Behind every picture

lies a story........ Located on the back of card or print

#201 Elm Park

Worcester, Massachusetts

27 acres for Elm Park was deeded to the City of Worcester on March 17, 1854 by Levi Lincoln and John Hammond. It was the first purchase of land for a public park in the U.S. Each year Veteran's organizations honor those who died at sea by tossing flowers into the water off the bridge.

Watercolor

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#202 Clark University

Worcester, Massachusetts

Jonas Clark was the benefactor of this University. This first building was built in 1887, making Clark the second oldest graduate university in the U.S. Clark University has the highest graduating Geography Ph.D.'s in the country.

Watercolor

#203 Main Street

Leominster, Massachusetts

Settlement began here in 1725 after purchasing the land from the Nashaway Indians. Johnny Appleseed was born here in 1774, and also in that same year, Leominster's principal industry, comb making, began.

Watercolor

 

#205 Fitchburg Longsjo Classic

Fitchburg, Massachusetts

One of the few races in the country to be termed a "Classic", this race is a memorial of Art Longsjo of Fitchburg, an admired athelete in both the speed skating and cycling community.  This race. now a four-day stage race, beginning in 1960, has attracted international world class cyclists and Olympic teams.

Acrylic

#206 Victorian Home

Leominster, Massachusetts

This home was built in 1890 in Leominster, Massachusetts. It was originally a "Painted Lady," as Victorian homes painted in 3 or more colors are called. The 40 year old maple next to it is now the "Painted Lady!"

Watercolor

#207 Coggshall Park

Fitchburg, Massachusetts

In 1894 Henry Coggshall gave the City of Fitchburg 40 acres and $1000 to purchase more land as needed for this beautiful park. With its grounds beautified for its 100 year anniversary in 1994, it is a favorite place for picnics and hiking, as well as a haven for swans, ducks and children!

Watercolor

#208 Downtown

Fitchburg, Massachusetts

Main Street Fitchburg, following the curve of the Nashua River, dotted with old churches and staunch victorian structures, leads one to City Hall, the Upper Common, the Old First Parish Meeting House, and the 100 ton Boulder.

Watercolor

 

#209 Vermont Scene

Vermont has four distinct seasons.  The fall is one of the most magnificent.  Farm roads and farm stands, cheese and fruit and vegetables, the state's pastoral lands devote 1 million and a half acres to agriculture.  Dairying is the primary industry.  So this is a classic 'Vermont' Scene.

Watercolor

 

#210 New England Fall

People from all over the world flock to see the New England Fall. Orchestrated in a peak performance, colors play upon the senses in subdued tones, and then sharp bursts, blending, weaving through a symphony of sight!

Watercolor

#211 Annisquam, Massachusetts

Annis means "island" and Squam means "pleasant or peaceful harbor." In 1662 Charles Annis came from Ireland and eventually built his home on the peaceful Annisquam River.

Watercolor

# 212 Covered Bridge 1

Jackson, NH

Also known as the Honeymoon Bridge, this covered bridge was built by Charles Austin Broughton and his son Frank. During the Civil War he was a sergeant in the 18th Regiment of the New Hampshire Volunteers, Company E. He was a finish carpenter, an avid fiddler, and a skillful bear hunter. A 10,000 meter footrace has been running for several decades across this bridge.

Acrylic Crackled

#213 Charles River Colors

Boston, Massachusetts

Boston's Charles River, with its array of architectural history along its banks and sailboats skirting about on its waves. A panorama of American History!

 

Watercolor

#214 Charles River Night

Boston, Massachusetts

Boston's Charles River, with its array of architectural history along its banks and sailboats skirting about on its waves. A panorama of American History!

 

Watercolor

 

#215 Charles River

Boston, Massachusetts

Boston's Charles River, with its array of architectural history along its banks and sailboats skirting about on its waves. A panorama of American History!

 

Watercolo

 

#216 Faneuil Hall/Quincy Market

Boston, Massachusetts

"The Cradle of Liberty".  Faneuil Hall (center) as seen across Quincy Market

From revolutionary rhetoric to the chatter of Bostonian shoppers and tourists, the whimsical shops and restuarants bring life and color once again to a famed American scene!

Watercolor

#217 Boston Common

Boston, Massachusetts

The Boston Common is known to be one of the oldest public parks in the country. The park is almost 50 acres in size. In the past it had cattle grazing on it and until 1817, public hangings took place here. British troops camped on Boston Common prior to the Revolution and left from here to face colonial resistance at Lexington and Concord in April, 1775.

Rendered Photography

(What is ?)

#218 Boston City Street

The Boston City Street a reminder
of 19th century city life with
their inlaid sidewalks and
gas lanterns - the charm of
this historic city on the Charles.

