- Alex McKenzie
- Personal
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Autobiographical Anecdotes
>
- Breakfast - 1940s & 50s
- Those Were the Days - 1950s
- Building Underwater Gear, 1950's
- Can't Let Go - 1953
- The Turning Point, 1957
- Mexico, October 1965
- Bilbo Baggins 1971
- A brush with death? 1977
- What I didn't do, 1979
- Brazil 1996
- Family Dinner Time
- Forbidden Fruit
- Solo Sailing Incident, ca 2000
- Joel Nichols - 2013
- Manatees, January 2014
- Motorcycle Incident, June 2014
- Time is a Thief, 2015
- Never Too Old to Learn, 2015
- Two Weeks in Rockport MA 2015
- A Fork in the Road - 2016
- The Winos
- Smooth Stones
- Change
- No One Would Have Guessed ... - 2017
- What I Discovered ...
- At This Time of Year ... 2017
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AMC Trail Crew
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-
The Trail Crew in Appalachia
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- With the Trail Gang
- Recovery of the Old Bridle Path on Mt. Lafayette
- The Trail Spree of 1929
- Webster Cliff Trail 1912-1914
- Trail Bridges
- The Story of the Mahoosuc
- 1939 trail report
- June 1940 trail report
- Dec 1940 trail report
- 1941 trail plan
- A Vacation With Pay
- 25 Years of the AMC Trail Crew
- Five Thousand Trail Signs
- The AMC Trail System
- The Pace of the Grub-Hoe
- 1953 trails report
- 1954 trails report
- trail report - call for volunteers
- Trail Erosion
- Ethan Pond Shelter
- An Early AMC Trail Crew
- Great Gulf Shelter
- The AMC Trail Crew 1919-1964
- The Evolution of a Trailman
- Trail Crew Thoughts
- Trail Design. Construction & Maintenance
- Of Mules, Mice, and Madison
- The Green Plate Special
- 1980-81 trails report
- Trail Blazers
- White Mountain Trail Crew - 75 Years
- 1960 Trail Crew Resignation
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The Trail Crew in Appalachia
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- 2017 Summer Trip
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Autobiographical Anecdotes
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- Professional
- INWG Documents
- Family
-
Alexander A. McKenzie II
>
- Mount Washington >
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LORAN
>
- Crusing the Labrador
- Acquisition of Canadian sites for Long-Range-Navigation Stations
- Sites #1 and #2: Loran Memo #108
- LRN Site No. 3
- Report of Construction at L.R.N. Site #3, 8/10-11/5 1942
- LRN Site No. 4 (Bonavista Point, Newfoundland)
- Supplies for Site 4
- Drawings Left at Site #4 by A.A. McKenzie
- Site 4 Letter of March 24, 1943
- LRN Site No. 5
- LRN Site No. 8
- LRN Site No. 9
- Test Plan - Eastern US
- LORAN - Part 1
- LORAN - Part 2
- LORAN - Part 3
- End of LORAN
- Genealogy >
-
Alexander A. McKenzie II
>
- Photos
-
Europe 2015 -first half
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- Barcelona April 2015
- Pont du Gard France - April 24, 2015
- Nimes France - April 27, 2015
- Aix-en Provence - April 28, 2015
- Cote d'Azur - April 29, 2015
- Vence to Gourdon - April 30, 2015
- Eze France - May 1, 2015
- Milano - May 3, 2015
- Parco Burchina - May 6, 2015
- Ivrea & Aosta Valley - May 7, 2015
- Torino - May 9, 2015
- Europe 2015 - second half >
- Indianapolis Art Museum - July 2015
- Ringling Estate
- Oak Park 2017
- Frank Lloyd Wright in Florida
-
Europe 2015 -first half
>
- Edit Website
At the peak of his career Frank Lloyd Wright designed a college campus in Lakeland Florida. Much of what he designed was built, and is now part of Florida Southern College. The part of his design which was constructed is public spaces; he also designed residence halls and faculty housing which was not built at the time. [In 2013 the College built a faculty house as an exhibit, but it is so far from meeting modern building code that the building permit requires that no person spend even one night in it.] I took a tour in early May 2018 which happened to be on the day before graduation - that day is the one time during the year when students (seniors only) are allowed to play in the huge fountain Wright designed.
The Wright buildings on campus are quite spectacular to see. Perhaps they were not so spectacular to use. The librarians hated the library, and a new library was built a few decades later. The church leaks a lot, and the guide told us that the bits of colored glass inserted in all the bricks fall out at a touch, so repair is constant. All the air conditioning machinery on the roof of the Science Building was added later and would have given Wright a fit if he had ever seen it. The big bank of south-facing windows you can see in the interior photo of the Arts Building were original clear glass that let in so much light that the building overheated - eventually the clear glass was replaced by smoked glass. And the technology to pump enough water into the fountain to actually create a dome of water was not available when the fountain was constructed in 1948. It sat as a big pool for a few years and then was covered with a deck which had a few small openings to see the water. Not until 2007 were the pumps and nozzles installed which create a dome up to 45 feet high as Wright envisioned.
The Wright buildings on campus are quite spectacular to see. Perhaps they were not so spectacular to use. The librarians hated the library, and a new library was built a few decades later. The church leaks a lot, and the guide told us that the bits of colored glass inserted in all the bricks fall out at a touch, so repair is constant. All the air conditioning machinery on the roof of the Science Building was added later and would have given Wright a fit if he had ever seen it. The big bank of south-facing windows you can see in the interior photo of the Arts Building were original clear glass that let in so much light that the building overheated - eventually the clear glass was replaced by smoked glass. And the technology to pump enough water into the fountain to actually create a dome of water was not available when the fountain was constructed in 1948. It sat as a big pool for a few years and then was covered with a deck which had a few small openings to see the water. Not until 2007 were the pumps and nozzles installed which create a dome up to 45 feet high as Wright envisioned.