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 | To match the RAF Red Arrows, I'm posting this mark on some of the US Navy Blue Angels aerial demonstration team. These are at their base in Pensacola in the imagery not long after Hurrican Ivan came through the area. |  | 04/09/2007 | 372 | 



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 | The many bright blue rooftops in Pensacola are not a regional preference in style. The image was taken only slightly more than two months after Hurricane Ivan crashed through the area. In addition to marking a few examples of the rooftops being repaired, I've also marked some of the reconstruction that is happening on the barrier island. |  | 06/09/2008 | 234 | 



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 | Overlay of Pensacola after Hurricane Ivan. |  | 01/10/2006 | 394 | 
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 | Sorry, but this is a real secret. In the quiet town of Pensacola there is a fantastic flight museum at the NAF. You can see planes and "flight machines" in perfect restoration and all for free. The city is very nice, some places are real "Art Deco" (but maybe they don´t know it), for example the Cinema. I love this City!!! and the beach. |  | 07/30/2005 | 435 | 



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 | The current Fort Moltrie is the third fort at this location. It is a brick fort built in 1809. It was modernized in the 1870s, with rifled cannon and concrete bunkers. Additional modernization in the 1880s turned all of Sullivan's Island into a military complex, of which the old fort was just a part. |  | 03/16/2006 | 378 | 



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 | Fort Stanwix was a colonial fort erected in 1758 by British General John Stanwix, at the location of present-day Rome, New York. The fort guarded a portage known as the Oneida Carrying Place during the French and Indian War. A reconstructed fort has been built at the site by the National Park Service, and the Fort Stanwix National Monument lies in the center of the modern city. |  | 12/11/2005 | 262 | 



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 | Fort McHenry, the star fort that protected Baltimore in the War of 1812. Francis Scott Key, while watching the bombardment of this fort from a British ship, wrote the "Star Spangled Banner" about the flag flying at this fort. |  | 08/13/2005 | 542 | 



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 | Fort Charles is an old British fort on the island of St. Kitts. It's capture by the French was the reason for the construction of the more famous Brimstone Hill Fortress, which overlooks it.
The fort today is not in good shape. It was abandoned by the British in 1854, and used from 1890 to 1996 as a Leper colony. Since then, it has been completely abandoned and is overgrown with... |  | 04/25/2007 | 516 | 



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 | A pentagonal brick fort with both inner and outer walls, Fort Clinch lies to the northeast of Fernandina Beach at the entrance to the Cumberland Sound. The fort was briefly re-activated in 1898 for the Spanish-American War. In 1935 the State of Florida bought 256 acres that included the then-abandoned fort and the surrounding area. The park opened to the public in 1938. |  | 03/29/2007 | 239 | 



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 | Fort Warren defended the harbor at Boston, Massachusetts, for over 100 years. onstruction of the penatagonal-shaped granite fort began in 1833 and was fully completed shortly after the Civil War. Today, the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation maintains the fort. An estimated 100,000 tourists visit the fort each year. |  | 10/22/2005 | 325 | 



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 | Bewcastle Roman Fort was a Roman fort, built to the north of Hadrian's Wall as an outpost fort and intended for scouting and intelligence. The Roman name for the fort was Fanum Cocidi (as recorded in the Ravenna Cosmography), and means 'The Shrine of Cocidius', a deity worshipped in northern Britain. The remains of the fort are situated at the village of Bewcastle, Cumbria, 7 miles (11 km) to t... |  | 11/03/2009 | 17 | 



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 | A image error shows the lighthouse on the Breakwater near Plymouth Sound twice. Also in the middle of the Breakwater is the Breakwater Fort. Building work on the Breakwater Fort started in 1860 and went on until 1880. It was part of the ring around Plymouth, coming between Fort Bovisand to the east and Picklecombe Fort to the west. It had 2-foot thick steel armour-plating, and a gun hoist (stil... |  | 10/15/2007 | 1,327 | 



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