Showing posts with label National Register of Historic Places. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Register of Historic Places. Show all posts

Sunday, April 25, 2021

Summertime At Geiger's Covered Bridge ...

“Summertime, and the livin’ is easy ...

 ~ “Summertime”

 ~ composed by George Gershwin in 1934

 for the 1935 opera “Porgy & Bess”

~ performed by such jazz greats as

 Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong,

 Sarah Vaughan & Billie Holiday

It’s summertime and the livin’ is easy at Geiger’s Covered Bridge on the warm, lazy and lush July evening – quintessential summer – I captured this HDR scene that beckons you to stop and soak in the splendor of my most favorite of seasons in this picturesque postcard of summer’s beauty.

 

Geiger’s Covered Bridge is an historic wooden covered bridge in North Whitehall Township. It is a 112-foot-long Burr Truss bridge, constructed in 1860. It has vertical plank siding and an entry portal of stepped square planks. It crosses the Jordan Creek and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. It can be accessed from The Covered Bridge Trail of Trexler Nature Preserve, Schnecksville, Pennsylvania.


 

Monday, March 15, 2021

Illick's Mill Draped In Winter ...

“Places I love come back to me as music …”

      ~ Sara Teasdale

    ~ American lyric poet & Pulitzer Prize winner

      ~ 1884-1933

       ~ “The Collected Poems”

Illick’s Mill is draped in winter as a February evening beckons while the sunset wanes at Monocacy Park, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, three days after the region was blanketed with 27.3 inches of snow.

Illick’s Mill, also known as Peters’ Mill and Monocacy Milling Co., is an historic grist mill. It was built in 1856, and is a four level, vernacular stone mill building with a heavy timber frame interior. The original building measured approximately 34 by 40 feet. The building was expanded in the 1880s with a 20-foot addition and the addition of the fourth level and a monitor roof. The mill was formerly the home of the Fox Environmental Center.

The grist mill was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. As of October 2015, the Appalachian Mountain Club’s Mid-Atlantic Conservation Office has occupied a portion of the building, under a lease agreement with the City of Bethlehem. The building is maintained and its uses managed by the City of Bethlehem’s Parks, Recreation and Public Properties Department.