The Lounge Off Topic PG-13.
Warning: The Lounge may contain irrelevant and off topic discussions that may not be related to anything HHR. If you are not interested in these kinds of discussions, do not read or respond to these threads.

HHRs with Landmarks

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 04-25-2007, 11:12 PM
  #61  
Senior Member
 
ivtech's Avatar
 
Join Date: 01-14-2006
Location: La Crescenta, CA
Posts: 1,615
Mike where did you find all those HHR for the pic in Solvang?! Looks good.
ivtech is offline  
Old 04-28-2007, 08:31 PM
  #62  
Senior Member
 
Black Beauty's Avatar
 
Join Date: 05-13-2006
Location: Chicago,IL
Posts: 2,334
Future Landmark (I`m sure)

This is a building that will be (if not already), an Automotive Landmark.
Not to mention, a shot of the Original Fall Edition "Black Beauty" Prototype.
Attached Images  

Last edited by Black Beauty; 04-29-2007 at 07:29 AM. Reason: typo
Black Beauty is offline  
Old 04-28-2007, 11:58 PM
  #63  
Senior Member
 
SoCalHHR's Avatar
 
Join Date: 10-14-2005
Location: SoCal
Posts: 5,359
Originally Posted by ivtech
Mike where did you find all those HHR for the pic in Solvang?! Looks good.
Well Charles, - at least we did it once!

(You would have been in that pic if you were'nt standing next to me!)

Good times...
SoCalHHR is offline  
Old 04-29-2007, 04:44 PM
  #64  
Senior Member
 
Nor-Cal HHR Club's Avatar
 
Join Date: 09-09-2006
Location: Fresno, California (formerly of Modesto, Ca. -- hometown of George Lucas, formerly of Winnipeg, Mb.)
Posts: 930
A Landmark of sorts in Atwater.

One of the items in these three pictures is an SR-71A and the other is an HHR... can you guess where the HHR is?








Pics taken today at Castle Air Museum.
Nor-Cal HHR Club is offline  
Old 04-29-2007, 05:37 PM
  #65  
Senior Member
 
Black Beauty's Avatar
 
Join Date: 05-13-2006
Location: Chicago,IL
Posts: 2,334
The one with the pointy nose !!!

My guess is... the HHR is the one in the background !!!
Black Beauty is offline  
Old 04-30-2007, 05:22 PM
  #66  
Senior Member
Thread Starter
 
SandyBeach's Avatar
 
Join Date: 07-21-2006
Location: Ft Walton Bch FL
Posts: 1,708
Nice photo! The more HHRs I see in Amethyst, the more I wish I had bought one.
SandyBeach is offline  
Old 04-30-2007, 08:06 PM
  #67  
Senior Member
 
Goose's Avatar
 
Join Date: 01-31-2007
Location: New Hampsha
Posts: 2,479
I was going to say Castle..I visted that place a few Februarys ago. My Father-In-Law lives in Lodi and we took the ride down to check out the planes...very neat place!!!


Goose
Goose is offline  
Old 04-30-2007, 08:34 PM
  #68  
Senior Member
 
Black Beauty's Avatar
 
Join Date: 05-13-2006
Location: Chicago,IL
Posts: 2,334
Originally Posted by SandyBeach
Nice photo! The more HHRs I see in Amethyst, the more I wish I had bought one.
Yeah, Mrs. B/B wanted Amethyst too.
Every time she sees one she says, OOHHH!!!
Drives me crazy
Black Beauty is offline  
Old 04-30-2007, 08:58 PM
  #69  
Senior Member
 
Z-Man's Avatar
 
Join Date: 06-21-2006
Location: Chicago
Posts: 3,100
This is a Great Landmark on the South Side of Chicago the town that Mr. George M. Pullman had built. This is a place were the Cruck Bros hang out often. I must say the Cruck Bros really know were to hang out, They have alot of Class and Great taste in Landmarks.





People & Events: George Pullman (1831-1897)

George Pullman raised Chicago from the muck, literally.

In 1855, the city established a new sewer system, but in order for it to drain into the river, the new pipes and streets were raised as high as ten feet above ground. Consequently, buildings below street level required stairs to get up to the street. Other buildings -- as well as hydrants and lampposts and trees -- were raised up to the new level. This was a great opportunity for George Mortimer Pullman, a building mover from Albion, New York.

Pullman, just twenty-eight years old when he moved to Chicago in 1859, would systematically raise a building with perhaps 600 men each in charge of 10 jacks. On his signal, each man would turn his jacks a quarter turn. As the building slowly ascended, the foundations of the buildings would be shored up. In this way, he raised buildings so smoothly that businesses could continue to run while their structures were elevated. Pullman was hailed as a genius and a hero.

