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FLOOR REGISTER WOOD - REGISTER WOOD


Floor Register Wood - 13th Floor Belvedere Hotel Baltimore - Cutting Floor Tile



Floor Register Wood





floor register wood






    register
  • An official list or record, for example of births, marriages, and deaths, of shipping, or of historic places

  • record in writing; enter into a book of names or events or transactions

  • file: record in a public office or in a court of law; "file for divorce"; "file a complaint"

  • (music) the timbre that is characteristic of a certain range and manner of production of the human voice or of different pipe organ stops or of different musical instruments

  • A book or record of attendance, for example of students in a class or school or guests in a hotel

  • A particular part of the range of a voice or instrument





    floor
  • a structure consisting of a room or set of rooms at a single position along a vertical scale; "what level is the office on?"

  • The lower surface of a room, on which one may walk

  • A level area or space used or designed for a particular activity

  • shock: surprise greatly; knock someone's socks off; "I was floored when I heard that I was promoted"

  • the inside lower horizontal surface (as of a room, hallway, tent, or other structure); "they needed rugs to cover the bare floors"; "we spread our sleeping bags on the dry floor of the tent"

  • All the rooms or areas on the same level of a building; a story





    wood
  • Such material when cut and used as timber or fuel

  • forest: the trees and other plants in a large densely wooded area

  • The hard fibrous material that forms the main substance of the trunk or branches of a tree or shrub

  • A golf club with a wooden or other head that is relatively broad from face to back (often with a numeral indicating the degree to which the face is angled to loft the ball)

  • the hard fibrous lignified substance under the bark of trees

  • United States film actress (1938-1981)











The historic Madison hotel




The historic Madison hotel





We were looking for a place to stay for the last night in Yellowstone. We got a list of all the hotels in West Yellowstone from the previous night hotel's stay. We randomly called a few numbers from the list and booked this one - Madison hotel. And after a long day in Yellowstone National park, we reached this place late in the night. Unknowingly we reserved a room in one of the most famous and historic hotels in the Yellowstone area. We loved the place as soon as we saw it and felt that we stumbled upon something historical. The Madison hotel is listed in National register of historic places by the United States government. Everything inside and outside has a long history. It was a great experience.

There is an inscription on the side there that reads:
The Forest Service granted Jess Pierman a special-use permit to build a hotel and restaurant here in 1910. A large tent accommodated guests until the present hotel was under construction in the fall of 1912. Doll Barlett began cooking for Pierman in 1910, saving much of her weekly ten-dollar paycheck. Her husband Roxy drove the stage between Monida and West Yellowstone. By the time the hotel was under construction, the Barletts had saved enough money to buy the business which they ran until Roxy died in the 1920s. Doll continued to run the hotel with her second husband, George Pickup. The two story rectangular plan is of simple log construction with saddle-notched corner timbering and a prominent front dormer. The original six upstairs rooms, warmed by a cut stone fireplace in the downstairs lobby, catered to rail and stage travelers. Each room had a pitcher, a wash basin and a chamber pot. Water came from well across the street. The hotel expanded adding fourteen rooms in 1921 and a bar and dance floor soon after, but there was no running water until the 1930s. In 1923, President Harding was a guest and and antiquated registers show that such Hollywood greats as Wallace Beery and Gloria Swanson enjoyed the hospitality of the Madison Hotel. Log support columns and beams, wood floors, light fixtures, the stone fireplace and many of the room furnishings are original. Although not the first hotel in West Yellowstone, the Madison is the only hotel that remains from this early period when tourism was in its infancy.











Still in crates at Longwood




Still in crates at Longwood





From wikipedia: "Longwood, also known as Nutt's Folly, is an historic antebellum octagonal mansion located at 140 Lower Woodville Road in Natchez, Mississippi, USA. The mansion is on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, and is a National Historic Landmark.[2][4]Longwood is the largest octagonal house in the United States..
The mansion is known for its octagonal plan, byzantine onion-shaped dome,[7] and the contrast between its ornately finished first floor and the unfinished upper floors..
.
Samuel Sloan, a Philadelphia architect, designed the home in 1859 for cotton planter Dr. Haller Nutt.[8] Work was halted in 1861 at the start of the American Civil War. Dr Nutt died of pneumonia in 1864, leaving the work incomplete. Of the thirty-two rooms planned for the house, only nine rooms on the basement floor were completed..
.
Haller Nutt's never-finished Natchez home, Longwood, was the last burst of southern opulence before war brought the cotton barons' dominance to an end. Longwood survived decades of neglect and near-abandonment to become one of Natchez' most popular attractions."









floor register wood







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Post je objavljen 27.10.2011. u 16:28 sati.