Posted at 6:29 pm by 1909ventilo, on March 16, 2011
he said ……”Just because I love You!”
“Love doesn’t make the world go round, love is what makes the ride worthwhile.” – Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)
The red rose also has an interesting place in the history of England. Opposing factions in York and Lancaster fought for control over England in the 15th century. York was synonymous with the white rose and Lancaster with the red rose. In fact, the friction between these warring factions led to the coining of the term ‘War of the Roses’. Lancaster emerged victorious, but this victory did not spell defeat for York. Tudor Henry VII and his bride from York facilitated the symbolic union of red rose and the white rose, and gave England ‘the Rose of England’.
Posted at 12:19 am by 1909ventilo, on March 16, 2011
Doug Devine instrumental in the raising of the Hunley
Shiloh April 6, 1862, My life Preserver G. E. D. (Lt. Dixon’s initials)
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Have you ever been to a dinner party seated next to a person who extravagantly boasts about the things they have done? Yet, across from where you sit the humble gentleman who never says a word, if he did therein would lie the extraordinary story that you would love to hear. The Hunley, have you heard of it? My friend Doug Devine director of OnlineAuction.com could tell you of it, of course, you would have to ask, Mr. Devine has accomplished many things but the Hunley is what I want to talk of. The hand-cranked Confederate Hunley rammed a black powder charge into the Union blockade ship Housatonic on Feb. 17, 1864, becoming the first submarine in history to sink an enemy warship.
. …The H.L. Hunley and its eight-man crew were preserved for more than 140 years under silt.
Life has its surprises, doesn’t it? Getting a call to be a part of this historical project probably wasn’t what Doug thought his day would entail as he drank his coffee that morning. Mr. Devine owner of Pacific Survey has been involved with measuring technologies for more than 25 years; he was instrumental in the raising of the Hunley. Using computer models, advanced measuring and analytical instrumentation the recovery plans were developed to ensure the safety of this historical project – the only one of its kind on the planet today. August 8, 2000, was a joyful day in Charleston. After five years of planning and fund-raising, the Hunley was raised from beneath 3 feet of sand and 27 feet of water from its resting place, four miles off Sullivan’s Island. The tube-shaped boat was forty feet long and four feet deep. There was barely enough room for eight men. Inside, the men would use candles for light; they would sit on a wood bench and turn a shaft that moved the propeller. The Hunley’s whereabouts remained unknown until divers, funded by author Clive Cussler, discovered the sunken vessel in 1995, 4 miles off the Carolina coast.
If you read the fascinating story about the Hunley and crew member George Dixon you will hear of the famous gold coin that Queenie Bennett gave him “Hold this keepsake close, to remember my love and bring you good luck.” In 1864 George was leaving Mobile, Alabama to fight with the Confederate Army of the South. It’s rumored George slipped the gold coin into the left pocket of his trousers, and in the fierce fight at the Battle of Shiloh he was shot, he fell to the ground but the gold coin stopped the bullet and saved his life. Later, he had the coin inscribed “Shiloh April 6, 1862, My Life Preserver.”… “The Story of the H.L Hunley and Queenie’s Coin” by Fran Hawk. The coin is on display today at the Hunley Exhibit. Horace Hunley, a wealthy Southerner who lived in Mobile, and helped George Dixon and others build and pay for the submarine the H.L. Hunley. If you know me at all you know I tend to be a romanticist. Queenie did eventually remarry but I wonder if her heart was forever broken just like the broken vessel that lay mysteriously unearthed in the Atlantic Ocean all those years. I can’t wait to someday go to the museum and see it for myself.
I’m sure there was much speculation that a tiny vessel could sink the great USS Housatonic Union Ship. The same speculation that the Hunley would even be found, let alone raised and preserved. But a few people with a vision that stayed steadfast in what they believed did it. That’s what Mr. Devine brings to our company, a vision and positive attitude to get the job done even when others say it can’t be done.
I love the quote by Isabelle De Borchegrave who says, “No one truly invents anything; you always build on the Past.”
Three-dimensional laser scan of the submarine exterior and interior utilizing the ‘Cyrax system’ to provide a high resolution digital record of the submarine, which allows for the creation of a lines plan and detailed measured and accurate plans of construction details. The project team employed on the Cyrax documentation of H.L. Hunley, Epic Scan/Pacific Survey, performed this work. A big thanks to Doug DeVine and Carlos Velasquez!
photos are courtesy of Friends of the Hunley Inc. More Hunley information is available at www.hunley.org. Doug Devine is owner of Pacific Survey Supply (www.pacificsurvey.com)
Valerie Fain pictured with Mr. Doug Devine
Update….
Friday, June 24, 2011 at a conservation lab in North Charleston, S.C..
Friday, June 24, 2011 at a conservation lab in North Charleston, S.C.. The Hunley, the first submarine in history to sink an enemy warship, was rotated upright this week for the first time since it sank with its crew of eight in 1864 The hole at the lower right is on a side of the sub not seen in almost 150 years. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)Read more: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2011/06/24/2405066/hl-hunley-civil-war-sub-062511.html?spill=1#ixzz1QQ6zJzwM
for the first time since it sank with its crew of eight in 1864 The hole at the lower right is on a side of the sub not seen in almost 150 years. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)