Pullman took the capital he earned from raising buildings and moved on to developing a new venture, luxury railroad cars. Rail travel had been a hard exercise in boredom and hunger before Pullman. He created train cars with elegant restaurants, accordioned connectors between cars to keep out wind and noise, and well appointed sleeper compartments with fine sheets and pillows. A master public relations man, Pullman made sure that when President Abraham Lincoln died, a Pullman car returned his body to Illinois.

The railroad car business made him a fortune. Pullman never sold his sleepers; instead, railways leased them from his company and also handed over the premium they charged passengers for the luxury ride. With over two thousand cars on the rails, his company was worth $62 million in 1893.

Not content as a mere businessman, Pullman created a utopian town for his workmen, with state-of-the-art houses, proper sewage lines, a church and even a library -- but no alcohol. It was a dry town. But the lovely village of Pullman, just south of Chicago (and now within city limits) operated like his rail car business, designed to make a profit for Pullman's investors. All houses were leased, never sold. Even the church was to be leased, but the rent was too high for any sect to occupy it. He also sold city water and gas to his employee-residents -- at a 10% premium.

In the winter of 1893-4, at the start of a depression, Pullman decided to cut wages by 30%. This was not unusual in the age of the robber barons, but he didn't reduce the rent in Pullman, because he had guaranteed his investors a 6% return on their investments in the town. A workman might make $9.07 in a fortnight, and the rent of $9 would be taken directly out of his paycheck, leaving him with just 7 cents to feed his family. One worker later testified: "I have seen men with families of eight or nine children crying because they got only three or four cents after paying their rent." Another described conditions as "slavery worse than that of Negroes of the South."

On May 12, 1894 the workers went on strike.

The American Railway Union was led by Eugene Victor Debs, a pacifist and socialist who later founded the Socialist Party of America and was its candidate for president in five elections. Under the leadership of Debs, sympathetic railroad workers across the nation tied up rail traffic to the Pacific. The so-called "Debs Rebellion" had begun.

Debs gave Pullman five days to respond to the union demands but Pullman refused even to negotiate (leading another industrialist to yell, "The damned idiot ought to arbitrate, arbitrate and arbitrate! ...A man who won't meet his own men halfway is a God-damn fool!"). Instead, Pullman locked up his home and business and left town.

On June 26, all Pullman cars were cut from trains. When union members were fired, entire rail lines were shut down, and Chicago was besieged. One consequence was a blockade of the federal mail, and Debs agreed to let isolated mail cars into the city. Rail owners mixed mail cars into all their trains however, and then called in the federal government when the mail failed to get through.

Debs could not pacify the pent-up frustrations of the exploited workers, and violence broke out between rioters and the federal troops that were sent to protect the mail. On July 8, soldiers began shooting strikers. That was the beginning of the end of the strike. By the end of the month, 34 people had been killed, the strikers were dispersed, the troops were gone, the courts had sided with the railway owners, and Debs was in jail for contempt of court.

Pullman's reputation was soiled by the strike, and then officially tarnished by the presidential commission that investigated the incident. The report condemned Pullman for refusing to negotiate and for the economic hardships he created for workers in the town of Pullman. "The aesthetic features are admired by visitors, but have little money value to employees, especially when they lack bread." The State of Illinois filed suit against the Pullman Company's ownership of a town, and the neighborhood was reabsorbed into the fabric of the city.

When Pullman died on October 19, 1897, his family was worried that his corpse would be desecrated by former employees. His tomb in Graceland cemetery was a pit eight feet deep, with floors and walls of steel-reinforced concrete. The lead-lined casket was buried at night, and covered with asphalt, more concrete and steel rails. The grave was then sodded and fitted with a Corinthian column.
Z-Man is offline  
Old 04-30-2007, 10:55 PM
  #70  
Senior Member
 
Nor-Cal HHR Club's Avatar
 
Join Date: 09-09-2006
Location: Fresno, California (formerly of Modesto, Ca. -- hometown of George Lucas, formerly of Winnipeg, Mb.)
Posts: 930
It is a great place to visit... I do have a personal vested interest in the place (I'm the museum's webmaster).

Originally Posted by Goose
I was going to say Castle..I visted that place a few Februarys ago. My Father-In-Law lives in Lodi and we took the ride down to check out the planes...very neat place!!!


Goose
Nor-Cal HHR Club is offline  


Quick Reply: HHRs with Landmarks



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:01 PM.