Watercolor

#219 Boston's North End

Some say that Boston is the most European of American Cities.  Certainly the North End, or "Little Italy" as it is known, brings to Boston the true cultural feel of a trip to another country!  The little streets with assorted restaurants and shops, flower boxes and cobblestones, delight residents and tourists alike!

Rendered Photography

(What is ?)

#220 Boston City Street 2

Boston, Massachusetts

The Boston City Street a reminder
of 19th century city life with
their inlaid sidewalks and
gas lanterns - the charm of
this historic city on the Charles.

Watercolor

#221 The Old State House

Boston, Massachusetts

Towering buildings now loom
over the scene of the 'Boston Massacre'
The Old State House,
where "Independence was born."

Watercolor

#222 Fenway

Boston, Massachusetts

The Boston Red Sox baseball
team play at the famous Fenway
Stadium, with applauding fans
as a shimmering back drop.

Watercolor

#223 Boston Swan Boats

Boston, Massachusetts

This man-made lake in the
Boston Public Gardens, is home
to the Swan Boats, a most popular
sight. The garden was landscaped
in 1860 by George F. Meacham.

Watercolor

#224"Pleasure Gardens"

Boston, Massachusetts

In the late 1800's
Landscape Architect, Frederick
Law Olmstead, turned the
marshy Back Bay Fens into
"Public Pleasure Gardens."

Watercolor

#225 Longfellow Bridge

Boston, Massachusetts

Connecting Cambridge to
Beacon Hill, the Longfellow
Bridge sits a top a sun kissed
river, dotted with the favorite
pastime on the Charles, boating.

Watercolor

#226 Boston's North End

Coffee Shop

Some say that Boston is the most European of American Cities.  Certainly the North End, or "Little Italy" as it is known, brings to Boston the true cultural feel of a trip to another country!  The little streets with assorted restaurants and shops, flower boxes and cobblestones, delight residents and tourists alike!

Rendered Photography

(What is ?)

#227

Caesar Salad

Sally Swift and Caesar the horse carry delighted travelers thru the streets of Boston on a carriage ride reminisent of gentry folk of days gone by.  Sally cares for Caesar in her back yard having 26 years experience.

Watercolor

#260

Manhattan Skyline

Twin Towers

The Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, New York City, highlited the Manhattan Skyline until September 11, 2001.  This scene will ever more remain only a memory preserved on the printed page or screen, and in the mind and heart of the world.

Watercolor

#270 Versaille Cottages 1

When the frivolous Marie-Antoinette, Queen of France, wanted a change from the pomp and ceremony of life at court in the Grand Palace of Versaille, she would retreat with her entourage to the palace's world renown gardens and these little cottages, 'roughing it,' Parisian style! Living in excess, you might say she 'lost her head!'

Watercolor

#271 Versaille Cottages 2

When the frivolous Marie-Antoinette, Queen of France, wanted a change from the pomp and ceremony of life at court in the Grand Palace of Versaille, she would retreat with her entourage to the palace's world renown gardens and these little cottages, 'roughing it,' Parisian style! Living in excess, you might say she 'lost her head!'

Watercolor

#280 The Art Show

Art Shows and festivals delight art lovers across the country.  The talented and patient artist exhibits their passion while they hope that the patrons will support them so they can continue their work.

Watercolor

#250 View From

Boboli Gardens

Florence, Italy

This is a view of a residential neighborhood in Florence, Italy beyond the old city walls from high up in the Giardini  di Boboli .  These gardens behind the Ritti Palace, the main seat of the Medici grand dukes of Tuscany, were laid out for Eleanor di Toledo, the wife of Cosimo l de' Medici.  They are some of the first and most familiar formal 16th century Italian Gardens .

Watercolor

#244 Nantucket Cottages

Oil on Canvas

 

 

 

#242 Nantucket Field

Oil on Canvas

 

 

 

#243 Nantucket Road

Oil on Canvas

 

 

 

#290 China Sunset

Watercolor

 

 

 

#231 Shop on Martha's

Vineyard

English Explorer, Bartholomew Gosnold who sailed to this Island in 1602, named it after his second child who died in infancy. It is one of the few place names in the United States today with a possessive apostrophe. Known primarily as a summer colony, this island was also home to one of the earliest known deaf communities.

Watercolor

 

 

 

#241 Country Farm

Watercolor

 

 

 

#240 Alaskan Tundra

Watercolor

 

 

 

 

 

#230 Gingerbread House 1

These homes were built on Martha’s Vineyard in the mid-1800’s by members of the Methodist church group who had used the grounds surrounding these cottages formerly as campgrounds. Many of the houses have been passed on through generations of families.

Watercolor

 

 

 

 

 

#229 Old Orchard Beach

 

Oil