(135mm ƒ/3.5 SMC Takumar lens) |
Former Ralph Lembo store, Humphreys Street, Itta Bena |
This blog documents what remains when we abandon our buildings, homes, schools, and factories. These decaying structures represent our impact on the world: where we lived, worked, and built. The blog also shows examples of where decay was averted or reversed with hard work and imagination.
(135mm ƒ/3.5 SMC Takumar lens) |
Former Ralph Lembo store, Humphreys Street, Itta Bena |
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Aerial view of the Mississippi Basin Model with red outline showing area that has been cleared and cleaned as of June, 2018 (from Friends of the Mississippi River Basin Model). |
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Postcard, unknown date, title "Carnation Plant looking west, Tupelo, Miss. [graphic]", from the Cooper Postcard Collection, Mississippi Department of Archives and History |
It opened Saturday, May 14, 1927. Tupelo threw an unprecedented celebratory parade and party, attended by some 15,000 to 20,000 people. It was a big day; it was a historic day.
For nearly all of the next 45 years, the Carnation Plant lived up to expectations. The dairy industry flourished in Northeast Mississippi. Thousands of dairy farmers enjoyed consistent income, even through the Great Depression. Two and a half generations of workers made the Carnation Plant a part of their memorable and proud careers. The aging plant finally closed its doors in 1972.
But because of its solid, well-built construction, the old building has been considered for many other uses since it was shuttered 39 years ago – a police department and jail, city offices and even a history museum.
There have been numerous studies and plans drawn up to move the Oren Dunn Museum into this once-proud but now-lonely building. Currently, however, those plans simply gather age and dust – just like the Carnation Plant itself. For now, it is remembered only for what it once was, not for what it could be again. The once-shining example of hope and promise in Tupelo 80 years ago simply grows old, both in reality and in all of our Southern Memories.The nomination for the National Register of Historic Places states that the plant closed in 1965.
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Honeywell Pentax advertisement, Modern Photography, June 1968. |
Asahi Pentax screw-mount Cameras1 | ||
Model2 | Date | Features |
Original | 1957 | Modern appearance, right side wind lever, instant return mirror. ≈ $199 with 55 mm f/2.2. |
S | 1957 | Contemporary geometric sequence of shutter speeds. 9 lensesavailable. |
K | 1958 | Semi-automatic diaphragm |
Asahi S3 (identical to Honeywell H3) | 1960 | Fully automatic diaphragm. $199 with 55 f/1.8 lens. |
Honeywell H1 | 1961 | ≈ $150; 1/500 top speed. World's first clip-on CdS meter available ($32). |
Asahi S3v (Honeywell H3v) | 1963 - 1969 | Added self-timer and automatic frame counter. |
Asahi S1a (H1a) | 1963 - 1969 | Added auto frame counter. 14 lenses available. |
Spotmatic | 1964 - 1971 | Through-the-lens CdS meter. $299 with 50 f/1.4. Very popular! Most chrome, some black paint. Motorized model made in 1970 (uncommon). |
SL | 1969 | Same as Spotmatic but without CdS meter. |
Spotmatic 500 | 1971 | Lower cost, 1/500 top speed, supplied with 55 f/2.0. |
Spotmatic II | 1971 | Added accessory shoe; sold with multi-coated lenses with extra indexing levers. |
Spotmatic IIa | 1972 | Sensor for automatic Honeywell flash. |
ES | 1972 | First Pentax auto exposure camera with electronically-controlled shutter. |
Spotmatic F | 1974 | Finest manual Spotmatic; open-aperture metering, $375 with 55mm f/1.8. |
SP 1000 | 1974 | No self-timer |
ESII | 1974? | Improved reliability over ES. End of the era for screw-mount bodies. |
Notes: 1. Sources: “A History of Pentax” articles by W. L. Fadner in Shutterbug (1988) 2. U.S. cameras had the Honeywell name and logo on the prism. International models were labeled with the Asahi name and logo. Many servicemen brought Asahi models back from Vietnam. |
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Advertisement from Cambridge Camera Exchange, Popular Photography, January 1981, p. 164. |
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Advertisement from Cambridge Camera Exchange, Popular Photography, December 1985, p. 105. |