Peter Bennett - Citizen of the Planet Photo

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  • Richmondtown gained its present name in 1728 when the village now preserved as Historic Richmond Town was founded. The village area occupies 25 acres of a 100-acre site with about 15 restored buildings, including homes and commercial and civic buildings, as well as a museum., New York
    NY6124.jpg
  • Guyon-Lake-Tysen House c.1740, Richmond Town gained its present name in 1728 when the village now preserved as Historic Richmond Town was founded. The village area occupies 25 acres of a 100-acre site with about 15 restored buildings, including homes and commercial and civic buildings, as well as a museum., New York
    NY6127.jpg
  • Richmondtown gained its present name in 1728 when the village now preserved as Historic Richmond Town was founded. The village area occupies 25 acres of a 100-acre site with about 15 restored buildings, including homes and commercial and civic buildings, as well as a museum., New York
    NY6118.jpg
  • Historical Museum, Richmond Town gained its present name in 1728 when the village now preserved as Historic Richmond Town was founded. The village area occupies 25 acres of a 100-acre site with about 15 restored buildings, including homes and commercial and civic buildings, as well as a museum., New York
    NY6110.jpg
  • Basket Maker's House c.1810, Richmond Town gained its present name in 1728 when the village now preserved as Historic Richmond Town was founded. The village area occupies 25 acres of a 100-acre site with about 15 restored buildings, including homes and commercial and civic buildings, as well as a museum., New York
    NY6120.jpg
  • April 25, 2014. Th e recently unearthed Zanja Madre, or Mother Ditch. The 100 foot section of brick pipe was found at a construction site at Chinatown and is a remnant of the 90 mile network of channels that brought water to the early inhabitants of Los Angeles.
    US_CA_44_1790.jpg
  • April 25, 2014. Workers clean out a section and prepare the recently unearthed Zanja Madre, or Mother Ditch, for removal to the nearby Metabolic Studios for safe keeping. The 100 foot section and 4 foot diameter of brick pipe was found at a construction site at Chinatown and is a remnant of the 90 mile network of channels that brought water to the early inhabitants of Los Angeles. Originally built in 1781 it was enclosed in 1877 and eventually abandoned in 1904.
    US_CA_44_1808.jpg
  • April 25, 2014. Workers clean out a section and prepare the recently unearthed Zanja Madre, or Mother Ditch, for removal to the nearby Metabolic Studios for safe keeping. The 100 foot section and 4 foot diameter of brick pipe was found at a construction site at Chinatown and is a remnant of the 90 mile network of channels that brought water to the early inhabitants of Los Angeles. Originally built in 1781 it was enclosed in 1877 and eventually abandoned in 1904.
    US_CA_44_1792.jpg
  • April 25, 2014. Th e recently unearthed Zanja Madre, or Mother Ditch. The 100 foot section of brick pipe was found at a construction site at Chinatown and is a remnant of the 90 mile network of channels that brought water to the early inhabitants of Los Angeles.
    US_CA_44_1803.jpg
  • April 26, 2014. Zanja Madre lays broken after its transfer to a flat bed truck failed in an attempt to remove the structure to nearby Metabolic Studios for safe keeping. The 100 foot section and 4 foot diameter of brick pipe was found at a construction site at Chinatown and is a remnant of the 90 mile network of channels that brought water to the early inhabitants of Los Angeles. Originally built in 1781 it was enclosed in 1877 and eventually abandoned in 1904.
    US_CA_44_1875.jpg
  • April 26, 2014. Zanja Madre lays broken after its transfer to a flat bed truck failed in an attempt to remove the structure to nearby Metabolic Studios for safe keeping. The 100 foot section and 4 foot diameter of brick pipe was found at a construction site at Chinatown and is a remnant of the 90 mile network of channels that brought water to the early inhabitants of Los Angeles. Originally built in 1781 it was enclosed in 1877 and eventually abandoned in 1904.
    US_CA_44_1874.jpg
  • Father Junípero Serra, Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_321.jpg
  • Gracie Mansion, Built in 1799 for a prosperous New York merchant named Archibald Gracie as a country house, it became the official residence of the Mayor in 1942, Carl Schurz Park, Manhattan, New York
    NY6183.jpg
  • Gracie Mansion, Built in 1799 for a prosperous New York merchant named Archibald Gracie as a country house, it became the official residence of the Mayor in 1942, Carl Schurz Park, Manhattan, New York
    NY6184.jpg
  • Apollo Theater, 125th Street, Harlem, Manhattan, New York
    NY6172.jpg
  • Dakota Building, 72nd Street, Central Park West, Manhattan, New York
    NY3091.jpg
  • New York Stock Exchange & Federal Hall, Broad Street & Wall Street, Manhattan, New York
    NY3062.jpg
  • Federal Hall, Wall Street, Manhattan, New York
    LM1G.jpg
  • Father Junípero Serra, Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_318.jpg
  • Old Stable, West 17th Street, Manhattan, New York
    NY3046.jpg
  • Dakota Building, 72nd Street, Central Park West, Manhattan, New York
    NY3092.jpg
  • Grant's Tomb, Upper West Side, Manhattan, New York
    NY3017.jpg
  • Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_365.jpg
  • Tejas (roof tiles), Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_340.jpg
  • Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_324.jpg
  • View of Statue of Liberty from Ellis Island Immigration Museum, New York
    NY3086.jpg
  • Gracie Mansion, Built in 1799 for a prosperous New York merchant named Archibald Gracie as a country house, it became the official residence of the Mayor in 1942, Carl Schurz Park, Manhattan, New York
    NY6180.jpg
  • Apollo Theater, 125th Street, Harlem, Manhattan, New York
    NY6171.jpg
  • New York Stock Exchange & Federal Hall, Broad Street & Wall Street, Manhattan, New York
    LM1L.jpg
  • Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_364.jpg
  • Lavadero, Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_361.jpg
  • Grindstones, Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_359.jpg
  • Skulls over doorway to chapel, Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_356.jpg
  • Chapel, Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_350.jpg
  • Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_334.jpg
  • Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_326.jpg
  • Grant's Tomb, Upper West Side, Manhattan, New York
    NY3018.jpg
  • Grove Court, Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York
    NB1J.jpg
  • Bedford Street House, Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York
    NB1F.jpg
  • Plaque at Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_327.jpg
  • View of Statue of Liberty from Ellis Island Immigration Museum, New York
    NY3087.jpg
  • Jefferson Market Library, Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York
    NB1B.jpg
  • Mission Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
    US_CA_52_357.jpg
  • Next month the Robert F. Kennedy Community School will open on the site of the former Ambassador Hotel, where the Democratic presidential contender was assassinated in 1968. Dubbed one the  "Taj Mahal" schools, it will be the nation’s most expensive public school with a price tag of $578 million, and will include fine art murals, a marble memorial to Kennedy, a public park, and a state-of-the-art swimming pool. August 23, 2010. Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, California, USA
    CA17407.jpg
  • Next month the Robert F. Kennedy Community School will open on the site of the former Ambassador Hotel, where the Democratic presidential contender was assassinated in 1968. Dubbed one the  "Taj Mahal" schools, it will be the nation’s most expensive public school with a price tag of $578 million, and will include fine art murals, a marble memorial to Kennedy, a public park, and a state-of-the-art swimming pool. August 23, 2010. Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, California, USA
    CA17406.jpg