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The Bournemouth Air Festival is an annual air show held along the coast at Bournemouth, in Dorset, England. It has featured aircraft from the Royal Air Force and the Royal Navy, as well as civil aviation displays. Since its formation in 2008, the festival claims to have entertained over ten million people.
The festival usually takes place in late August, over four day...
The first pier in Bournemouth consisted of a short wooden jetty that was completed in 1856. This was replaced by a much longer wooden pier, designed by George Rennie, which opened on 17 September 1861. Due to an attack by Teredo worm, the wooden piles were removed in favour of cast iron replacements in 1866, but even with this additional benefit just over a year later...
The water castle of Bourtzi is a Venetian castle located in the middle of the harbour of Nafplio.
It was built by Antonio Gambello, an Italian architect from Bergamo in 1471, although the construction was completed by the engineer Brancaleone.
This fortress was constructed by the Venetians after the departure of Mahmut Pasha in 1473, and equipped with cannons. In...
Bouse is a town and ghost town in La Paz County, Arizona, United States. Founded in 1908 as a mining camp, the economy of Bouse is now based on tourism, agriculture, and retirees. The population was 996 at the 2010 census. It was originally named Brayton after the store owner John Brayton Martin.
Arizona State Route 72 passes through the community, leading northwest 2...
The Fisherman Intaglio is near Bouse, Arizona. The Fisherman intaglio shows a man suspending a spear, with two fish depicted below, a sun and serpent above. According to Native Americans, this image may represent their Creator carving the Colorado River with his spear. Geoglyphs are difficult to date, so archaeologists have no way of knowing their age. An interpretive...
The Bow Bridge is a cast iron bridge located in Central Park, New York City, crossing over the Lake and used as a pedestrian walkway.
It is decorated with an interlocking circles banister, with eight planting urns on top of decorative bas-relief panels. Intricate arabesque elements and volutes can be seen underneath the span arch. Its 87-foot-long (27 m) span is the l...
Bowen’s Wharf and Bannister’s Wharf are a great place to start exploring Newport. This busy harbor & square lined with quaint boutiques, cafes, galleries & sightseeing tour companies. Along the historic brick and granite quay, you’ll find moored schooners, seafood restaurants and 18th-century buildings.
The Bowers Mansion, located between Reno and Carson City, Nevada, was built in 1863 by Lemuel "Sandy" Bowers and his wife, Eilley Orrum Bowers, and is a prime example of the homes built in Nevada by the new millionaires of the Comstock Lode mining boom.
The land originally was purchased in 1856 by Eilley and her second husband Alex Cowan, who returned to Utah a year l...
Bowling is a village in West Dunbartonshire, Scotland, with a population of 740 (2015).
It lies on the north bank of the Firth of Clyde, between the towns of Clydebank and Dumbarton. It is just 1.5 miles to the west of Old Kilpatrick which is at one end of the Antonine Wall and therefore represents the extreme limit of the Roman Empire on the west coast of the island ...
Bowlin's Old Crater Trading Post is a former trading post which was located along historic U.S. Route 66 in Bluewater, New Mexico. The trading post was built in 1954 by Claude Bowlin. Bowlin had traded with local Navajo since 1912, and he built his first trading post at the site in 1936. The store's name came from a volcanic crater that drew tourists to the area. Whil...
Bowness-on-Solway is a village of fewer than 100 houses on the Solway Firth separating England and Scotland. It is in North-West Cumbria to the west of Carlisle on the English side. The western end of Hadrian's Wall is a notable tourist attraction, along with beaches and wading birds. The village is part of the Solway Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
The vill...
The Bowsher Ford Covered Bridge is a single span Burr Arch truss covered bridge structure that was built by Joseph A. Britton in 1915. It is 92 Feet long, 16 feet wide, and 13.5 feet high.
The bow is the front of the ship. This area of the deck is called the foc'sl (prn. foke-sul). This was sailor-talk for "forecastle" which is the proper name of the area. The name refers to early ship design which called for a "castle," or a fortress-like construction built at the bow of ships. Archers and warriors manned the castle and fought other ships from that ...
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