|
Showing 1 - 18 of
18 matches in All Departments
The Elizabeth River courses through the heart of Virginia. The
Jamestown colonists recognized the river's strategic importance and
explored its watershed almost immediately after the 1607 founding.
The Elizabeth River traces four centuries of this historic stream's
path through the geography and culture of Virginia.
The Oceanfront's Cottage Line, the music halls of Seaside Park, and
dunes so large they dwarfed the old Cape Henry lighthouse are a
memory. Gone too are many of the city's iconic landmarks and open
spaces, lost to flood, fire, storm and the relentless onslaught of
post-World War II development. With a deft hand and rare vintage
images, historian Amy Waters Yarsinske recalls a time when the
likes of Chuck Berry and Ray Charles played beneath the sizzling
lights of the Dome and locals shagged the night away at the
Peppermint Beach Club. Join Yarsinske as she takes one final stroll
through a Virginia Beach lost to time.
Berthed today at NAUTICUS, the National Maritime Center, the USS
Wisconsin (BB-64) was the last authorized of the four Iowa-class
battleships, the largest American dreadnoughts ever built.
Wisconsin saw action in World War II and the Korean Conflict for
which the Big Wisky earned a collective six battle stars. Brought
out of mothballs and recommissioned a second time on October 22,
1988, the Wisconsin saw action again during the Persian Gulf War
but was decommissioned a third time on September 30, 1991. But this
great piece of American history was not destined for a lengthy
slumber. Resurrected by the city of Norfolk and USS Wisconsin
Foundation, working in lockstep with the Navy, it has become a
museum ship and Navy heritage site that continues the legacy of
duty, honor, and country that was the calling card of Wisconsin's
crew, and to inspire future generations of Americans.
In its first century and counting, NASA Langley Research Center
[LaRC] has had a remarkable history that has stood out not only for
the many outstanding achievements in flight and space exploration
but the people who made it happen. "If there were a list of 100
people who contributed the most the progress in the world of
flight, I believe Langley would provide the most names. Without
question," observed astronaut, aeronautical engineer and the first
man to walk on the Moon, Neil Alden Armstrong (1930 - 2012) on
LaRC's nineteenth anniversary, "many of the giants of aero research
spent their careers here, and many others, who learned their craft
here, went on to lead other research efforts at other governments
labs in the industry. Langley has been a powerhouse of creative
thinking." With a centennial theme of "inventing the future," NASA
LaRC is poised to enter its second century of ingenuity and
invention with a wealth of pending and proposed research, and
near-term prognostication may prove a bit easier.
|
Ocean View (Hardcover)
Amy Waters Yarsinske
|
R1,031
R827
Discovery Miles 8 270
Save R204 (20%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Lost Norfolk (Hardcover)
Amy Waters Yarsinske
|
R846
R695
Discovery Miles 6 950
Save R151 (18%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
You may like...
Barbie
Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling
Blu-ray disc
R266
Discovery Miles 2 660
|