There was talk of replacing the old wood floor, but those familiar with restoration were concerned with the oil soaked wood. Instead, the stained floor reflects the many eras of hard work above them. An honest style that I hope is not restored...


A final look through the historic Ansonia photos brought the real, in the day and now old school fire apparatus. This of course are the two-horsepower equine engines known as Mollie and Dollie. The technology has gone a long way from the old to the new. A great small city museum of which we are all proud...see more shadowy art at SSS2!

Monday, April 30, 2012

Tina's Pic Story - Emergency 'E'



Tina's Pic Story allows us to take photos, not randomly but to follow Tina's weekly theme, which this week is the letter 'E'.

Today I look to vehicles that respond to Emergency situations, so have chosen a couple of fire trucks, one newer and enormous and one old and not so much, both part Webster Hose Company 3 in Ansonia.
The big one is a Pierce, purchased by Ansonia new in 2009, and huge. It carries the six fire fighters safely inside and pumps plenty of water onto the flames. 

I hope that I never need their services...the old one is is a local museum and is a Mack and was purchased by the city in 1946. Not as enormous, but it was once elemental is arriving at emergencies. So the letter 'E' is here, happily without emergencies now...

Ruby Tuesday 2 - Fire protection past-present

Ruby Tuesday 2 is back, and we look for rubies in small or large doses, and even in different eras...Patti and I were in a new attraction in our small (19,000) city, the Ansonia Fire Museum built as part of an old and now restored school. Though not open to the public yet, we were on an informal tour of the great displays of trucks and firefighter gear.

This picture jumped at me - a late 19th century horse-drawn fire wagon in the foreground from Webster Hose Company. The red sits all over this classic apparatus. Behind is something completely different in era - a modern fire suppression system. The differences from horse-drawn to computerized is cool, the way once good enough then to state of the art now I find intriguing. With plenty of red to capture our attention! See more ruby at RT2!


Sunday, April 29, 2012

Whimsical Windows - Local Byzantine

At ground level by the St Peter-St Paul Church, Howard Avenue, Ansonia, Connecticut 
Toby hosts the fun Whimsical Windows/Delirious Doors, and we hope to capture unique portals.  

Today I show part of the Saint Peter-Saint Paul Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in Ansonia. We are in an old industrial town immigrants that immigrants from Eastern Europe who originally worshiped here from countries such as the Ukraine, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania. 

This building was completed in 1915, and is in a Byzantine style, the domes clad in copper (befitting Ansonia, known as the Copper City). I notice a few buildings where the copper has turned to a green hue like this one. I would imagine the cost to restore the roof to its copper hue would be astronomical, so the copper stays as is. However, the dome and windows have a very unique shape... 

Patti and I were in an old school next door yesterday, and I noticed the church through a large window. Since she had the camera, and I saw windows perfect for the meme. I asked and she kindly took this shot. If we pay attention with camera in hand, we may capture even more architectural gems…