Skip to main content

3077 - Chantilly, Virginia, USA

I received this card from Chantilly, which is located just outside of Washington, DC. The card is from Washington State. The sender spent 10 days in Seattle visiting family. 

Deception Pass is a strait separating Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island. Two bridges cross Deception Pass. Both bridges were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. 

Whidbey Island was named after Joseph Whidbey (1757-1833). He was the first European to find and map the Deception Pass in 1792. He was a part of the Vancouver Expedition. Caption George Vancouver named in Deception Pass because it misled him into thinking Whidbey Island was a peninsula. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

3584 - Blaine, Minnesota, United States of America

The sender was in Las Vegas recently and bought this card from The Mob Museum. The Mob Museum, officially known as the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, is located in downtown Las Vegas. It open in 2012. It features artifacts, stories, and the history of organized crime in the United States, but also the actions and initiatives by law enforcement to prevent such crimes.  The museum is found at the former Las Vegas Post Office and Courthouse, which was built in 1933.  The quote on this card was from John Gotti. John Gotti (1940-2002) was the mafioso and boss of the Gambino crime family in New York City. After ordering the killing of Gambino boss Paul Catellano in 1985, he took over the family and led what was the United States' most powerful crime syndicate. He was known as The Teflon Don  after three high profile trials in the 1980s resulted in acquittals. Later it was revealed that the trials had been tainted by jury tampering, juror misconduct, and witness i

3564 - Kassel, Hesse, Germany

A wonderful message on this card that translates to to those wh o can wait, everything comes with time.

2346 - Iwate, Iwate, Japan

Keita is a junior high science teacher in Iwate  岩手町. He sent me a photo of the Tokyo Sky Tower during a fireworks display. The Tokyo Sky Tower is a broadcasting and observation tower in Simide, a special ward in the Tokyo Metropolis. It became the tallest structure in Japan in 2010. In 2011, when it was completed at a height of 634 meters, it became the tallest tower in the world, and the second tallest structure in the world, after Burj Khalifa in Dubai, UAE.