Difference between revisions of "Quarry Trip 2016"

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Day trip to [http://brownstonepark.com/ Brownstone Park], Portland, CT on [[Has meeting date::September 11, 2016]]  
 
Day trip to [http://brownstonepark.com/ Brownstone Park], Portland, CT on [[Has meeting date::September 11, 2016]]  
  
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[https://www.dropbox.com/sh/zq95o36rqkz0c1r/AACGDhwfzQTI4ag_P1QdEX7za?dl=0 📸 More photos (Dropbox 🔒)]
 
[https://www.dropbox.com/sh/zq95o36rqkz0c1r/AACGDhwfzQTI4ag_P1QdEX7za?dl=0 📸 More photos (Dropbox 🔒)]
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[[Category:Meetings]]

Revision as of 17:50, 19 June 2017

Day trip to Brownstone Park, Portland, CT on September 11, 2016

The quarry where the brownstone for Cooper's Foundation Building (and many brownstone buildings in New York) was originally sourced from is now a waterpark.

See also: Bidding Farewell to a City’s Precious Stone, The New York Times (Oct. 22, 2012):
After being mined on and off for centuries, the Portland Brownstone Quarries, the very last of a kind, closed down this year, and by the end of this month, the quarry’s final scraps of inventory should be gone.
...
The stone fell out of fashion, and by the 1940s, the Portland quarries, flooded by the Connecticut River in a major storm, were shuttered. It wasn’t until the mid-1990s that Mike Meehan, a geologist with a background in coal exploration, reopened the ground at the edge of the quarry, slicing chunks of brownstone off a wall about 20 feet high and 650 feet long.
But most of the area is still filled with water, and Mr. Meehan’s closest neighbor is a recreational water park, where zip lines crisscross an old brownstone quarry.

Photos

📸 More photos (Dropbox 🔒)