Showing posts with label black & white. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black & white. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Down By The Old Mill Bridge ...



“My darling I am dreaming of the days gone by,
When you and I were sweethearts beneath the summer sky …
But still I will remember, where I first met you …
Down by the old mill stream where I first met you …
It was there I knew that you loved me true ..”
          ~ “Down by the Old Mill Stream”
           ~ written by Tell Taylor and one of the most popular songs of the early 20th century. The publisher, Forster Music Publisher, Inc. sold four million copies.
The song was written in 1908 while Taylor was sitting on the banks of the Blanchard River in northwest Ohio in the city of Findlay. Reportedly, Taylor’s friends persuaded him not to publish the song, believing it did not have commercial value. Two years later in 1910, however, the song was published and introduced to the public with the performances by the vaudeville quartet The Orpheus Comedy Four. After the group performed the song at a Woolworth store in Kansas City, it became so popular that the store sold out all one thousand copies of its sheet music Taylor had brought with him. Since then, over four million copies of its sheet music have been sold and it has become a staple for barbershop quartets.
            ~ recorded by artists including Arthur Clough, Harry Macdonough, Bing Crosby, The Mills Brothers and Harry James
The Old Mill Bridge is the star of this high contrast monochrome shot I captured on perfect, sun-dappled late August afternoon just off the Saucon Rail Trail, Hellertown, Pennsylvania.

The Saucon Creek streams under the bridge, constructed in 1867 and considered to be one of the earliest dated iron Pratt pony truss structures known in Pennsylvania. The bridge was rebuilt in 1948 and rededicated April 17, 2013.

The Old Mill Bridge is part of the Ehrharts Mill Historic District that appears on the National Register of Historic Places.

First developed as a mill site in the mid-18th century, the Grist Mill ground wheat from local farmers that was shipped out via the North Penn Railroad, which now serves as the Saucon Rail Trail. The mill was operated by the Ehrhart family from 1820 to 1959 and was destroyed by a fire in 1995.















Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Jersey Bound ...


“… Counting the cars on the New Jersey Turnpike
They’ve all come to look for America …”
           ~ “America”
            ~ Simon & Garfunkel
                  ~ 1968
Though it’s not the New Jersey Turnpike, cars are headed toward The Garden State as traffic crosses the Delaware River over the historic Northampton Street Bridge, commonly called The Free Bridge, into Phillipsburg, New Jersey from Easton, Pennsylvania on a late spring evening in this high contrast monochrome shot I captured in early June.

The Free Bridge, which spans the two states, was completed in 1896 and survived massive flooding from Hurricane Diane in 1955. It underwent a thorough restoration in 1990 and is one of my very favorite places to photograph.